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 debate».
«The content within the posts does not encourage or provoke violence,» the X account said.
The statement from the company formerly called Twitter, which the billionaire bought in 2022, clashes with Australian lawmaker claims that police feared the footage would be used to encourage people to join terrorist groups.
The e-Safety Commissioner ordered X to remove posts containing the video globally to stop Australians seeing them, but X has challenged the order partly on grounds of «exhorbitant jurisdiction». A court this week temporarily upheld the takedown order until a hearing on May 10.
The order has sparked increasingly heated public exchanges between Musk, who calls himself a free speech absolutist, and Australian