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Brazil Files Twitter Injunction To Take Down Roadblock Warning Tweets

Brazil Twitter

STAN LEHMAN   02/ 9/12 06:24 PM ET  AP

SAO PAULO — A request for an injunction to stop Twitter users from alerting drivers to police roadblocks, radar traps and drunk-driving checkpoints could make Brazil the first country to take Twitter up on its plan to censor content at governments' requests.

Twitter unveiled plans last month that would allow country-specific censorship of tweets that might break local laws.

"As far as we know this is the first time that a country has attempted to take Twitter up on their country-by-country take down," Eva Galperin of the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a telephone interview Thursday.

Galperin, who described the foundation as "a digital liberties organization," predicted governments will be taking similar opportunities to censor Twitter traffic.

"Twitter has given these countries the tool and now Brazil has chosen to use it," she said.

Carlos Eduardo Rodrigues Alves, a spokesman for the federal prosecutor's office, said the injunction request was filed Monday. He said a judge was expected to announce in the next few days whether he will issue the order against Twitter users.

The attorney general's office said in a statement that tweeted alerts about police operations jeopardize efforts to reduce traffic accidents and curb auto thefts and the transportation of drugs and weapons.

According to the statement, traffic accidents throughout Brazil kill 55,000 people each year and cost the country 24.6 billion reals, or about $14.3 billion.

If the judge rules in favor of the injunction, anyone who violates it could be hit with a daily fine of 500,000 reals ($291,000), the statement said.

San Francisco-based Twitter Inc. said in an email that it had "nothing to share on this issue."

Under Twitter's new policy, a tweet breaking a law in one country can be taken down there at a government's request. But it adds that censored tweets will still be seen elsewhere.

Twitter has said it will post a censorship notice whenever a tweet is removed and will post the removal requests it receives.

It said it has no plans to remove tweets unless it receives a request from government officials, companies or another outside party that believes the message is illegal.

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SAO PAULO — A request for an injunction to stop Twitter users from alerting drivers to police roadblocks, radar traps and drunk-driving checkpoints could make Brazil the first country to take Tw...
SAO PAULO — A request for an injunction to stop Twitter users from alerting drivers to police roadblocks, radar traps and drunk-driving checkpoints could make Brazil the first country to take Tw...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Bourbon
03:55 PM on 02/13/2012
How DARE twitter cut into the PM's lucrative business of shaking down for bribes people who had one or two beers at these traffic blitzes!
06:42 AM on 02/13/2012
Oh no, we can't control the masses, panic, panic!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LangstonA
Attempting to stand in the gap
10:45 PM on 02/12/2012
This is so silly. Brazilians will just come up with slang/code for police blockades so that their tweets will get past the filters. And once the authorities figure out what the slang is and start filtering for it, Brazilians will come up with new slang/code.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:31 AM on 02/12/2012
Twitter was the means to allow the rest of the world footage of widespread Iranian protest at the time of elections despite a clampdown on traditional media.

This decision plays directly to the wishes of autocrats.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dknyc00
Reality has a well-known liberal bias. S.C.
10:41 PM on 02/10/2012
If I know where those radars are I definitely make sure I am not above the speed limit, so no laws will be broken!!! Now, let everyone know where those radars are and you will see how even more people will be following the rules... theres no need for "traps."
Authorities should spend more time promoting ways for people to do the right thing instead of TRAPING them into committing crimes or fixing mistakes after it already happened...
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
05:09 AM on 02/11/2012
I agree. It's rather like having police cruisers parked in problem areas with their lights on. It acts as a deterrent.
06:04 PM on 02/10/2012
Ok when is people going to wake up and realize that if you want to do business in another country you have to play by their rules? Microsoft and hundreds of other tech names and brands must adhere to various government stipulations before their product can be sold and used in other nations. Twitter is no different.
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
03:52 PM on 02/10/2012
Brazil has NO suit. Twitter did nothing wrong. There are no damages.
03:47 PM on 02/10/2012
So, what if I call a bunch of people to tell them where a radar trap is?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:27 PM on 02/10/2012
If Twitter agrees to this, Stop using Twitter.
Make sure internet media companies understand that the Users will not tolerate compromising freedom of speech, for cash... and that other nations understand that their economies will be left behind to atrophy if they can't grow up and embrace the modern concept of individual liberty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dknyc00
Reality has a well-known liberal bias. S.C.
10:27 PM on 02/10/2012
Yeah lets get rid of all local laws and enjoy "individual liberties" ... at what cost?!?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:08 AM on 02/11/2012
I didn't suggest that... I suggested applying pressure to Twitter, a US corporation, to uphold US laws regarding free expression and censorship.
And any foriegn nations that don't want to be part of the world wide web, created by nations that defend such freedoms, are perfectly free to foster their backward and repressive agendas in their own, separate, network.

But as with free markets, if they don't like the freedom, they can stay put of the market.

I do not agree that the west should compromise core principles ( that, let's face it, made theinternet possible) just for the sake of including cultures that can not abide those principles...
And, frankly, if we allow media to voluntarily make such compromises, piecemeal for base profit, it won,t be long before our own government is compromising those freedoms, here. As in the CIA co-opting telecom companies to violate civil rights, just a few years ago.
SOPA was stopped, and if twitter lost enough users in protest, they would backpedal, too.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
08:43 AM on 02/11/2012
You have freedom of speech in the USA, not in say Brazil.

Other countrys do not have the same laws the USA does.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:52 PM on 02/11/2012
So what? It's a world wide web and it's entire purpose is the free exchange of information.
Any nation unwilling to play by those rules should develop their own, internal web.
Not be allowed to compromise other people's freedom.
If they don't like their people being able to read what other people have to say... Or don't want their own people to be able to say what they want to say... Then they shouldn't be allowed to participate at all.
See how far that gets them in the coming century.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerry Bourbon
03:57 PM on 02/13/2012
USA=Right, Brazil=Wrong on this one. Since Twitter is an American company...
02:25 PM on 02/10/2012
How is the government going to monitor every Twitter post? It seems a little crazy to think a government will monitor every single "tweet" by their citizens, there has to be millions of them a day. Even if the government does succeed in monitoring Twitter, what is to stop users from finding another source to post the same information such as google+ or Facebook? Did the Brazilian government also outlaw apps such as Trapster? In todays technology environment, it woud be like the government monitoring CB communications of truck drivers in the days before modern day technology.
01:17 PM on 02/10/2012
I don't think it's right to sue a company because of how an end user is using the product (unless the product was designed for that intended purpose of breaking the law). Telephone companies aren't sued when phones are used in an illegal way... is that a comparable?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dknyc00
Reality has a well-known liberal bias. S.C.
10:30 PM on 02/10/2012
Gun companies aren't sued when a gun user commits a homicide either...
I believe Brazil has a point but they are definitely suing the wrong "person."
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Ruyur
I can't believe you like money too. We should h...
11:58 AM on 02/10/2012
The Society for Creative Euphemisms thinks this is a wonderful idea.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rlj13
Torn between liberal and libertarian
11:53 AM on 02/10/2012
Wow, twitter sucks.
11:18 AM on 02/10/2012
This is really another sad part.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susanbsbi
Slave to 3 cats
11:16 AM on 02/10/2012
Well if they don't tweet it , they will just ext the information. Brazil get over it, this is the century of Media and it is here to stay. Why do you want this information squashed, is there some illegal activity going on that you don't want the world to know? Well that isn't going to happen, there is more than one source of getting that information out there.