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Granite Act: A U.S. Free-Speech Backlash Puts Brazil's Top Judge Under Scrutiny
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Outside Brazil, few people knew Alexandre de Moraes until his court orders started hitting big social-media platforms.
As a Supreme Court justice, he led investigations into online attacks on Brazilian institutions and ordered removals of posts that critics say went far beyond Brazil's borders, reaching U.S. users and companies.
The Granite Act grows out of the backlash to that reach. First drafted as a state bill in Wyoming, it is now promoted as a template for other states and for Congress.
The idea is blunt: if a foreign government, agency or official tries to censor speech that would be protected in the U.S., affected Americans could sue them in U.S. courts.
To make that threat real, the proposal would pierce the usual shield of sovereign immunity in censorship cases and open the door to very large damage awards.
Granite Act Signals Pushback
In plain language, it tells foreign officials: touch American speech and you might face an American judge and a heavy bill. Supporters say Moraes fits the template.
They accuse him of using sealed orders, steep daily fines and threats to block platforms to pressure companies into removing political content.
For them, this is one example of regulators in Brasília, Brussels and London exporting stricter speech rules worldwide through global tech firms.
Behind this sits frustration among Americans who see foreign agencies punishing their companies while U.S. citizens have no direct way to push back.
The Granite project channels that mood into a clear warning: if you censor Americans online, expect consequences on American soil. For expats and foreign readers, the lesson is simple.
The internet is turning into a space where legal systems collide. If measures like the Granite Act advance, a ruling in Brazil could end up tested in a U.S. courtroom, and the online arena will grow more contested and political.
A planned U.S. Granite Act would let Americans sue foreign officials who try to censor their online speech.
Brazilian Supreme Court justice Alexandre de Moraes is already cited by backers as the main example.
The real battle is over who sets speech rules on global platforms used far beyond any one country.
Outside Brazil, few people knew Alexandre de Moraes until his court orders started hitting big social-media platforms.
As a Supreme Court justice, he led investigations into online attacks on Brazilian institutions and ordered removals of posts that critics say went far beyond Brazil's borders, reaching U.S. users and companies.
The Granite Act grows out of the backlash to that reach. First drafted as a state bill in Wyoming, it is now promoted as a template for other states and for Congress.
The idea is blunt: if a foreign government, agency or official tries to censor speech that would be protected in the U.S., affected Americans could sue them in U.S. courts.
To make that threat real, the proposal would pierce the usual shield of sovereign immunity in censorship cases and open the door to very large damage awards.
Granite Act Signals Pushback
In plain language, it tells foreign officials: touch American speech and you might face an American judge and a heavy bill. Supporters say Moraes fits the template.
They accuse him of using sealed orders, steep daily fines and threats to block platforms to pressure companies into removing political content.
For them, this is one example of regulators in Brasília, Brussels and London exporting stricter speech rules worldwide through global tech firms.
Behind this sits frustration among Americans who see foreign agencies punishing their companies while U.S. citizens have no direct way to push back.
The Granite project channels that mood into a clear warning: if you censor Americans online, expect consequences on American soil. For expats and foreign readers, the lesson is simple.
The internet is turning into a space where legal systems collide. If measures like the Granite Act advance, a ruling in Brazil could end up tested in a U.S. courtroom, and the online arena will grow more contested and political.
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