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With concerns of market concentration, the government of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva — whom Musk called a “lapdog” of the supreme court justice who banned X — is keen for new entrants.
The communications minister recently met a representative from tech giant Amazon to discuss its rival service, which is expected to be available in Brazil from 2026. Anatel last week authorised challenger E-Space to operate in the country.
“Having a second or third supplier would greatly minimise this concern about the total unavailability of the service with no other alternative,” said Ayub.
Perhaps alive to the competition, Starlink is now advertising a time-limited offer for households in Brazil: R$1,000 for hardware, down from R$2,400, with “unlimited” high-speed internet for R$184 per month before taxes.
Additional reporting by Beatriz Langella in São Paulo
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Publish date : 2024-09-19 23:00:00
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