Brazil regulator authorizes fresh 7,500 Starlink satellites to operate locally
The decision more than doubles the 4,408 Starlink satellites currently allowed by Anatel to operate, according to the statement from the regulator.
SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Anatel said the decision also includes the expansion of frequency bands, adding it decided to maintain the expiration date for SpaceX's authorizations for 2027.
Despite the approval, Anatel also said its members see the need to update Brazil's current regulatory framework, noting there is a gap to deal with market domain, spatial sustainability and digital sovereignty.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
24 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Tesla awards Elon Musk $29 billion in stock amid compensation battle. What to know
Tesla is awarding Elon Musk around $29 billion in shares as a legal battle looms over a prior multibillion dollar compensation plan for the chief executive. A special committee of the company's board of directors said the interim pay package would motivate Musk to "stay focused" on Tesla as the electric vehicle maker pivots to robotics and artificial intelligence. Under the pay plan, Musk would receive 96 million shares valued at around $300 each as long as he remains in an executive position at Tesla for the next two years. On Musk's social media platform X, the special committee said the executive has not received "meaningful compensation" for his work for eight years. One of the world's richest people, Musk owns about 13% of Tesla shares, making him the largest individual shareholder. The company is worth more than $969 billion based on current share prices. Tesla shares on Monday closed at $309.26, up 2%. Why did the board approve this plan? Tesla board members Robyn Denholm and Kathleen Wilson-Thompson said on X that the $29 billion award is a first step, "good faith" effort to compensate Musk in lieu of a longer term plan. As Musk splits his time and energy among several ventures, including AI startup xAI and space exploration firm SpaceX, Tesla board members said they are eager to keep his attention focused on the electric vehicle maker. Musk has garnered criticism from investors for getting distracted by his temporary role in the Trump administration. Tesla shares have fallen more than 18% this year following significant brand damage and plunging vehicle sales. The company is at a critical turning point where it must pivot to robotics and autonomous driving technology to remain competitive, analysts said. Musk has overseen Tesla's robotaxi launch in Austin, Texas, and frequently touts the potential of the humanoid robot Optimus. "While these impending changes are exciting, the outcomes are not guaranteed," wrote Denholm and Wilson-Thompson. "It is imperative to retain and motivate our extraordinary talent, beginning with Elon." "We are confident that this award will incentivize Elon to remain at Tesla," they wrote. What happened to Musk's previous pay package? A Delaware judge has twice struck down a 2018 executive pay package that would have awarded Musk more than $55 billion in stock, arguing that Musk exerted unfair control over the negotiation process. In 2018, Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta sued the company to block the compensation plan, claiming the board misled investors and was not transparent about the approval process. Tornetta and his attorneys also argued that the board was too susceptible to Musk's influence. Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, the judge in the case, sided with Tornetta and rescinded the entire pay package, calling it an "unfathomable sum." McCormick denied the pay plan again in 2024, after the board held another vote to approve it. Tesla has since appealed McCormick's second decision, citing his contributions to Tesla's growth. "This compensation issue has been a constant concern of shareholders once the Delaware soap opera began," Tesla analyst Dan Ives wrote in a note. If the 2018 plan is ultimately approved after legal battles, the recent $29 billion package will be thrown out to prevent double dipping, the board said. How does Musk's pay compare to other chief executives? The pay package brought to court in 2018 was the largest potential compensation plan for an executive of a publicly traded company, McCormick said, worth 250 times as much as the median peer pay. The new plan is still the highest executive compensation package by far. Blackstone Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman earned $1.39 billion in 2008, compared to the $29 billion interim package for Musk. Another top earner, Palantir CEO Alexander Karp, earned $1.10 billion in 2020. In 2018, Musk agreed to forgo a cash salary for his work at Tesla and instead receive stock options based on his ability to meet company milestones. Board members argue that the value Musk brings to the company is worth hefty compensation. "We can all agree that Elon has delivered the transformative and unprecedented growth that was required to earn all milestones of the 2018 CEO Performance Award," the board's special committee wrote. "Retaining Elon is more important than ever before." Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Billionaire founder hoping for a Trump pardon sets sights on space
Billionaire founder hoping for a Trump pardon sets sights on space originally appeared on TheStreet. Justin Sun, the billionaire founder of the crypto firm Tron Inc. (Nasdaq: TRON), recently made a spaceflight aboard the Blue Origin, the Jeff Bezos-owned aerospace company. "A childhood dream from thirty years ago has finally come true," Sun wrote on X on Aug. 4. The crypto entrepreneur's spaceflight is among the most spectacular phenomena in the tech world, as it marks a unique intersection of crypto, fintech, and the space race. Naturally, the crypto community was piqued as to who else from the industry will board the spaceflight next. When an X user asked if Changpeng "CZ" Zhao, the billionaire founder of the Binance crypto exchange, will be the one, CZ said he might try but only after Elon Musk. "I am not an early adopter in this area," CZ remarked. Founded in 2017, Binance has been the world's largest crypto exchange by trading volume for years now. Notably, the exchange invested $500 million in Musk's acquisition of Twitter, later rebranded to X, in October the world's wealthiest man, is the leading tech mogul who leads companies like the space tech firm SpaceX, the electric car maker Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA), and the social media platform X. While SpaceX sends human spaceflights and it even sent the first known Bitcoiner, Chun Wang, the co-founder of the Bitcoin mining company f2pool, to space on March 31, Musk himself has never been aboard such a journey. The space tech company, along with Tesla, also holds Bitcoin on its corporate balance sheet. Musk himself once talked highly of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Dogecoin. Billionaire founder hoping for a Trump pardon sets sights on space first appeared on TheStreet on Aug 4, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Aug 4, 2025, where it first appeared. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
No, Vine isn't Coming Back
This story was originally published on Social Media Today. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Social Media Today newsletter. So Vine isn't really coming back after all. As you may recall, a couple of weeks back, X owner Elon Musk announced that X was planning to bring back Vine, but in AI form. At the time, I speculated that this was actually about xAI's new 'Imagine' text-to-video tool, which is currently in Beta testing among selected X Premium users. And now, Elon has confirmed this, posting that: So as Musk says, X isn't bringing back Vine, the app. But instead, in his view at least, the new Grok Imagine functionality is 'AI Vine,' and will provide similar functionality and engagement as Vine did in the past. But it won't. I mean, sure, there's going to be a new influx of AI-generated video on X, which will be largely dominated by right-wing memes (as this is the primary audience that can currently access the option, being paying X Premium users). But it's nothing like Vine, which was TikTok before TikTok, providing an endless, full-screen, vertically-aligned feed of short-form video clips, which helped to kickstart the careers of many now-established online creators. Vine, as many have noted, was really the beginning of the short-form video trend. But without a dedicated app and presentation format, and without providing a stream of super short-form content (Vines were originally only 6-seconds long), this will be nothing like what Vine was. Instead, it's just going to be more weird AI-generated video clips posted to X, of which some will be good, some will be interesting. And a lot will be rubbish. Which, I guess, maybe does actually replicate what Vine had been, but the user experience and engagement process is not the same. And we've already got this in TikTok and via Reels. AI-generated clips have been gradually infiltrating these platforms as well, so enabling the same functionality on X likely won't have a major impact. So, sorry to burst your bubble Vine fans, but Vine isn't coming back. All that's happening is that random AI clips will now be filtering through your X feed. Though as Elon also notes, they are working to restore the Vine video archive. So you can check out videos from ten years ago. Maybe find some classics. But again, this is not the return of Vine, but a re-angling of what Vine kind of was, in order to promote xAI's latest tool. X hasn't announced plans for a broader roll-out of its 'Imagine' text-to-video tools as yet. Sign in to access your portfolio