Elon Musk's brutal response to Australia's online watchdog after X was asked to take down posts about bishop's alleged stabbing in Western Sydney


by Daily Mail

Daily Mail— Content was shared on X linked to a livestreamed Sydney stabbing. Australia e-safety watchdog has demanded it be removed. Elon Musk's X is preparing to fight the ban. READ MORE:

ETtech.com—Elon Musk's X says posts of Australia bishop stabbing don't promote violence. Elon Musk's social media platform X defended publishing posts showing a bishop in Australia being stabbed during a sermon as part of public discussion , rejecting a regulator's order to take down the content on grounds it is offensive and violent. In a post overnight, X's global government affairs account said the video taken by an innocent bystander should not have been banned under Australian law, which permits content that can be reasonably considered as part of public discussion or...

The Guardian—Elon Musk’s X was asked to remove 65 tweets with video of Sydney church stabbing, court documents show. Exclusive: Australian federal police told court there was ‘a real risk’ the video could be used to encourage people to commit terrorist attacksGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastElon Musk’s X was asked by the Australian online safety regulator to remove 65 tweets containing video of the Sydney church stabbing attack, court documents obtained by Guardian Australia reveal, but many of the tweets remain accessible outside Australia.The Australian federal police...

Japan Today—Musk says X posts of Australia bishop stabbing don't promote violence. Elon Musk's social media platform X defended publishing posts showing a bishop in Australia being stabbed during a sermon as "part of public discussion", rejecting a regulator's order to take down the content on grounds it is offensive and violent. In a post overnight Thursday, X's "global government affairs" account