
Australian regulator suggests Musk’s X should not dictate internet law limits
Australian regulator suggests Musk’s X should not dictate internet law limits
SYDNEY, May 10 (Reuters) – Elon Musk’s X has policies to take down harmful content when it chooses but should not be allowed to overrule Australian law in deciding what can be viewed there, a lawyer for the cyber regulator told a hearing into video of a bishop being stabbed.
X, formerly Twitter, is fighting an order by the e-Safety Commissioner to remove 65 posts showing video of an Assyrian Christian bishop being knifed mid-sermon in Sydney last month, in what authorities called a terrorist attack.
“X says … global removal is reasonable when X does it, because X wants to do it, but it becomes unreasonable when X is told to do it by the laws of Australia,” Tim Begbie, the lawyer, told a hearing of the Federal Court, Australia’s second-highest.
Other platforms, such as Meta (META.O), opens new tab, took down the content quickly when asked, he said, adding that X had policies to remove very harmful content, as responsible services did.
But X’s opposition to global removal could not be right as it would determine the definition of “reasonable” within the terms of Australia’s Online Safety Act, he added.
The company Musk bought in 2022, with a declared mission to save free speech, says it has blocked Australia from seeing the posts but refuses to remove them globally on the grounds that one country’s rules should not control the internet.
Begbie said the dispute was not a debate about free speech but rather about the practicality of the Australian law that gives the regulator power to protect citizens from the most objectionable content.
Geoblocking Australians, the solution X offered, was ineffective because a quarter of the population used virtual private networks that disguise their locations, he added.
“Global removal in these circumstances is a reasonable step,” he said. “It would achieve what parliament intended, which is no accessibility to end users in Australia.”
Lawyers for X have yet to make their argument, but previously called the regulator’s order an overreach of its jurisdiction, a contention Musk has repeated in posts on his website.
The one-day hearing continues.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by VoM News staff and is published from syndicated feed)
Latest Posts
- US-Israeli Strikes on Iran LIVE Updates March 05, 2026 | Senate Fails To Curb Trump War Powers
March 5, 2026 | Breaking News, Live Updates, Politics, World - Is Pakistan Ready to Step In as Middle East Tensions Escalate with Saudi Arabia?
March 4, 2026 | Featured by VoM, Politics, World - Meta Blocks Kashmir Life, Greater Kashmir & Rising Kashmir Social Media Pages ; Political Leaders Condemn Restriction
March 4, 2026 | Breaking News, Jammu Kashmir - Following The Assassination Of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Mojtaba Khamenei Elected As New Supreme Leader of Iran
March 4, 2026 | Featured by VoM, Politics, World - US Has Bombed at Least 10 Countries Since 9/11 — And the Count Keeps Growing in 2026
March 4, 2026 | Featured by VoM, Politics, World - Iran’s Regional Attacks – A Broader Strategy Designed To Expand Pressure On The Global Stage, Beyond the Battlefield
March 4, 2026 | Articles/Editorials, Breaking News, Featured by VoM - LIVE Updates: Russia and China Condemn US‑Israeli Attacks on Iran, Call for Ceasefire
March 4, 2026 | Live Updates, Politics, World - No Trade With Spain says, US President Donald Trump, After Spain Restricted Military Bases
March 4, 2026 | Breaking News, Politics, World - UN Nuclear Chief Rafael Grossi Says No Evidence of Coordinated Iranian Weapons Program
March 3, 2026 | Breaking News, Politics, World - At Least 40 Killed, 246 Wounded in Lebanon Amid Escalating Israel-US Attacks on Iran
March 3, 2026 | Breaking News, Politics, World