A judge in Sao Paulo has ordered WhatsApp to shut down for 48 hours, starting at 9PM Eastern tonight.
WhatsApp is the single most used app in Brazil, with about 93 million users, or 93% of the country's internet population. It's a particularly useful service for Brazil's youth and poor, many who cannot afford to pay the most expensive plans on the planet.
Brazilian telco's have been lobbying for months to convince the government that WhatsApp's voice service is unregulated and illegal (not entirely unlike the taxi industry's posture on Uber), and have publicly blamed the "WhatsApp effect" for driving millions of Brazilians to abandon their cell phone lines.
A WhatsApp shut-down would be akin to taking half the country off the electricity grid because of an industry squabble over the impending threat of solar power.
Update: Brazil court lifts suspension of Facebook's WhatsApp service
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 17 2015, @06:27PM
Ah, but the libertarians/ancaps/neoliberal-economists sophists have a casuistic explanation for that too! Any such failing of capitalism in the way you describe is only because the government was meddling. If the government was sufficiently small, this would never happen. If it happens, then the government isn't sufficiently small. QED. Since capitalism is perfect and always optimally efficient, any problems that appear to be caused by capitalism must be in actuality the result of exogenous forces and not an inherent flaw or contradiction in the perfection that is market capitalism.