On Thursday, Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled that digital platforms are responsible for users’ content — a major shift in a country where millions rely on apps like WhatsApp, Instagram, and YouTube every day.
The ruling, which goes into effect within weeks, mandates tech giants including Google, X, and Meta to monitor and remove content involving hate speech, racism, and incitement to violence. If the companies can show they took steps to remove such content expeditiously, they will not be held liable, the justices said.
Brazil has long clashed with Big Tech platforms. In 2017, then-congresswoman Maria do Rosário sued Google over YouTube videos that wrongly accused her of defending crimes. Google didn’t remove the clips right away, kicking off a legal debate over whether companies should only be punished if they ignore a judge.
In 2023, following violent protests largely organized online by supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro, authorities began pushing harder to stop what they saw as dangerous behavior spreading through social networks.
For context:
There’s an older law called Marco Civil da Internet (roughly “internet civil framework”), from 2014. The Article 19 of that law boils down to “if a third party posts content that violates the law in an internet service, the service provider isn’t legally responsible, unless there’s a specific judicial order telling it to remove it.”
So. The new law gets rid of that article, claiming it’s unconstitutional. In effect, this means service providers (mostly social media) need to proactively remove illegal content, even without judicial order.
I kind of like the direction this is going, but it raises three concerns:
- False positives becoming more common.
- The burden will be considerably bigger for smaller platforms than bigger ones.
- It gives the STF yet another tool for vendetta. The judiciary is already a bit too strong in comparison with the other two powers, and this decision only feeds the beast further.
scintilla@beehaw.org 3 days ago
I’m unsure how I feel about this. I think whether this is beneficial or a net negative will end up depending entirely on how it is enforced.
doleo@lemmy.one 3 days ago
What do you think could be negative about it?
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 3 days ago
It will make it extremely risky from a liability standpoint to operate any platform that allows users content. The EFF has a bunch of writeups on these types of laws. This is the last of a 4-part series on them: Link
Fediverse operators would for example be extremely vulnerable to lawsuits, because almost none of them can afford teams of lawyers to deal with claims, true or not, that they failed to enforce content policies.
It gives power to large corporations like Meta and Xitter, who can afford to handle legal threats.
sik0fewl@lemmy.ca 3 days ago
Consider a Brazilian Lemmy instance. They will have to remove everything anyone complains about.
There’s no way to tell legitimate requests from illegitimate and as soon as volunteer admins are overwhelmed with requests, they will have to automatically delete any post that they are notified about.
All the power is on the side of the complainant. Nonprofit Lemmy hosts would go bankrupt in minutes trying to fight it.
gaspar_petersen@programming.dev 2 days ago
It works only for big tech. Small forums, for example, often can’t comply with such regulations.
MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 days ago
I just don’t see how smaller social groups like forums or fedi stuff can survive if they need to potentially fight legal battles too.