Citing Meta's "lack of transparency," Messias said the company "will have 72 hours to inform the Brazilian government of its ...
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed a bill on Monday restricting smartphone use in schools, aligning with a ...
Former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing criminal charges, has been invited to Trump's inauguration even though ...
Brazil’s government will give Meta until Monday to explain the changes to its fact-checking program, Solicitor General Jorge ...
Meta told Brazil it would not yet end fact-checks outside the US, but its attempts to clarify its new social media policies fell flat Tuesday as the Latin American nation slammed measures which ...
Jair Bolsonaro has had a rough couple of years: election losses, criminal cases, questionable embassy sleepovers. So when he ...
In a statement to Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court (STF) in November of last year, Meta used a tone opposite to that now ...
Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to do away with Meta’s third-party fact-checking service was presented as a sweeping cultural ...
According to Moraes, “our electoral justice system and our Supreme Court have already shown that this is a land that has law.
Meta wants to control content on its platforms less in future – Brazil's government wants to know by Monday how this fits in ...
Brazil's communication minister Sidonio Palmeira criticized Meta's decision to end fact-checking in the US, calling it "bad ...
Meta’s announcement has sparked alarm in Brazil, where the government sees Meta’s policy changes as a potential threat to ...