Digital Law in Brazil - Current Hot Topics | Brazil’s Supreme Court Redefines Platform Liability: Toward a Global Model of Digital Diligence

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In a landmark decision, Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court (STF) declared the partial unconstitutionality of Article 19 of the Marco Civil da Internet, reshaping the country’s approach to online platform liability. The ruling introduces a layered model of diligence and responsibility that aligns Brazil with evolving global standards such as the EU’s Digital Services Act and other emerging regimes of digital accountability.

A shift from reactive to preventive responsibility

For over a decade, Article 19 of Brazil’s Internet Bill of Rights (Marco Civil da Internet) shielded platforms from civil liability for third-party content unless they failed to remove it after a specific court order. This approach, modeled on liberal free-speech principles, sought to prevent private censorship while safeguarding open expression online.

However, the Supreme Court found that this purely reactive regime failed to provide adequate protection for fundamental rights such as dignity, privacy, and democratic integrity. By ruling the provision partially unconstitutional, the Court signaled a decisive move toward a more preventive and differentiated framework of responsibility.

A layered model of diligence

The STF’s decision establishes a stratified model of platform liability based on the type of content and the degree of control the platform exercises:

Global convergence in platform accountability

Brazil’s new framework joins a global movement redefining intermediary responsibility:

In this context, Brazil’s approach stands out for its constitutional foundation and the central role of the judiciary. Instead of relying solely on statutory regulation, the STF interpreted existing law through constitutional principles such as human dignity, freedom of expression, and privacy, embedding platform governance within the broader framework of fundamental rights.

Practical implications for companies and counsel

Digital service providers operating in Brazil — whether local or foreign — will now face new compliance expectations.

They must strengthen internal procedures for:

For lawyers and compliance professionals, the ruling expands advisory roles beyond litigation. Counsel will increasingly need to help clients design preventive governance frameworks, balancing freedom of expression with the duty to mitigate harm and manage systemic risks.

A constitutional laboratory for digital regulation

The STF’s decision marks a turning point in Brazil’s digital regulation landscape, introducing a principle-based model of responsibility rooted in diligence, transparency, and accountability.

Finally, this landmark ruling suggests that platforms must act with greater care and promptness in protecting users from manifestly illegal content.

In doing so, Brazil positions itself as a constitutional laboratory in the global debate on platform governance — bridging the liberal tradition of the Internet Bill of Rights with the risk-based regulatory models emerging in Europe and beyond.

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