Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed a bill on Monday restricting smartphone use in schools, aligning with a ...
Citing Meta's "lack of transparency," Messias said the company "will have 72 hours to inform the Brazilian government of its ...
The former Brazilian president, squeezed by criminal investigations, looks to the United States to shift his nation’s ...
A decision by social media giant Meta to end fact-checking in the United States is "bad for democracy," the newly appointed ...
Justices and advisors of the Supreme Federal Court (STF) are cautiously observing Meta's shift towards a model resembling X ...
Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to do away with Meta’s third-party fact-checking service was presented as a sweeping cultural ...
In a statement to Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court (STF) in November of last year, Meta used a tone opposite to that now ...
Brazil on Friday gave social media giant Meta 72 hours to explain its fact-checking policy for the country, and how it plans ...
Meta’s announcement has sparked alarm in Brazil, where the government sees Meta’s policy changes as a potential threat to ...
According to Moraes, “our electoral justice system and our Supreme Court have already shown that this is a land that has law.
Brazil's communication minister Sidonio Palmeira criticized Meta's decision to end fact-checking in the US, calling it "bad ...