World
Brazil Lifts Its Ban on Telegram After Two Days
RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil’s Congress, Supreme Court docket, election officers and federal police have been attempting to get a response from Telegram, the fast-growing messaging app, for months. It turned out, all they needed to do was ban it.
On Friday, Brazil’s Supreme Court docket blocked Telegram within the nation as a result of the corporate behind the app had been ignoring the courtroom’s orders.
Then, immediately, Telegram’s chief govt responded — with a pedestrian excuse: his firm had missed the courtroom’s emails. “I apologize to the Brazilian Supreme Court docket for our negligence,” mentioned the chief, Pavel Durov.
Telegram labored shortly over the weekend to adjust to the courtroom’s orders, together with by deleting categorized info shared by the account of President Jair Bolsonaro and eradicating the accounts of a distinguished supporter of Mr. Bolsonaro who has been accused of spreading misinformation.
That motion glad the courtroom. Late Sunday, the courtroom lifted its ban on Telegram.
However Telegram additionally went additional in a bid to keep away from a ban. The app made a number of different modifications in Brazil to fight misinformation on its app, which has anxious Brazilian officers forward of the presidential elections in October. Telegram mentioned that among the many modifications, it will begin selling verified info in Brazil and marking false posts as inaccurate, whereas additionally having staff monitor the 100 hottest channels in Brazil, which account for 95 p.c of the views of public posts within the nation.
“The app has at all times been prepared to collaborate with the authorities. What occurred was a misunderstanding relating to communication,” mentioned Alan Thomaz, Telegram’s lawyer in Brazil, who was appointed on Sunday as a part of Telegram’s response to the courtroom.
The courtroom’s reversal was so swift that the ban by no means took impact. Whereas the courtroom’s order was regulation for 2 days, the ban had given web suppliers, wi-fi corporations, and Apple and Google 5 days to conform.
The ban was instituted and lifted by Alexandre de Moraes, a Supreme Court docket choose who has emerged as a distinguished opponent of Mr. Bolsonaro. He’s overseeing a number of investigations into the president and his allies. Mr. Bolsonaro criticized the ban, calling it “unacceptable,” and his administration shortly challenged it in courtroom.
Telegram has lengthy maintained a hands-off strategy to content material on its apps, which has made it fashionable with right-wing customers who complain that their views are censored on extra mainstream social networks. That has meant Telegram has turn out to be an vital broadcast channel for Mr. Bolsonaro, who has amassed almost 1.1 million followers on the app. His prime competitor within the 2020 presidential race, former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has lower than 50,000.
Brazil is a crucial marketplace for Telegram, and dropping entry to the nation would have been a serious blow to an organization that has been surging in recognition. Since 2014, Telegram has been downloaded almost 85 million occasions in Brazil, with 29 p.c of these installations coming final 12 months, in line with Sensor Tower, an app information agency.
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US Supreme Court critical of TikTok arguments against looming ban
Justices at the United States Supreme Court have signalled scepticism towards a challenge brought by the video-sharing platform TikTok, as it seeks to overturn a law that would force the app’s sale or ban it by January 19.
Friday’s hearing is the latest in a legal saga that has pitted the US government against ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, in a battle over free speech and national security concerns.
The law in question was signed in April, declaring that ByteDance would face a deadline to sell its US shares or face a ban.
The bill had strong bipartisan support, with lawmakers citing fears that the Chinese-based ByteDance could collect user data and deliver it to the Chinese government. Outgoing US President Joe Biden ultimately signed it into law.
But ByteDance and TikTok users have challenged the law’s constitutionality, arguing that banning the app would limit their free speech rights.
During Friday’s oral arguments, the Supreme Court seemed swayed by the government’s position that the app enables China’s government to spy on Americans and carry out covert influence operations.
Conservative Justice Samuel Alito also floated the possibility of issuing what is called an administrative stay that would put the law on hold temporarily while the court decides how to proceed.
The Supreme Court’s consideration of the case comes at a time of continued trade tensions between the US and China, the world’s two biggest economies.
President-elect Donald Trump, who is due to begin his second term a day after the ban kicks in, had promised to “save” the platform during his presidential campaign.
That marks a reversal from his first term in office, when he unsuccessfully tried to ban TikTok.
In December, Trump called on the Supreme Court to put the law’s implementation on hold to give his administration “the opportunity to pursue a political resolution of the questions at issue in the case”.
Noel Francisco, a lawyer for TikTok and ByteDance, emphasised to the court that the law risked shuttering one of the most popular platforms in the US.
“This act should not stand,” Francisco said. He dismissed the fear “that Americans, even if fully informed, could be persuaded by Chinese misinformation” as a “decision that the First Amendment leaves to the people”.
Francisco asked the justices to, at minimum, put a temporary hold on the law, “which will allow you to carefully consider this momentous issue and, for the reasons explained by the president-elect, potentially moot the case”.
‘Weaponise TikTok’ to harm US
TikTok has about 170 million American users, about half the US population.
Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, arguing for the Biden administration, said that Chinese control of TikTok poses a grave threat to US national security.
The immense amount of data the app could collect on users and their contacts could give China a powerful tool for harassment, recruitment and espionage, she explained.
China could then “could weaponise TikTok at any time to harm the United States”.
Prelogar added that the First Amendment does not bar Congress from taking steps to protect Americans and their data.
Several justices seemed receptive to those arguments during Friday’s hearing. Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts pressed TikTok’s lawyers on the company’s Chinese ownership.
“Are we supposed to ignore the fact that the ultimate parent is, in fact, subject to doing intelligence work for the Chinese government?” Roberts asked.
“It seems to me that you’re ignoring the major concern here of Congress — which was Chinese manipulation of the content and acquisition and harvesting of the content.”
“Congress doesn’t care about what’s on TikTok,” Roberts added, appearing to brush aside free speech arguments.
Left-leaning Justice Elena Kagan also suggested that April’s TikTok law “is only targeted at this foreign corporation, which doesn’t have First Amendment rights”.
TikTok, ByteDance and app users had appealed a lower court’s ruling that upheld the law and rejected their argument that it violates the US Constitution’s free speech protections under the First Amendment.
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