News

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.
This indication came after the federal government’s eSafety commissioner and Australia’s tech industry couldn’t agree on how companies were going to stamp out child sexual abuse material ...
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 ...
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 ...
Julie Inman Grant, Australia's top internet regulator, will be enforcing one of the strictest social media crackdowns in the world. Provided by the Australian eSafety Commission hide caption ...
Melbourne-headquartered email hosting provider Fastmail has said that the eSafety Commissioner’s proposed industry standards, requiring message and online file-storage providers to scan content ...
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.
The notices, issued by eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, will require Apple, Google, Meta and Microsoft to report to the regulator every six months about the measures they have in place to ...
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 ...
eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said the long-term partnership with the AFL promised to be a game-changer for players, clubs and fans. “Increasingly, we’re finding the cheapest seats in the ...
Australia’s eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant has again avoided endorsing a teen social media ban — despite being tasked by the government with enacting it — and will continue to help ...
Eight nations are syncing their content restriction, user surveillance, corporate disclosure and other oversight powers aimed at mitigating online harms. Australian, UK, French, Korean, South ...