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Over the years, '''SouJava''' has organized several Java conferences in Brazil, <ref name="SouJava"/><ref>{{cite web
|url = https://jcp.org/en/press/news/awards/2011award_nominees#soujava
|title = JCP Program and Industry Awards
|accessdate =July 5, 2015 |author=[[Java Community Process]]
|date = 2011
|publisher=[[Java Community Process]]
|quote= SouJava [...] is a non-profit organization that hosts activities and events all over the country, including the sizable JustJava conference in Brazil, the university-focused Abapuru, and two international developer conferences, Sou+Java and CaféBrasil.
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url = http://soujava.org.br/eventos/justjava-2012/
|title = JustJava 2012
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|publisher=[[O'Reilly]]
|quote = Bruno is president of SouJava, Brazil's largest Java User Group, where he has led the group's Javali Project, an ambitious umbrella project that hosts 10 large open source projects. Javali, which includes a project to create an open source Java runtime, is targeted to bring software development into Brazil's open source discussions. Bruno also co-authored SouJava's Open Source Manifest, which discusses open source and open standards as the way to correctly apply and succeed with open source in Brazil. The document positively influenced the adoption of open source in Brazil.
}}</ref> which in turn forced [[Sun Microsystems]] to open -source Java.<ref>{{cite web
|url = http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/cmp/ddj0208/index.php?startpage=18
|title = South America Software Development: A Climate of Creativity