Brazil gives Meta 72 hours to explain changes to fact-checking program

Brazil gives Meta 72 hours to explain changes to fact-checking program


Jaque Silva | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Brazil’s government will give Meta until Monday to explain the changes to its fact-checking program, Solicitor General Jorge Messias said on Friday.

The move comes after the social media company scrapped its U.S. fact-checking program and reduced curbs on discussions around topics such as immigration and gender identity.

It is not immediately clear exactly what will happen after the deadline expires.

“I’d like to express the Brazilian government’s enormous concern about the policy adopted by the Meta company, which is like an airport windsock, changing its position all the time according to the winds,” Messias, the government’s top lawyer, told reporters in Brasilia.

“Brazilian society will not be at the mercy of this kind of policy,” Messias added.

On Thursday, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the changes were “extremely serious” and announced he had called a meeting to discuss the topic.

Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In announcing the move on Tuesday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg cited “too many mistakes and too much censorship.” A spokesperson said on Tuesday that, for now, Meta was planning the changes only for the U.S. market.

Reuters, which was a Meta partner on its U.S. fact-checking program, has declined to comment.



Source

Recession odds climb on Wall Street as economy shows cracks beneath the surface
World

Recession odds climb on Wall Street as economy shows cracks beneath the surface

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell last week pushed back when asked whether stagflation posed a threat to the U.S. economy. His successor may face a tougher challenge, as Wall Street forecasters raise their expectations of recession, brought on in part by the Iran war and potential for higher prices. In recent days, economists have pulled […]

Read More
Arm jumps 13% in premarket after saying first in-house chip set to generate  billion in revenue
World

Arm jumps 13% in premarket after saying first in-house chip set to generate $15 billion in revenue

Rene Haas, chief executive officer of Arm Holdings Plc, holds the AGI CPU chip during the Arm Everywhere event in San Francisco, California, US, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images Arm jumped in early market trading Wednesday after the company said its newly released in-house chip would generate […]

Read More
Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise
World

Private credit’s ‘zero-loss fantasy’ is coming to an end as defaults and fund exits rise

Deteriorating asset quality, collateral markdowns and a growing rush for the exits are rattling private credit markets and prompting comparisons to the Global Financial Crisis. But a spike in loan defaults, while painful, could help shake out pockets of stress from the $3 trillion sector and provide what one industry pro calls a “healthy reset” […]

Read More