sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

Elon Musk’s feud with Brazilian judge is much more than a personal spat − it’s about national sovereignty, freedom of speech and the rule of law

Technology / analysis
Elon Musk’s feud with Brazilian judge is much more than a personal spat − it’s about national sovereignty, freedom of speech and the rule of law
Brazil’s Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes faces off against X’s Elon Musk. Ton Molina/NurPhoto via Getty Images / AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
Brazil’s Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes faces off against X’s Elon Musk. Ton Molina/NurPhoto via Getty Images / AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

By Yasmin Curzi de Mendonça*

It is easy to get distracted by the barbs, swipes and bluster of the ongoing and very public spat between the world’s richest man and a fierce justice on Brazil’s highest court. Elon Musk, the billionaire owner of X, posts regularly of his contempt for Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes – a man Musk has labelled a “dictator” and “Brazil’s Darth Vader.” He makes these comments on a social media platform that Moraes has banned in Latin America’s most populous country as part of a lengthy campaign against disinformation.

But as an expert on Brazilian digital law, I see this as more than just a bitter personal feud. X’s legal battle with Brazil’s Supreme Court raises important questions about platform regulation and how to combat disinformation while protecting free speech. And while the focus is on Brazil and Musk, it is a debate being echoed around the world.

Countdown to the big fight

Things came to a head between Musk and Moraes in August 2024, but the battle has been years in the making.

In 2014, Brazil passed the “Marco Civil da Internet” or the “Internet Bill of Rights,” as it is commonly known. Backed by bipartisan support, this framework for internet regulation outlined principles for protecting user privacy and free speech while also creating penalties for platforms that break the rules.

It included a “judicial notice and takedown” system under which internet platforms are liable for harmful user-generated content only if they fail to remove the content after receiving a specific court order.

The approach was designed to strike a balance between protecting free speech and ensuring that illegal and harmful content can be removed. It prevents social media platforms, messaging apps and online forums from being held automatically responsible for users’ posts, while empowering courts to intervene when necessary.

But the 2014 law stops short of creating detailed rules for content moderation, leaving much of the responsibility in the hands of platforms such as Facebook and X.

And the rise of disinformation in recent years, especially around Brazil’s 2022 presidential elections, exposed the limitations of the framework.

The president at the time, far-right populist Jair Bolsonaro, and his supporters were accused of using social media platforms such as X to spread falsehoods, sow doubts about the integrity of Brazil’s electoral system and incite violence.

When Bolsonaro was defeated at the ballot by the leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, an online campaign of election denialism flourished. It culminated in the Jan. 8, 2023, storming of the Brazilian Congress, Supreme Court and the presidential palace by Bolsonaro’s supporters – an event similar to the US Capitol riots two years earlier.

The fight gets personal …

In response to the disinformation campaigns and the attacks, Brazil’s Supreme Court initiated two inquiries – the digital militias inquiry and the antidemocratic acts inquiry – to investigate groups involved in the plot.

As part of those inquiries, the Supreme Court requested social media platforms – such as Facebook, Instagram and X – to hand over the IP addresses and suspend accounts linked to those illegal activities.

But by this time, Musk, who has described himself as a free-speech fundamentalist, had acquired the platform, promising to support free speech, reinstate banned accounts and decrease significantly the platform’s content moderation policy.

Men in restraints holding their arms behind their backs kneel on the floor with security guards around them.

Security forces arrest supporters of President Jair Bolsonaro after retaking control of the presidential palace on Jan. 8, 2023. Ton Molina/AFP via Getty Images

As a result, Musk has been openly defying the Supreme Court’s orders since the beginning. In April 2024, X’s global government affairs team began sharing information with the public on what it deemed as “illegal” demands from the Supreme Court.

The feud escalated in late August when X’s legal representative in Brazil resigned and Musk refused to name a new legal representation – a move that was interpreted by Moraes as an attempt to evade the law. In response, Moraes ordered the platform’s ban on Aug. 31, 2024.

The move was accompanied by heavy penalties for Brazilians attempting to circumvent the ban. Anyone using virtual private networks, or VPNs, to access X faces daily fines of nearly US$9,000 – more than the average annual income of many Brazilians. Those decisions were confirmed by a panel consisting of five Supreme Court justices on Sept. 2, 2024. Amid criticism of judicial overreach, however, the full court of 11 justices will discuss and potentially revisit this part of Moraes’ decision.

… then turns political

The X v. Brazil Supreme Court fight has become deeply politicised. On Sept. 7, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters took part in a “pro-free speech” protest. Lula’s administration and the Supreme Court have become targets, with the opposition and right-wing factions framing the platform’s suspension as a symbol of state overreach.

The rhetoric contrasts sharply with the more balanced, deliberative efforts to regulate platforms that began over a decade ago with the Marco Civil da Internet. It also highlights the challenge of finding a balance between free speech and combating disinformation in a deeply polarised environment – an issue that Brazil is far from alone in grappling with.

The political heat surrounding the banning of X doesn’t bode well for Brazil’s ongoing efforts to counter online disinformation and hold platforms accountable for harmful content.

A “fake news bill,” as it has been dubbed by Brazilian media, was introduced by the country’s Congress in 2020. It seeks to create oversight mechanisms and increase transparency around political advertising and content moderation policies.

But despite its good intentions and a very light “regulated self-regulation” approach, the last version of the draft bill was blocked in the Brazilian Congress after three years of debate.

It follows a campaign by right-wing politicians and Big Tech lobbyists who labelled the legislation a “censorship bill,” arguing that it would infringe on free speech and stifle political discourse. As of now, the fate of the bill looks uncertain.

Meanwhile, on Aug. 23, the Supreme Court announced that it will look at two key parts of the Marco Civil as part of a judicial review taking place in November.

The first is the “judicial notice and takedown” process that critics complain is too slow and allows platforms to choose not to adopt more robust content moderation mechanisms. Supporters, however, maintain that judicial oversight is necessary to prevent platforms from arbitrarily removing content, which could lead to censorship.

The second area under review is the part of the Marco Civil that outlines the penalties for companies that fail to follow the rules. The debate centers on whether the current penalties, particularly service suspensions, are proportionate and constitutional. Critics argue that suspending an entire platform violates users’ rights to free speech and access to information, while proponents insist that it is a necessary tool to ensure compliance with Brazilian law and safeguard sovereignty.

The fate of both the “fake news bill” and the Supreme Court’s review could set in place new legal standards for platforms in Brazil and determine how far the country can go in enforcing its laws against global tech companies as it seeks to battle disinformation.

And while the Supreme Court did not directly link the review to the ongoing feud with X, the fight with Musk forms the unavoidable political backdrop to discussions over the future direction of Brazil’s experiment in platform regulation. As such, the fallout of this seemingly personal spat could have major regulatory consequences for Brazil and potentially other countries.The Conversation


*Yasmin Curzi de Mendonça, Research associate, University of Virginia.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

24 Comments

The fundamental issue here is who decides what is “disinformation” or “misinformation”? The moment you give that authority to bureaucrats or to the current political party in power, it will start to get abused. That’s just human nature.

While not a perfect solution, I believe it’s much more preferable to allow citizens to decide for themselves what to believe or not believe. Given access to both sides of an argument, the majority of us can smell bull*shit from a mile away.

No government should ever be your one “source of truth”!

Up
11

Limits on speech are required in society in many circumstances e.g. (1) trading - buy this tonic and it will cure your cancer (2) Inciting violence - let's kill people who wear crocs  (3) inciting panic - yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre etc....

All these limits have sanctions that society (legislation, Courts, citizens) can use to enforce those limits e.g. Fair Trading Act, criminal offences against threats, defamation.

Where a social media platform operates outside the jurisdiction of a society this limits that society's ability to enforce rules and laws that prevent harmful speech. Where those platforms basically tell that society to "far cough" when they are asked to help prevent or enforce those rules it is reasonable to shut them down in that society, IMHO.  

 

Up
8

I'm unconvinced by all of your examples (though I understand the courts don't agree with me).

If someone tries to sell me snake oil, as a rational adult, I will attempt to validate their claims. People will always lie or exaggerate, and we don't need a state to be the arbiter of that. This is why I tell my children about the emperor's new clothes.

If someone asks me or attempts to convince me of the need to kill someone, I'll refuse. If I don't, I should be held accountable for my actions, and not the other person for speech (which is not violence). This is why I tell my children they alone are responsible for their actions.

If someone incites panic unduly, their reputation will suffer. This is why I tell my children about the boy who cried wolf.

Up
8

Unless everyone in the world is your child (and is as well behaved as you think your children are) your solution doesn't work e.g. (1) Person who relied on false cancer cure claim dies (your answer - parent should have raised you smarter, death is now your cure) (2) Someone kills a person based on incitement to hatred (your answer - bad parenting of the offender - victim = collateral damage) (3) Yelling fire in a theatre causing death and injury in he resulting panic (your answer - bad parenting of the offender - victims = collateral damage). 

Courts and hopefully most of society wouldn't agree with your position. 

 

Up
5

I used the children's fables as a rhetorical device, and you know that. What is your solution? No one is ever able to say anything untrue, under pain of state sanction? What if they neverthess believe it to be true? Are people free to try medical remedies that aren't supported by evidence? Isn't that our right? Otherwise we wouldn't have homeopathy (which, incidentally, almost everyone has been able to determine is quackery without a ban on the practice). Do I incite suicide if I tell someone I dislike them? Do I incite genocide if I say I have problems with Islamic beliefs? Can climate change alarmists press their case, causing mass panic and anxiety about an impending mass extinction, or religious end-of-times types press their case? Putting limits on speech always—always—has unintended consequences, as noble as you think your limitations are.

Up
2

You sound like you are from a small town from USA in wild western times with all this reputation stuff. You know that we live in cities where there are so many people you might never see a stranger again ever? Moving town is incredibly easy these days. Businesses close and open overnight with a rebranding. And worse, we communicate online anonymously. You don't need to be in a small town local cinema to cause harm with your communications.

We don't have time to check whether the food is safe to eat, or the safety harness you are wearing will hold your weight. We buy things from people we don't know all the time. That is why the rules are there to stop most of the dishonesty.

People shouldn't do what someone tells you to do if it harms someone, but if you truly believed you were in a situation where the right thing to do was harm someone, then you would do it. How do you think wars happen otherwise? Nobody is completely infallable to deception. Most scammers prey on the easiest to deceive as it doesn't take as much work, but that doesn't mean you or I aren't vulnerable to more sophisticated deception.

Up
5

Indeed if you visit countries where regulation is untrustworthy and governments corrupt, it does get really exhausting. The government certifies the tap water meets WHO regulations for being drinkable, but nobody in that country drinks the water because they don't trust the government.

You don't want to have to rely on personal responsibility to know whether to drink the water, take a swim at the beach, or get on a plane. Indeed, where regulation isn't trusted you're far more likely to find that feeding into a laziness by the regulators and the industries they control, creating a feedback loop.

With information, while I agree a "government stamp of approval" on a media release is a bad smell, I think the counterfactual where you're told to distrust all MSM and rely on X for all your news is likely to lead people to place trust where they shouldn't, and by being convinced so easily that MSM is fake, are unlikely to have good reasoning skills. It only takes one such person to be sucked into a cult and blow themselves up in parliament and tolerance for freedom of information wanes. We haven't yet had an outright physical attack easily attributed to X in NZ, but Brazil has.

You eventually end up with a country that's ungovernable, because Musk has more influence over your populace than your elected leaders. I think the UK riots have shown this to be the case.

Most of the population are poor judges of authenticity. I think some light handed regulation to set some ground rules is absolutely fine, so long as it doesn't turn into political interference in information flows. I think a suitably impartial observer (not the regulator nor the media outlet) is the best judge of whether there's overreach present there.

Up
2

But who appoints (controls) your "impartial observer"? I would counter that we should have strong regulations on our physical environment such as clean water and fair trading (consumer guarantees) and a light touch on individual free speech. I think the population are generally good judges of authenticity (that's why we live in a democracy). There will always be difference of opinion within the population, if an influencer on X tells their followers not to drink tap water because it's floridated, and those people who listen have worse dental health outcomes then I'm ok with that.

Up
1

Your response is a good example of disinformation, as it strongly suggests the public has no say in matters that affect them, and what the government does. It is a conspiracy theory in fact, and we don't need that here, thank you.

Up
3

If the truth makes you uncomfortable don't blame the truth, blame the lie that made you comfortable.

Juha, you just lost a little credibility.  I guess that the actions of the last Labour govt 3-4 years ago have been forgotten.  We had a govt telling us we couldn’t travel outside of the Auckland region, limits on the number of people at weddings and funerals, vaccine mandates.  How much say did the public have on this?

It is interesting that even Mark Zuckerberg has made the following comment that he disagreed with the US government censorship pressure.

https://brownstone.org/articles/why-did-zuckerberg-choose-now-to-confess/

In 2021, senior officials from the Biden Administration, including the White House, repeatedly pressured our teams for months to censor certain COVID-19 content, including humor and satire, and expressed a lot of frustration with our teams when we didn’t agree….I believe the government pressure was wrong, and I regret that we were not more outspoken about it. I also think we made some choices that, with the benefit of hindsight and new information, we wouldn’t make today. Like I said to our teams at the time, I feel strongly that we should not compromise our content standards due to pressure from any Administration in either direction – and we’re ready to push back if something like this happens again.

Up
5

Power to you, who can't even use your actual name, to chime in on the Facebook founder talking about compromising "our content standards". The point is, stay on topic and don't ruin the experience for everyone else.

Up
0

Jon Wallace

Not sure what my name has to do with the topic though.

Up
4

Who should decide what is disinformation or misinformation? It's an important question. I think I prefer the institutions of nation states, with their checks and balances, to the oligarchy. Especially an oligarch such as Elon Musk who is interested in promulgating their own ideas and ambitions through their platform. The issue of who controls the discourse has existed since before we had media barons, but where previously the message could be interpreted through the lens of our knowledge of the messenger, now we can't really know the source of the message. And where previously the messenger could be held accountable for illegal or otherwise bad actions, now the messenger may remain both anonymous and beyond boundaries reachable by the rule of law. Unquestionably, the opportunity for disinformation and misinformation becomes higher, with real and significant consequences. Moreover, your information is not the same as mine. Your search results and other expressed, inferred, or purchased, preferences, will mean that you get served different information to me. E.g. men and women get different information served to them, even without demonstrating any differences in preferences. The same for other demographic groups. Who is deciding that and why? What are the implications? How can you make a valid decision on what to believe, when there's no longer any baseline reliable truth and you could be getting effectively brainwashed by the information which is curated for you (by who and why)? Are you comfortable with the fragmentation, commercialisation, and untraceability of information? It has become necessary to consider that what you are reading may have been influenced by a disinformation campaign. The sort of thing that I believe you wouldn't like to happen, if a government was directing it through their secret services (as they continually do, of course). If you don't want to be influenced by bad government actors, then you do want to regulate disinformation and misinformation. You are correct that there's no perfect solution, but...better the devil you know?

Up
6

Incredibly, social media is optional.

Up
3

That may well be true, but there's an inverse relationship between people who are well researched and good judges of information and those that consume social media.

Guns are also optional. Those that choose to misuse them more typically harm others than themselves, much like social media.

Up
2

Do you know how wars happen?

Wars happen when a government decrees that things are bad due to the actions of others and that the people must unite to defend against those that would do harm against them. To get a population to agree to war it must be controlled to believe that it knows the truth.  Dissenting opinions are not to be permitted.  

I am very comfortable with the fragmentation, commercialisation, and untraceability of information - everybody should be.  Because it takes the power to delineate "truthiness" away from the people who control standing armies.  I do not want our societies to be united in believing any official government sanctified version of anything, simply because the risks are too high.  

It is always much better for people to form dissenting BS opinions than to have everyone convinced of one uniting set of BS.   

Up
7

War is a complicated example, and governments wouldn't be able to declare one if they hadn't indoctrinated the populace to be "patriotic" as children. If everyone in a country was an immigrant from somewhere else you'd have a hard time telling them to take up arms vs just leave.

Social media is prone to actually leverage off that government indoctrination and direct it against the government - ie. it's your patriotic duty to storm government buildings because someone you like lost an election. You essentially hand moderation power for who can start a war to an offshore private sector actor. Is that any better than a government you elect?

Coupled with this, you hardly ever see a pacifist on social media gain any real mass traction. People are far more keen to be called to arms than defused and told to go sit on the couch.

Up
0

Israel being an example of a modern country consisting of recent immigrants, tends to suggest otherwise.  

Offshore private sector actors can bribe politicians and own newspapers (for considerably less than USD44 billion), the oligarchs have the power anyway.  Having politicians ban criticism of politicians is very dangerous.  People must be allowed to dissent and protest their governments.  

 

 

Up
2

Thanks. I'm against war and I'm against propaganda. I don't think that the logical inference must be that I should be in favour of entirely deregulated media. Not least because I don't think a lack of regulation of media will prevent either propaganda or war. Recent evidence suggests it may even increase the likelihood, e.g. Elon Musk going around predicting civil wars is perhaps a step towards inciting one. Certainly it is leading to dissenting opinions, at least some of which are BS. Are you comfortable with people (individuals, corporations, domestic or foreign governments) influencing election results with misinformation? Untraceably breaking electoral law to do so? With them inciting civil war in response to an unfavourable electoral outcome, based on BS? All with little to no traceability or accountability? What about the impact on really valuable important information, which might be an inconvenient truth - would you be OK with that message being drowned out by paid astroturfing bot-nets, to protect the profits of a few corporations, at the expense of consensus and action which might maintain the habitability of the planet? Or, would you be OK with the concept that no-one can really trust any information and so large-scale collaboration and what one might term social progress is likely to become increasingly difficult?

Up
0

To get a population to agree to war it must be controlled to believe that it knows the truth.  Dissenting opinions are not to be permitted.  

Very true, and the prime reason why the hippy movement in the 1960's was cracked down on in the USA for questioning the government on the apparent need for the Vietnam war, encouraging a more positive life outlook, as well as an open minded view on it. Also because they encouraged the questioning of the church and marriage, major religious and societal constructs governing them at the time. 

Up
1

I disagree . Its is not that  individual oligarchs are any better or any less biased than the state - but there are many of them , not acting in concert . 

Up
0

Thanks for your reply. Who or what is acting in concert and why is that bad?

Up
0

Musk is a great judge of what a dictatorship is. He should have stuck to hawking bullet proof utes. Now no one likes him except Russian bot farms.

Up
2

Yip I agree. Unfortunately like so many others, I have completely lost respect for him. 
 I used to be in awe of his accomplishments. But now I worry about the amount of power he has. I don’t see him as someone we can trust. 

Up
2