Musk's X skirts Brazil ban and returns to some users with change to
server access
Send a link to a friend
[September 19, 2024] By
ELÉONORE HUGHES and BARBARA ORTUTAY
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Some Brazilian users regained
access to X on Wednesday despite a nationwide ban put in place by the
country's Supreme Court, a reunion apparently resulting from the social
network changing the way its servers are accessed.
But the renewed access may be short-lived.
Late last month, Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered X blocked
nationwide after months of tension with the site's billionaire owner
Elon Musk over free speech, far-right accounts and misinformation. De
Moraes also set fines for anyone using virtual private networks, or VPNs,
to access the platform.
That rendered X effectively inaccessible in the country until Wednesday,
when an Associated Press journalist was among those who regained access.
The number of X posts made in Brazil rose from 939,000 Tuesday to more
than 2 million by late afternoon Wednesday, data analysis company Bites
said.
Experts examining X's IP addresses — numeric designations that
identifies sites' location on the internet — said there are indications
the company has begun routing users through the servers of Cloudflare, a
content delivery network, en route to its own.
“The service that Elon Musk’s social network has started using works
like a ‘digital shield’ that protects the company’s servers,” Pedro
Diogenes, Latin America’s technical director for CLM, a distributor that
focuses on cybersecurity. It acts as a proxy between users and X's
servers, filtering traffic and preventing the original IP address from
being recognized, Diogenes told the AP.
Brazil’s telecommunications regulator Anatel said it is looking into the
situation and will report its findings to the Supreme Court, noting that
there has been no change to de Moraes' ruling. A panel of fellow
justices later upheld his decision, though it hasn’t yet gone before the
court’s full bench. His fine for VPN users in particular has faced
blowback, including from the nation’s bar association.
The Supreme Court declined to comment on possible actions it could take.
X said on its platform that the shutdown in Brazil affected service to
Latin America as a whole, so it swapped network providers.
“This change resulted in an inadvertent and temporary service
restoration to Brazilian users,” the Wednesday evening statement said.
“We expect the platform to be inaccessible again shortly.”
[to top of second column] |
A view of a laptop shows the Twitter sign-in page with their logo,
in Belgrade, Serbia, Monday, July 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Darko
Vojinovic, File)
Earlier Wednesday, former President Jair Bolsonaro
celebrated the return of the social network with a post from his
account. He has sided with Musk in the feud with de Moraes and sought to
portray the ban as censorship from an overzealous judge.
Some Brazilian X users also trumpeted the platform's return — with
several addressing de Moraes directly, vowing that they weren't using a
VPN. There have been no reports of fines being levied against people
using VPNs.
Cloudflare, a security company that prides itself on providing services
to websites regardless of their content, has a history of protecting
sites other companies won’t touch. But only to a point. In 2017, for
instance, it dropped the neo-Nazi website Daily Stormer as a customer
following a deadly clash at a white-nationalist rally in
Charlottesville, Virginia. And in 2022, it dropped the notorious
stalking and harassment site Kiwi Farms citing an “immediate threat to
human life.”
But X is a mainstream social media platform — even if it may be home to
some extremist content — and it is not yet clear whether Brazil’s ban
would be enough for San Francisco-based Cloudflare to abandon it.
Cloudflare has a reputation for cooperating with governments, however,
and so may comply with an order from the Supreme Court to cease serving
as X's proxy, David Nemer, who specializes in the anthropology of
technology at the University of Virginia, told the AP.
Ordering internet service providers to block Cloudflare would be
impossible, since thousands of Brazilian companies depend on it, Nemer
previously wrote on Bluesky, another social media platform.
A person close to Cloudflare, who was not authorized to speak publicly
about a business relationship, said the network services provider did
not do anything specifically to help X get around Brazil’s ban. Rather,
X recently switched to Cloudflare from another provider, which could be
a reason the block is not working.
This person added that the workaround likely won't last long.
___
Ortutay reported from San Francisco. AP writer David Biller reported
from Rio.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |