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Brazil signs Marco Civil, its Internet bill of rights, into law

Brazil just took Internet freedom to new heights.

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Kevin Collier

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The world’s first major Internet Bill of rights is finally law.

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Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff signed “Marco Civil” Wednesday morning, merely hours after the Senate passed it late Tuesday evening.

Tweeting that evening, Rousseff praised the bill as a “fundamental step to guarantee freedom, privacy, and respect for Internet users’ rights.”

Saudo o Senado pela aprovação do #MarcoCivil, passo fundamental p/ garantia da liberdade, da privacidade e …

— Dilma Rousseff (@dilmabr) April 23, 2014

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…e do respeito aos direitos do usuário da internet

— Dilma Rousseff (@dilmabr) April 23, 2014

Marco Civil was hailed as a landmark bill, providing a legal standard for a host of issues important to Internet freedom advocates, like net neutrality and protection from copyright law abuse. And Rousseff’s touting of its privacy provisions should come as no surprise: she was among the most vocally outraged heads of state when news broke that the U.S.’s National Security Agency had extensive programs to track Brazilian communications.

The signing also has symbolic value: it kicks off the world Internet governance meeting Net Mundial, which began Wednesday in Brazil.

Illustration by Jason Reed

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