Brazil's Supreme Court Just Declared War on Free Speech Online - Speech has to preemptively be banned now in Brazil 8 out of the 11 Supreme Court Justices in Brazil Ruled.

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Brazil’s Supreme Court just took a sledgehammer to digital speech. In a landmark ruling, eight of eleven justices voted to make social platforms like X, Facebook, and TikTok directly liable for user content flagged as “hate speech,” “anti-democratic,” or inciting violence; no court order needed.This obliterates Brazil’s prior standard, where platforms acted after judicial orders. Now, they must act preemptively or face legal consequences. The justification? The court claims that stronger intervention is “necessary to protect fundamental rights and democracy.”But here’s the reality: this sets a dangerous precedent for pre-emptive censorship at massive scale. Tech firms are alarmed. Conservative lawmakers are furious. Even the US is watching closely: the Trump administration is weighing sanctions and visa bans for officials like Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who’s already notorious for blocking X in Brazil...


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Brazil’s highest court has handed down a ruling that significantly expands the legal liability of social media companies for content shared by their users, marking a sharp shift toward tighter controls on digital speech in the country.

The decision compels platforms like Facebook, TikTok, and X to swiftly remove posts that contain “hate speech,” incite violence, or promote so-called “anti-democratic acts” as soon as they are flagged, sidestepping the need for a court order.

This controversial judgment, passed by eight of the 11 Supreme Court justices, abandons Brazil’s prior approach, which held platforms accountable only when they ignored judicial orders to take down illegal content.

The court argued that this old standard “is no longer sufficient to protect fundamental rights and democracy,” claiming that more aggressive intervention is necessary.

The move is part of a growing trend in Brazil to clamp down on digital speech under the banner of protecting society, especially youth.

However, many voices warn that this ruling opens the door to dangerous pre-emptive censorship, forcing tech companies to police speech more aggressively than ever.

Conservative lawmakers have already raised alarm bells about the implications.

Tech firms have also expressed deep reservations about the ruling’s fallout.

The Trump administration has signaled it may impose visa restrictions on foreign nationals involved in suppressing speech by US firms and citizens. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently indicated that sanctions could be considered against Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who previously blocked access to X after Elon Musk defied court orders to shut down certain accounts.

At the GlobalFact 12 summit, three top Brazilian officials sought to defend the government’s aggressive regulatory push.

Addressing a gathering of international fact-checkers, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, Attorney General Jorge Messias, and Superior Electoral Court President Cármen Lúcia insisted that regulating online content is a necessary safeguard rather than censorship.

De Moraes declared, “We must always repeat that what is not allowed in the real world is not allowed in the digital world,” Poynter reported.

Lúcia drew an analogy between speech regulation and traffic laws, asserting, “Your freedom does not mean to be free to go the wrong way and crash into another car and kill another driver.” Messias likened technology to a tool that can either build or destroy, depending on who wields it.

Yet despite these statements, none of the officials outlined clear mechanisms for how such regulation would work without trampling on basic freedoms. De Moraes, who has played a prominent role in efforts to silence certain political voices and platforms, dismissed self-regulation as a failed experiment. Messias echoed this view, arguing that platforms are incapable of enforcing their own rules effectively.

Their remarks come as Meta, under mounting scrutiny, recently ended its controversial “fact-checking” partnership in the US, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledging concerns that the initiative had crossed into censorship.
 

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I used to think the people who were anti-speech on other forums were just contrarians but they really do cheer for shit like this. And it is definitely about control. The anti-speech crowd don’t want to be called mean words or whatever. They want the whole internet and world to adopt Redditspeak where what you can say outnumbers what you can’t say.
 
You can thank the boomers for that. A friend of mine described it as poverty levels of India + dysfunction/shitlibbery of Canada. It's so retarded that Brazilians can't even choose NOT to give consent to the system; voting is compulsory.
When I was visiting a neighboring country of Brazil, the dual citizens had to vote in order to not get fined/in trouble with the law. The leftists there would go over the border and tried to bribe them with beer and 50 reais. It was back in 2008. Now it’s .18 to a dollar. Rip.IMG_3183.webp
Also rip Iranian bro.
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The Trump admin should start sanctioning any country that thinks it can dictate to US based companies (like X former twitter) what is and isn't allowed on their platform. If those nations don't like what is said on X, they can ban it in their country.
Sanctions don't work. In fact, they would only push Brazil even closer to Russia and China.
The government can and will use the economic chaos as propaganda and mobilize the (brainwashed) population for the government.
Not to mention the risk of a refugee crisis, but given the geography, there is nowhere for them to escape.

Brazil's main issue is that the people are literally being enslaved by a caste of corrupts with authoritarian tendencies and authoritarians with corrupt tendencies, and the people are either too demoralized to fight back or too ignorant to recognize their own suffering. It's depressing.

Brazil has only been a democracy for 36 years or so, that country never had a "culture of democracy," unlike the US and many nations around the world. It suffers from the same issues Russia, the 'Good Tsar, bad Boyar.'
Authoritarianism and mediocrity is normal. That's how life is. Now shut up and pay abusive taxes to a government that clearly sees you nothing more than something to extract tax money from. They just need the economy to be stable so food is widespread, without it, there won't be anyone to extract tax money from. They have no humanity.

Update: Did you know that Brazil ranks 65/100 (partly free) in Internet Freedom and 72/100 in Global Freedom according to Freedom House? Despite their constant gloating about freedom and human rights, the score used to be 79/100 in 2017.
 
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Sanctions don't work. In fact, they would only push Brazil even closer to Russia and China.
The government can and will use the economic chaos as propaganda and mobilize the (brainwashed) population for the government.
Not to mention the risk of a refugee crisis, but given the geography, there is nowhere for them to escape.

Brazil's main issue is that the people are literally being enslaved by a caste of corrupts with authoritarian tendencies and authoritarians with corrupt tendencies, and the people are either too demoralized to fight back or too ignorant to recognize their own suffering. It's depressing.
Never 5Get BRICS is still a thing.

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It always trips me up when places like Brazil, Mexico, India etc. do this stuff. Bro, aren't there more pressing issues at hand?

>"We don't have drinkable water, working hospitals, a stable economy, functional infrastructure or security, crime is rampant and our cops are corrupt, but promoting lgbt rights, fourth wave feminism and zionism. is what we need to focus on right now."
Thats exactly why they focus on those stupid issues. The real issues are hard to solve and they don't have the balls to solve them, so instead the politicians focus on the easy stuff like lgbt shit to score easy political points.
 
We should just deny all travel, student, and work visas from Brazil. The rich there love to send their kids and relatives over to America for education and vacation, and fucking up their personal lives would do more to correct this nuttery than any number of sanctions would. Also, I find it insane how many third world shitholes will actively ignore the rampant crime in the nation to crack down on meanie words online; is anarcho-tyranny the way of the global elite moving forwards?
 
It always trips me up when places like Brazil, Mexico, India etc. do this stuff. Bro, aren't there more pressing issues at hand?

>"We don't have drinkable water, working hospitals, a stable economy, functional infrastructure or security, crime is rampant and our cops are corrupt, but promoting lgbt rights, fourth wave feminism and zionism. is what we need to focus on right now."
I mean you've almost hit the nail on the head it's more like

>"We can't provide drinkable water, working hospitals, a stable economy, functional infrastructure or security, crime is rampant and our cops are corrupt, but promoting lgbt rights, fourth wave feminism and zionism, is what we need our citizens to focus on right now."

Make sense?
 
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I mean you've almost hit the nail on the head it's more like

>"We can't provide drinkable water, working hospitals, a stable economy, functional infrastructure or security, crime is rampant and our cops are corrupt, but promoting lgbt rights, fourth wave feminism and zionism. is what we need our citizens to focus on right now."

Make sense?
Authoritarian regimes always need a scapegoat/distraction for their supporters from its own failings. Progressive stack identity politics was tailor-made for this.
 
It always trips me up when places like Brazil, Mexico, India etc. do this stuff. Bro, aren't there more pressing issues at hand?

>"We don't have drinkable water, working hospitals, a stable economy, functional infrastructure or security, crime is rampant and our cops are corrupt, but promoting lgbt rights, fourth wave feminism and zionism. is what we need to focus on right now."

I live in Argentina and it's the same. People are going broke and poor, but the government bought an f14plane for almost a billion... We are not at war or anything, they just wanted it so they could send it to Ukraine or Israel.
 
"the only sovereign is Brazil and the Brazilian democratic state",
A fresh reminder that the 'Our Democracy' (TM) team doesn't actually believe that the public should have any say in how they are governed; only that those who govern should claim to do so on the public's behalf and for the public's good.
Yet despite these statements, none of the officials outlined clear mechanisms for how such regulation would work without trampling on basic freedoms.
I think trampling on basic freedoms is the entire point of the exercise.

Funnily enough, Ketanji Jackson Brown just last week advanced a theory of judicial power very similar to what the Brazilian Supreme Court is currently imposing.
 
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