A new online platform backed by former Brazilian congressman Eduardo Bolsonaro is being launched this week to collect cases its founders describe as digital censorship in Brazil, according to single-source reporting from Folha de S.Paulo.
The site, ResumosBrasil.com, presents itself as a news portal that uses artificial intelligence to summarize recent Brazilian political coverage and, in its own wording, ensure that dissident voices are heard. Folha reported that the project is supported by Eduardo Bolsonaro, the son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who now lives in self-exile in the United States.
The Platform
The initiative comes from Layer3.Press, a portal founded by Peter Yared, an American former CBS News executive. Its launch is scheduled to coincide with the Oslo Freedom Forum, a human-rights and freedom-of-expression conference held in Norway from June 1 to June 3, 2026.
According to the Oslo Freedom Forum’s own website, the event brings together human-rights defenders, journalists, artists, technologists and policymakers. Its 2026 program includes a Freedom Tech track focused on technologies such as Bitcoin, Nostr and open-source AI as tools for communication under repression.
Layer3.Press says the Brazilian portal will use AI to aggregate material from news websites, RSS feeds and X/Twitter profiles. Folha reported that the company publishes directly on Nostr, a decentralized social-network protocol often described by supporters as more resistant to blocking than conventional platforms.
Brazil as a Test Case
The organizers argue that Brazil has become a global example of social-media persecution, especially because of the so-called digital militias inquiry led by Justice Alexandre de Moraes of Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court (STF), the country’s highest court.
The STF says that inquiry investigates the alleged existence of an anti-democratic digital organization, including political, financing, production and publication cells, with the purpose of attacking democracy and the rule of law. In January 2024, the court announced that Moraes had extended the inquiry for another 90 days at the request of Brazil’s Federal Police, which said it needed more time to complete investigative steps.
That legal context is central to the dispute. Supporters of Bolsonaro and several right-wing digital figures say court-ordered removals, account blocks and investigations have crossed into censorship. The court and its defenders argue the probes target coordinated anti-democratic conduct, not ordinary political speech.
Political Backing
Folha reported that the platform’s founders said they had cooperation from prominent Bolsonaro-aligned figures, whom the project describes as dissidents. Eduardo Bolsonaro is quoted in the project’s promotional material saying he had seen “firsthand” how what he called the Brazilian regime prevents millions of his followers from seeing his social-media posts.
“Layer3.Press is the most effective solution to finally level the playing field,” Eduardo Bolsonaro said, according to Folha.
Other figures who praised the initiative, according to Folha, include influencer Allan dos Santos, former judge Ludmila Lins Grilo and commentator Leandro Ruschel. Like Eduardo Bolsonaro, Folha reported, they live in self-exile in the United States.
The launch adds an international technology layer to Brazil’s long-running fight over speech, elections and judicial power. It also places Bolsonaro-aligned complaints about online censorship before a global audience gathered around human rights and freedom technology, even as Brazilian authorities continue to defend the digital militias inquiry as a response to organized attacks on democratic institutions.


