Australian Court Upholds A$650,000 Fine on X for Failing to Comply with Child Safety Rules

An Australian federal court today upheld a fine against Elon Musk's social media platform X, ordering it to pay A$650,000 (approx. NT$14.6 million) for failing to comply with child online safety regulations. The ruling concludes a three-year legal dispute between the tech company and the Australian government. The issue arose after X (formerly Twitter) provided an "incomplete" response in 2023 to the Australian regulator, eSafety, regarding its methods for handling child sexual abuse material on its platform.
事件NQ 6/100出典:PR Times

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(CNA, Sydney, May 21, Comprehensive Foreign Report) An Australian federal court today upheld a fine against billionaire Elon Musk's social media platform X for its failure to comply with child online safety regulations, concluding a three-year legal dispute between the tech company and the Australian government. According to an AFP report, under Australian law, the online regulator, the eSafety Commissioner's Office, has the authority to fine companies that fail to respond to requests or provide detailed information on how they protect children's online safety. In February 2023, eSafety contacted X, then known as Twitter, requesting an explanation on how it was addressing the dissemination of child sexual abuse material on its platform. The following month, Twitter was merged into Musk's newly formed X Corp. The company was fined for providing an "incomplete" response to eSafety's repeated requests for information. The Australian Federal Court ruled in October 2024 that X was obligated to respond to the notice, and today, the social media company was formally ordered to pay a fine of A$650,000 (approximately NT$14.6 million). Federal Judge Michael Wheelahan stated, "A penalty approaching the maximum is appropriate for the respondent, as it is a large corporation, to serve as a genuine deterrent rather than being seen as just a part of operational costs." The Australian government has been at the forefront of global regulation of large tech companies, including implementing a world-first law last year banning children under 16 from using social media platforms like Instagram and TikTok. Several other countries are reportedly considering similar social media control measures. Responding to the court's decision, Australia's eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said, "Meaningful transparency is key to holding tech companies accountable." She added, "This is not only one of our important jobs as Australia's online safety regulator, but it also provides the Australian public with crucial information about how these companies handle the worst and most severe harmful content on their platforms." (Compiler: Hsu Jui-cheng) 1150521

FAQ

社群平台X為何被澳洲法院罰款?

因為X未遵守澳洲的兒少網路安全規範,在澳洲監管機構「電子安全委員辦公室」(eSafety)要求其說明如何處理平台上的兒童性虐待內容時,提供了「不完整」的回覆。

這次的罰款金額是多少?

罰款金額為65萬澳元,約合新台幣1460萬元。

此法律爭端持續了多久?

根據報導,這起科技公司與澳洲政府之間的法律爭端長達3年。

承審法官對此案有何評論?

聯邦法官威拉漢(Michael Wheelahan)表示,對於像X這樣的大型企業,接近最高上限的罰款是適當的,才能真正發揮嚇阻作用,而不僅被視為營運成本的一部分。

澳洲在監管大型科技公司方面還有哪些作為?

澳洲政府一直站在全球監管大型科技公司的最前線,曾實施全球首創法規,禁止16歲以下兒少使用Instagram與TikTok等社群媒體平台。