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The Courts Communications Social Networks

Brazil Reverses Telegram Ban (engadget.com) 21

A judge on Brazil's Supreme Court has reversed a ban on Telegram, two days after blocking the messaging app for ignoring orders. Engadget reports: Telegram CEO Pavel Durov said the company missed the court's emails. "We complied with an earlier court decision in late February and responded with a suggestion to send future takedown requests to a dedicated email address," Durov wrote on Telegram on Friday. "Unfortunately, our response must have been lost, because the Court used the old general-purpose email address in further attempts to reach us. As a result, we missed its decision in early March that contained a follow-up takedown request. Luckily, we have now found and processed it, delivering another report to the Court today."

Durov added that Telegram will appoint a representative in Brazil and set up a framework so it can address requests more promptly. According to The New York Times, Telegram complied with the court's demands by taking down classified information posted on President Jair Bolsonaro's channel and deleting the accounts of a Bolsonaro supporter who was allegedly spreading misinformation. The court then reversed the ban. Telegram reacted so swiftly that the ban (which was imposed by a judge who is running multiple investigations into Bolsonaro and his allies for spreading misinformation) was never actually in effect. The court order gave Apple, Google, ISPs and phone providers five days to block the app.
Telegram will also "start promoting verified information and labeling posts containing falsehoods," adds Engadget. "It will also monitor the 100 most popular channels in the country," which account for 95 percent of views of public posts.
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Brazil Reverses Telegram Ban

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  • Is it only the US that values (or valued) free speech? I can understand classified information but spreading miss-information is just a catch all for saying we don't agree and since we are your dictators you need to shut up, and we enforce it by law.
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Brazil is weird. It's a country of extremes that look fucked up to almost all outsiders. For example, in previous presidential election, one of the two main candidates campaigned from prison, where he was after he was convicted (not indited, not prosecuted, but actually convicted) of corruption while in office.

      The other stated, among other things, that big problem with nazis is that... they were too lenient on their political opponents. And if you think that this is somehow unacceptable, I think it was Vice

      • Actually, Lula (who was imprisoned during last campaign) wasn't a candidate. His party's candidate was Fernando Haddad. And Lula's conviction were later overturned by the Supreme Court. Also, yeah... Brazil is weird.
      • where black grandma beat the shit out of her mulatto daughter if she brought something other than a white man home. And stated to the camera that the goal of her actions and long term family's goal was to "breed the black out".

        This is an extreme example of a common problem in Latin America (I'm from LATAM). It's a legacy of the colonial cast system that we had to endure back then. It's not uncommon to hear people say, "my granddaughter is dark, but she's still cute" (I shit you not.) There's a thing called "improving the race" to breed out the "Black" and the "Indio" out of the family. You see that a lot in Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Peru... pretty much everywhere.

        It's extremely disturbing, and I, for one, I'm happy

  • Their Intelligence people probably talked to the judge. Telegram has the reputation for being encrypted when only one non-default edge case is.

Only great masters of style can succeed in being obtuse. -- Oscar Wilde Most UNIX programmers are great masters of style. -- The Unnamed Usenetter

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