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Rede known as Redecard is a Brazilian multi-brand acquirer with 25 brands in its portfolio, for credit, debit and benefit cards. [2] Its activities include merchant acquiring, capturing, transmission, processing and settlement of credit and debit card transactions, prepayment of receivables to merchants (resulting from sales made by means of credit cards), rental of POS terminals, check ...
Rede Brasil Total de Serviços Comunicação Ltda. — 4.4 kW redengt.com.br: ZYB 898 Rede Século 21: Valinhos: 53 54 Fundação Século Vinte e Um — — redeseculo21.com.br: ZYB 905 TV Aparecida: Aparecida: 59 52 Fundação Nossa Senhora Aparecida 5 kW
Telefônica Brasil, trading as Vivo, [3] is a Brazilian telecommunications group, subsidiary of Spanish Telefónica. It was originally formed as part of Telebrás, the state-owned telecom monopoly at the time. In 1998, Telebrás was demerged and privatized. Telefónica bought Telesp, the São Paulo division, and rebranded it to Telefónica. The ...
The Sustainability Network (Portuguese: Rede Sustentabilidade, REDE) is an environmentalist Brazilian political party [2] founded in 2013 by Marina Silva, a Brazilian politician from Acre. [10] The party formed a strategic alliance with the Brazilian Socialist Party for the 2014 Brazilian general election , until its registration as an ...
RedeTV! (Portuguese: [ˈʁedʒi teˈve], also Rede TV! or RTV! or TV Ômega) is a Brazilian television network owned by Amilcare Dallevo and Marcelo de Carvalho.It is the newest television network, among the five major networks in Brazil, being a relaunch of Rede Manchete in 1999.
Redevida (stylized in upper case) is a Brazilian Catholic television network headquartered in São José do Rio Preto, SP, covering 90% of the Brazilian territory through affiliated networks and satellite.
Band Vale FM — radio station from Taubaté, São Paulo, with music and news programming. [23]Brasil Radio (WRSO) — radio station from Orlando, Florida, United States, which broadcasts the programming of the Grupo Bandeirantes radio networks in partnership with Cafifa Media Group.
This changed in 1998, as a result of the privatization of Telebras, and the blossoming of private companies, such as Telefônica, Telemar and Brasil Telecom. With the surge of competition for customers, coupled with government-imposed requirements, came improvements in cost, quality, and availability of the Internet to Brazilians. [citation needed]