An Australian court has ordered Elon Musk’s platform X to pay a fine after it failed to meet child safety compliance requirements. The case has been ongoing for about three years and centers on online protection measures for children.
Court Decision and Penalty
The court ruled that X must pay A$650,000 along with additional legal costs of A$100,000 to the regulator. The judge stated that a strong penalty was necessary so the fine would act as a real deterrent rather than a routine business expense.
Justice Michael Wheelahan noted that a lower penalty would not be enough given the scale of the company. The court also increased the original penalty amount that had been set earlier in the case.
Background of the Dispute
The issue began when Australia’s online safety regulator requested information in 2023 about how the platform was handling child exploitation risks. The regulator said the company did not respond properly to the request.
X argued that it did not need to comply at the time because the request was made when the platform was still operating under its former structure. The company said its legal identity had changed after restructuring.
Role of the Safety Regulator
Australia’s eSafety regulator has taken a strict approach toward major online platforms. It has also raised concerns in other cases involving harmful content and age related protections on social media services.
The regulator has previously clashed with X over content removal decisions and online safety policies. These disputes have contributed to ongoing tension between the company and Australian authorities.
Wider Concerns
The case highlights growing global pressure on social media companies to improve child protection systems. Regulators are demanding faster responses and stronger safeguards to prevent online exploitation.
At the same time, platforms like X continue to face scrutiny over how they balance free expression with safety requirements.
