Share and Follow


Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has branded Elon Musk “arrogant” after the billionaire appeared to thumb his nose at new court action taken by Australia’s eSafety Commissioner.
His social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, was to block all users from violent footage related to an in a western Sydney church on 15 April.

But Musk and his company have raised free speech and jurisdictional concerns over the orders made by the Federal Court.

“We’ll do what’s necessary to take on this arrogant billionaire who thinks he’s above the law, but also above common decency,” Albanese told ABC television on Tuesday.
“What the eSafety Commissioner is doing is doing her job to protect the interests of Australians.
“The idea that someone would go to court for the right to put up violent content on a platform shows how out of touch Mr Musk is.”

“Social media needs to have social responsibility with it. Mr Musk is not showing any.”

Other social media companies have complied with the eSafety Commissioner’s requests without complaint, Albanese added.
“But this bloke thinks he’s above the Australian law, that he’s above common decency,” he told Sky News on Tuesday.
“No one is above the law, not Elon Musk, not any Australian citizen when it comes to operating here in Australia.”

The eSafety Commissioner complained to the Federal Court that the “graphic and violent” footage was geo-blocked by X for Australian audiences, instead of being taken down globally.

There are bipartisan calls for harsher sanctions for social media platforms after the distressing footage of the stabbing of an Assyrian bishop and a violent riot outside the church in Wakeley circulated.
Graphic footage of a man rampaging through just days earlier, killing six people, also spread online.
Over the weekend, X said , saying the eSafety Commissioner had no authority.
In the Federal Court, the commissioner urgently applied to suppress the footage on specific URLs.
The fact an Australian user could access the content via an overseas virtual private network showed it had not been removed, the commissioner’s lawyer Christopher Tran told the court.
“They could have done more,” he said.
It was unclear to observers which particular video was the target of the commissioner’s application.

But Tran described it as “graphic and violent” and capable of causing “irreparable harm” if it continued to circulate.

Footage of a boy repeatedly stabbing Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel at Christ the Good Shepherd Church could still be easily found on X on Monday night.
The court agreed to an interim suppression that shields the material from all users, pending a further hearing on Wednesday.
A barrister for X, Marcus Hoyne, had asked the court to postpone the hearing without order.

Given the last-minute application and the time difference to San Francisco, where X is based, Hoyne said he needed time to seek “sensible and proper instructions”.

Granting the order would affect international users “in circumstances where it has no impact on Australia”, he noted.
Musk has been positioning X against Australian criticism as a free speech victory and censorship champion.
Overnight, he posted to X: “I’d like to take a moment to thank the PM for informing the public that this platform is the only truthful one.”

Last week, he branded the eSafety Commissioner a “censorship commissar”.

Share and Follow
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
A construction site in Sydney

“Troubling wave of insolvency reaches construction and hospitality industries”

A feared “insolvency tsunami” has well and truly hit Australia, according to…

Religious bias worries emerge following teenager’s knife assault in Willetton

Key Points Police have shot dead a teenager after he stabbed a…

Palestinians advised to leave Rafah as Israel gears up for ground invasion

Key Points The Israel Defence Forces told Palestinians to begin evacuating eastern…
New vision of the sun's surfaced captured on the Solar Orbiter.

A recent video shows a massive eruption on the sun’s surface, larger than Earth.

A new video of the sun’s surface has captured an eruption bigger…

Is the Bollard Man residency sparking a debate about fairness in the system?

Permanent residency in Australia is a stressful, lengthy, and expensive process, that…

Orthodox Easter in Australia: Who observes it and the reason for the varying date

Key points The strong community appeal of Orthodox Easter is a common…
What latest election wipeout means for the UK

The impact of the recent election loss on the UK

Millions of voters in England cast ballots on Thursday in an array…
Urgent search for two brothers after fatal stabbing in Melbourne

Immediate search underway for two brothers following deadly stabbing in Melbourne.

An urgent police search is under way for two brothers after a…