Australian Watchdog Faces Court Battle with Musk’s X

Australian Watchdog Faces Court Battle with Musk’s X

pushing back in court over Australia’s decision to⁣ fine⁣ it for failing to detail its anti-child abuse measures” width=”736″ height=”491″>

Elon⁣ Musk’s ‌X is pushing back in court over Australia’s decision to‌ fine it for failing to ⁤detail its anti-child abuse measures
AFP

Australia’s ⁤online safety watchdog ‍said⁣ Thursday it was being taken to court by Elon Musk’s X in a fight over the platform’s failure to outline how it combats child sexual abuse content.

Last month, eSafety‌ commissioner Julie ​Inman Grant slapped an Aus$610,500 (US$388,000) fine on the company formerly known as Twitter for failing to respond to questions sent in February about⁢ how ​it is tackling the issue ‍on its platform.

The social⁢ media giant missed an extended mid-November deadline to pay the fine, the eSafety commission said this week, ‌adding that⁣ it was “considering further steps”.

Instead,‌ X has taken the case to Australia’s federal ⁤court.

“X Corp. has lodged proceedings seeking judicial review of decisions of the eSafety Commissioner in ⁣this matter,” an eSafety commission spokesperson⁤ told AFP.

“ESafety continues to consider ⁤its ⁤options in⁤ relation to⁢ X Corp’s non-compliance with the reporting⁢ notice⁤ but cannot comment on legal proceedings.”

Documents have been filed with ‌the federal court​ in Melbourne, and‍ AFP has⁣ sought comment from lawyers acting for X in Australia.

When contacted by AFP, X responded with an automatic email: “Busy now,⁣ please⁤ check back later”.

Inman ​Grant — herself a former Twitter ‍employee — ‌last ​month urged X to show it was taking “tangible action” to clean up⁣ the platform.

“Twitter/X ‌has stated‌ publicly that tackling child sexual exploitation ⁤is the⁤ number one priority for​ the company,⁢ but it can’t just be empty talk,”‍ she said ‍at the time.

Billionaire Musk ‌has cut more ‌than 80 percent of X’s ⁤global workforce since his takeover in October 2022, including many of the‍ content moderators ‌responsible for ​stamping out abusive‌ content.

Proactive‍ detection ⁤of child sexual exploitation on X fell from 90 percent to 75 ⁢percent in the three months after the takeover, Inman Grant said.

Australia has spearheaded the⁤ global drive to regulate social⁤ media ‍platforms, and‍ this is‌ not the first time Inman Grant has singled​ out X or Musk.

In June, she raised concerns⁢ about a spike in more general “toxicity and hate” following Musk’s takeover of the platform.

Elon musk
Twitter
Australia

2023-11-17 06:41:02
Original from www.ibtimes.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version