BREAKING NEWS
Australia rejects Elon Musk's claim that it plans to control access to the internet
Read full article: Australia rejects Elon Musk's claim that it plans to control access to the internetAn Australian Cabinet minister has rejected X Corp. owner Elon Musk’s allegation that the government intends to control all Australians' access to the internet through legislation that would ban young children from social media.
Australian online watchdog drops court case against X over stabbing video
Read full article: Australian online watchdog drops court case against X over stabbing videoAustralia’s online safety watchdog has dropped her Federal Court case aimed at forcing X Corp. to take down a video of a Sydney bishop being stabbed.
Australian judge says it is unreasonable to require X to hide video of church stabbing for all users
Read full article: Australian judge says it is unreasonable to require X to hide video of church stabbing for all usersAn Australian judge says it would be unreasonable for the country’s internet safety watchdog to require social platform X to hide video of a bishop being stabbed in a Sydney church from all of its users around the world.
Australian judge lifts court ban on X showing video of Sydney church stabbing
Read full article: Australian judge lifts court ban on X showing video of Sydney church stabbingAn Australian judge has lifted a ban on the social media platform X showing Australians a video of a bishop being stabbed in a Sydney church.
Australian safety watchdog fines social platform X $385,000 for not tackling child abuse content
Read full article: Australian safety watchdog fines social platform X $385,000 for not tackling child abuse contentAustralia’s online safety watchdog has fined X — the social media platform formerly known as Twitter — 610,500 Australian dollars ($385,000) for failing to fully explain how it tackled child sexual exploitation content.
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Australian prime minister criticizes TikTok suicide video
Read full article: Australian prime minister criticizes TikTok suicide videoCANBERRA Australian regulators have ruled out prosecuting TikTok over an apparent suicide video under tough new laws prohibiting some forms of violent online images, but the prime minister urged social media companies on Wednesday to take more responsibility for offensive content. Australia last year took extraordinary legislative steps to remove violent content from internet platforms. Social media executives can be imprisoned if their platforms stream real violence under the new laws. The office is working with social media companies to to remove content and monitor the situation, Inman Grant said in a statement. Social media companies need to use the tools at their disposal to detect and remove this content much more quickly, she said.