A standoff between Elon Musk and Brazil escalated on Sunday when a Supreme Court judge opened an inquiry into the billionaire after Musk said he would reactivate accounts on the social media platform X that the judge had ordered blocked.
Musk, the owner of X and a self-declared free speech absolutist, has challenged a decision by Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordering the blocking of certain accounts. He said X would lift all the restrictions because they were unconstitutional and called on Moraes to resign.
Neither Musk, X nor Brazilian authorities have disclosed which social media accounts were ordered blocked. X first posted about the order to block on Saturday, but it was not immediately clear when the order was issued.
Photo: AFP
Moraes is investigating “digital militias” that have been accused of spreading fake news and hate messages during the government of former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro and is also leading an investigation into an alleged coup attempt by Bolsonaro.
Musk in an X post on Saturday evening accused Moraes of “brazenly and repeatedly” betraying the constitution and people of Brazil.
“This judge has applied massive fines, threatened to arrest our employees and cut off access to X in Brazil,” he wrote. “As a result, we will probably lose all revenue in Brazil and have to shut down our office there. But principles matter more than profit.”
The billionaire had pledged to legally challenge the order blocking X accounts where possible.
Moraes responded on Sunday by adding Musk to the investigation he is leading into fake news on social media and opened an inquiry into what he called an obstruction of justice.
In his decision, Moraes said: “X shall refrain from disobeying any court order already issued, including performing any profile reactivation that has been blocked by this Supreme Court.”
If X fails to comply with the order to block certain accounts the company would be fined 100,000 reals (US$19,737) per day, the judge said in a statement.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s government expressed its support for Moraes, with Solicitor General Jorge Messias criticizing Musk and calling for the regulation of social media networks to prevent foreign platforms from contravening Brazilian laws.
“We cannot live in a society in which billionaires domiciled abroad have control of social networks and put themselves in a position to violate the rule of law, failing to comply with court orders and threatening our authorities,” Messias wrote on X.
Moraes last year also ordered an investigation into executives at social messaging platform Telegram and Alphabet’s Google, who were in charge of a campaign criticizing a proposed Internet regulation bill.
The bill put the onus on Internet companies, search engines and social messaging services to find and report illegal material, instead of leaving it to the courts. It would also impose hefty fines for failures to do so.
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