Audio By Carbonatix
Brazil's Supreme Court has said it is lifting a ban on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.
In his decision, Justice Alexandre de Moraes said that he authorised the "immediate return" of X's activities in the country after it paid hefty fines and blocked accounts accused of spreading misinformation.
According to a statement, the site has paid fines totalling 28 million reais ($5.1m; £3.8m) and agreed to appoint a local representative, as required by Brazilian law.
Moraes had blocked access to the platform, owned by Elon Musk, after it had refused to ban several profiles deemed by the government to be spreading misinformation about the 2022 Brazilian Presidential election.
Anatel, Brazil's telecoms watchdog, has been instructed to ensure service has resumed for more than 20 million users in the country within 24 hours.
After months of defying the court’s orders, Musk fired the company’s Brazilian staff in late August and closed X's office in Brazil.
"The decision to close X offices in Brazil was difficult," Musk, who also runs electric carmaker Tesla and rocket company SpaceX, wrote at the time.
A self-declared "free-speech absolutist", the billionaire entrepreneur had described Justice Moraes’ move to ban several dozen accounts as an abuse of power and a violation of free speech.
Several days later, Justice Moraes ordered for the entire platform to be blocked across the country.
Many users switched to alternative sites such as Bluesky, and demand for VPNs (Virtual Proxy Networks) in Brazil soared.
But in September, the platform began to comply with the court's orders in an apparent U-turn.
On Tuesday, X said that it was "proud to return to Brazil".
"Giving tens of millions of Brazilians access to our indispensable platform was paramount throughout this entire process," its government affairs team wrote in a statement.
It appears that X has now complied with all of the judge’s demands in order to have the ban lifted.
Brazil is one of the biggest markets for the platform across the globe, as well as its largest in Latin America, with an estimated 22 million users.
Latest Stories
-
EBID partners Women of Valour as headline sponsor for London 2026 event
6 minutes -
What’s the point in issuing statements?– Franklin Cudjoe criticises NDC over Baba Jamal u-turn
11 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Wednesday, February 11, 2026
19 minutes -
Wacam demands investigation into officials after JoyNews galamsey extortion exposé
24 minutes -
New VAT won’t spike prices – GRA hits back at Abossey Okai traders
36 minutes -
GRA cracks down on VAT defaulters with new enforcement team
47 minutes -
GREY launches first community education project focused on dignity and access
48 minutes -
What gold and copper tell us about the new logic of mining investment in Africa
2 hours -
BoG revises directive on Net Open Position limits
2 hours -
They think we’ve stolen their cocoa – LBCs blame payment delays for farmer anger
2 hours -
FIDC Africa Infrastructure Conference 2026 launched in Accra
2 hours -
$185m unpaid – LBCs say Cocobod owes them for two seasons
2 hours -
We’ve pre-financed cocoa for 7 years – LBCs say banks are owed more than farmers
3 hours -
Blue Water Guards, NAIMOS, IMCIM… but rivers still poisoned – John Awuah slams galamsey fight
3 hours -
Airport rename debate while rivers die? – John Awuah blasts CSOs
3 hours
