WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

558

In an unexpected turn of events, it seems that the social media platform X did not take its blocking by Brazilian authorities lying down, and made changes that led to users in the country having access to it once again.

(With material from agencies and Tupy Report channel on Telegram.)

Earlier today some Brazilian users on the platform reported having access to their accounts, despite the Supreme Court’s decision to suspend the platform in the country for non-compliance with its tyrannical judicial rulings.

The Supreme Court was quick to confirm to the press that the social media blockade remains in effect.

The authorities are investigating reports of user access to X.

Initially, it was thought to be just ‘an instability in the blockade of some networks’, the source said.

But it soon became apparent that the X platform would be using methods to circumvent the ban in the country.

The Supreme Court and the National Telecommunications Agency (Anatel) issued statements on the failures in the blockade of the social media platform X in Brazil, repeating that there has been no change in the decision by Justice Alexandre de Moraes who suspended the platform on August 30. . .

Archive (archive.today)

>In an unexpected turn of events, it seems that the social media platform X did not take its blocking by Brazilian authorities lying down, and made changes that led to users in the country having access to it once again. >(With material from agencies and Tupy Report channel on Telegram.) >Earlier today some Brazilian users on the platform reported having access to their accounts, despite the Supreme Court’s decision to suspend the platform in the country for non-compliance with its tyrannical judicial rulings. >The Supreme Court was quick to confirm to the press that the social media blockade remains in effect. >The authorities are investigating reports of user access to X. >Initially, it was thought to be just ‘an instability in the blockade of some networks’, the source said. >But it soon became apparent that the X platform would be using methods to circumvent the ban in the country. >The Supreme Court and the National Telecommunications Agency (Anatel) issued statements on the failures in the blockade of the social media platform X in Brazil, repeating that there has been no change in the decision by Justice Alexandre de Moraes who suspended the platform on August 30. . . [Archive](https://archive.today/PPcAx)

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

oh, for fucks sake, they just blocked the IP?!

he should have first send out DNS updates so that Twitter now appeared to have the IP address of say Brazil's government or Brazil's tax payments websites.

then , after that fun died down, he could _then_ have reassigned x a new set of IP addresses.

[–] 0 pt

ah, change to a cloudflare block. good enough. go Elon, you Teflon fake.