Re: Elon Musk's a dishonerable sod to give Twitter a billion dollars
Posted: Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:12 pm
Moggy wrote:Grumpy David wrote:
No, I don't believe you.
And yet it's what I said.
You are capable of lying and being insincere.
Games and Stuff
https://grcade.co.uk/
Moggy wrote:Grumpy David wrote:
No, I don't believe you.
And yet it's what I said.
Grumpy David wrote:Moggy wrote:Grumpy David wrote:
No, I don't believe you.
And yet it's what I said.
You are capable of lying and being insincere.
On the weekend, X said it had complied with the request, but intended to launch a legal case challenging the orders.
In a hearing late on Monday afternoon, barrister for eSafety, Christopher Tran, told Justice Geoffrey Kennett that X had geo-blocked the posts containing the video, meaning Australians could not access them. However, the posts were still accessible globally, and to Australians who used a virtual private network (VPN) connection that made their IP address appear outside Australia.
Tran said that meant that X was not compliant with the online safety act around the removal of the material.
The agency wanted the posts to be removed, with an interim measure for the posts to be blocked from access globally.
X’s legal representation, Marcus Hoyne, sought to have the matter adjourned. He noted that it was close to 2am in San Francisco, where X is headquartered, and he had no instructions from his client on the matter.
Kennett said the “better course” was to make the interim order until a later hearing, and ordered the content be put behind a notice globally, with the interim order in place until 5pm Wednesday, 24 April Sydney time.
The assistant treasurer, Stephen Jones, on Monday described X as a “factory for trolls and misinformation” as the government vowed to fight any legal challenges brought by the company over removal orders related to the video of the Wakeley stabbing.
Moggy wrote:
There's no more delicious insult to Musk than claiming he's just a battery salesman.