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Australia’s eSafety commissioner has dropped her legal bid to force Elon Musk’s social media site X to hide a violent video of a church stabbing in Sydney from global users. Julie Inman Grant ...
Here's what we expect. The dispute began last Tuesday when eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman-Grant ordered X and Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram) to remove footage of the stabbing of Assyrian ...
Australia is heading down a dangerous path as the Albanese Government and its eSafety Commissioner work hand in hand to censor information they deem counterproductive to the left's narrative ...
Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant has defended her decision to challenge Elon Musk’s X Corp in court after abandoning legal action over the billionaire’s refusal to take ...
The cuts have had an impact, according to eSafety, which said users reported response times to hateful tweets had slowed by 20% since Musk’s takeover. Company attempts to deal with hateful ...
The federal government’s internet safety watchdog, known as the eSafety Commissioner, had last month won an injunction against X over video footage of a knife attack at a Sydney church.
In short: The eSafety commissioner won a two-day injunction requiring social media platform X to hide from all users certain content relating to the Wakeley stabbing. X had hidden the content from ...
Elon Musk will bank his legal victory against the eSafety commissioner over videos of the Wakeley church stabbing and take it round the world as part of his free-speech crusade. Justice Geoffrey ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. X plans to file a legal challenge against the office of the eSafety Commissioner, after the Elon Musk owned social network was ...
Australia’s eSafety commissioner has made a pitch for extra “technical regulation powers” that it could use against certain online app makers, and platforms that turn a blind eye to ...
This is a concern with any legislation.” eSafety has said that automated content-scanning technology like hash-matching can respect users’ privacy by only flagging illegal material.
As Australia’s online safety regulator, it is vital for eSafety to have the technology capability to keep pace with the ever-changing harms reported to it and discovered through its research.