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Australia

Australian Censors Back Down, Highlighting the U.S. as a Free Speech Haven

Officials suspend efforts to force X to suppress the world’s access to video of a crime.

J.D. Tuccille | 6.10.2024 7:00 AM

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An Apple iPhone open to the App Store listing for X (formerly Twitter), against the backdrop of the Australian flag. | Andre M. Chang/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Andre M. Chang/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

In a welcome development for people who care about liberty, Australia's government suspended its efforts to censor the planet. The country's officials suffered pushback from X (formerly Twitter) and condemnation by free speech advocates after attempting to block anybody, anywhere from seeing video of an attack at a Sydney church. At least for the moment, they've conceded defeat based, in part, on recognition that X is protected by American law, making censorship efforts unenforceable.

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A Censor Throws In the Towel

"I have decided to discontinue the proceedings in the Federal Court against X Corp in relation to the matter of extreme violent material depicting the real-life graphic stabbing of a religious leader at Wakeley in Sydney on 15 April 2024," the office of Australia's eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, announced last week. "We now welcome the opportunity for a thorough and independent merits review of my decision to issue a removal notice to X Corp by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal."

The free speech battle stems from the stabbing in April of Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel and Father Isaac Royel at an Orthodox Christian Church by a 16-year-old in what is being treated as an Islamist terrorist incident. Both victims recovered, but Australian officials quickly sought to scrub graphic video footage of the incident from the internet. Most social media platforms complied, including X, which geoblocked access to video of the attack from Australia pending an appeal of the order.

But Australian officials fretted that their countrymen might use virtual private networks (VPNs) to evade the blocks. The only solution, they insisted, was to suppress access to the video for the whole world. X understandably pushed back out of fear of the precedent that would set for the globe's control freaks.

Global Content Battle

"Our concern is that if ANY country is allowed to censor content for ALL countries, which is what the Australian 'eSafety Commissar' is demanding, then what is to stop any country from controlling the entire Internet?" responded X owner Elon Musk.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) also argued that "no single country should be able to restrict speech across the entire internet" as did the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE). The organizations jointly sought, and received, intervener status in the case based on "the capacity for many global internet users to be substantially affected."

In short, officials lost control over a tussle they tried to portray as a righteous battle by servants of the people against, in the words of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, "arrogant billionaire" Elon Musk. Instead, civil libertarians correctly saw it as a battle for free speech against grasping politicians who aren't content to misgovern their own country but reach for control over people outside their borders.

Worse for them, one of their own judges agreed.

"The removal notice would govern (and subject to punitive consequences under Australian law) the activities of a foreign corporation in the United States (where X Corp's corporate decision-making occurs) and every country where its servers are located; and it would likewise govern the relationships between that corporation and its users everywhere in the world," noted Justice Geoffrey Kennett in May as he considered the eSafety commissioner's application to extend an injunction against access to the stabbing video. "The Commissioner, exercising her power under s 109, would be deciding what users of social media services throughout the world were allowed to see on those services."

He added, "most likely, the notice would be ignored or disparaged in other countries."

American Speech Protections Shield the World

This is where the U.S. First Amendment and America's strong protections for free speech come into play to thwart Australian officials' efforts to censor the world.

"There is uncontroversial expert evidence that a court in the US (where X Corp is based) would be highly unlikely to enforce a final injunction of the kind sought by the Commissioner," added Kennett. "Courts rightly hesitate to make orders that cannot be enforced, as it has the potential to bring the administration of justice into disrepute."

Rather than have his government exposed as impotently overreaching to impose its will beyond its borders, Kennett refused to extend the injunction.

Three weeks later, with free speech groups joining the case to argue against eSafety's censorious ambitions, the agency dropped its legal case pending review by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.

"We are pleased that the Commissioner saw the error in her efforts and dropped the action," responded David Greene and Hudson Hongo for EFF. "Global takedown orders threaten freedom of expression around the world, create conflicting legal obligations, and lead to the lowest common denominator of internet content being available around the world, allowing the least tolerant legal system to determine what we all are able to read and distribute online."

But if the world escaped the grasp of Australia's censors, the country's residents may not be so lucky.

Domestic Censorship Politics

The fight between eSafety and X "isn't actually about the Wakeley church stabbing attacks in April — it's about how much power the government ultimately hands the commissioner once it's finished reviewing the Online Safety Act in October," Ange Lavoipierre wrote for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"The video in dispute in the case against X has been used, in my opinion, as a vehicle for the federal government to push for powers to compel social media companies to enforce rules of misinformation and disinformation on their platforms," agrees Morgan Begg of the free-market Institute of Public Affairs, which opposes intrusive government efforts to regulate online content. "The Federal Court's decision highlights the government's fixation with censorship."

That is, the campaign to force X to suppress video of one crime is largely about domestic political maneuvering for power. But it comes as governments around the world—especially that of the European Union—become increasingly aggressive with their plans to control online speech.

If the battle between Australia's eSafety commissioner and X is any indication, the strongest barrier to international censorship lies in countries—the U.S. in particular—that vigorously protect free speech. From such safe havens, authoritarian officials and their grasping content controls can properly be "ignored or disparaged."

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: The Black Panther Who Was Banned From the Ballot

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

AustraliaTwitterFree SpeechCensorshipSocial MediaInternetHate SpeechElon MuskLaw & Government
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  1. mad.casual   1 year ago

    In short, officials lost control over a tussle they tried to portray as a righteous battle by servants of the people against, in the words of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, “arrogant billionaire” Elon Musk.

    Not enough "protecting The Good Samaritans holding back the tide of subversive trolls" in order to pull off a “1A of the internet”.

  2. Chumby   1 year ago

    The EU may have a new look soon. Citizens voting against the unipolar agenda.

    1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

      People in europe are allowed to vote?

      1. Old Engineer   1 year ago

        Yeah, but the EU ignores the votes.

    2. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      Thanks for providing the Russian perspective, as usual.

      Did RT happen to mention that the EU Parliament is not particularly powerful, and would struggle to change the EU's "look" in any meaningful way?

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        Russia made Macron dissolve the government?

        1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

          Is that what RT said?

          1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

            I have no idea what RT says about anything. Just wondering why you think Russia has anything to do with European elections.

            1. mad.casual   1 year ago

              If Chumby had vaguely referenced factual news that had been covered by some African news source do you think ObviouslyNotSpam would be here to inform us that African news shouldn’t be trusted because of the source?

            2. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

              Perhaps that's why I was asking Chumbovich, and not you?

        2. Chumby   1 year ago

          Russia also made the Belgian PN resign. Additionally, Russia cost Hillary the 2016 election and compelled Saudi Arabia to let the petrodollar agreement to expire. Putinmanbad.

          1. JohnZ   1 year ago

            Putin got LePenn elected and forced Macron to dissolve the government.

        3. Old Engineer   1 year ago

          Governments are soluble? Where can I get the solvent?

      2. Zeb   1 year ago

        What does that have to do with the Russian perspective? Seems to me that immigration is probably the bigger driver of the shifts in the EU. Is it a Russian position that the EU ought to have stricter immigration controls?

    3. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Reason warned us about the dangers of a populist takeover but we just wouldn't listen.

    4. JohnZ   1 year ago

      Marine LePenn just kicked Macron's arse good and hard. Now he's scared shitless.

  3. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

    The 1st Amendment is one of the reasons why the USA is great. If you think it's a shithole, you probably need to travel a bit.

    1. JohnZ   1 year ago

      The USA is not a shithole but most if not, all of the Democrat run cities are.

    2. Old Engineer   1 year ago

      The US is the last place where you defend yourself verbally when possible and with a shotgun when necessary. I remember some Canadian politician warning Ann Coulter to watch what she said because, as he proudly proclaimed, "In Canada, we don't have a 1st Amendment".

  4. Set Us Up The Chipper   1 year ago

    "The Commissioner, exercising her power under s 109, would be deciding what users of social media services throughout the world were allowed to see on those services."

    Feature not a bug.

    Surely made her moist and tinglely.

    1. JohnZ   1 year ago

      She was probably busily masturbating to the idea.

      1. gnome   1 year ago

        Circle-jerk of Australian pollies and their imported (from the US) hyphenated sow.

  5. Minadin   1 year ago

    [formerly Twitter]

    I wonder if the whole reason behind Musk's renaming of the short-form platform is to see how many times he could get journalists to repeat the phrase.

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      "Xitter" is more accurate.

  6. JohnZ   1 year ago

    Haw,haw,haw. Musk just kicked ass one more time. made the cucked Aussie government whine and sulk. Hee,hee, hee, ho,ho,ho. Can't stop laughing.
    Maybe those in the Aussie government finally came to the realization they don't have that power to stifle and control international news.
    It must be driving them bonkers.

    1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

      Aussie government finally came to the realization they don’t have that power to stifle and control

      No. They didn't. And they have a remarkably docile populace, judging by how little reaction there was to the Covid insanity down there.

      Who would have thought, just a generation ago, that Canada and Australia would be competing for who would be the biggest fucking pussies? But it has happened. Huge swaths of their populaces, woke as fuck, wanting to force others to do things "for their own good."

  7. Iwanna Newname   1 year ago

    Is Hunter's laptop banned in Australia?

  8. No Hunting Aloud   1 year ago

    Twas a blunder Down Under

  9. DaveM   1 year ago

    Not mentioned here is that Australia's eSafety Comissioner, Julie Inman Grant, is actually not a native citizen of that country at all, but rather an immigrant who hails from the US. Prior to running Australia's censorship department, she worked for Microsoft, Twitter, Adobe, and on Capitol Hill.

    One could argue that this kerfuffle was a proxy war engagement in the cold war between the rising authoritarian Left and classic US liberalism.

    https://www.esafety.gov.au/about-us/who-we-are/about-the-commissioner

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