Australia fines Telegram over response to terror, abuse content

(FILES) This picture taken on March 23, 2022 shows the mobile messaging and call service Telegram logo and US instant messaging software Whatsapp logo on a smartphone screen in Moscow. - Messaging services Telegram and WhatsApp experienced large-scale outages in Russia on August 21, 2024, the country's official media regulator Roskomnadzor said. (Photo by AFP)

Australia’s online watchdog said Monday it has fined Telegram more than US$600,000 for missing a deadline to reveal how it tackles “terrorist” and child sexual abuse content.

The encrypted messaging firm replied more than five months after the May 6, 2024 limit for disclosing its online safety compliance, eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said.

In March last year, the watchdog asked Telegram and other platforms what they were doing to detect “terrorist”, violent extremist, and child sexual exploitation content, she said in a statement.

Telegram did not reply until October 13, obstructing the commission’s work for almost half a year, she said.

“Surfacing how and where some of these platforms might be failing — and also succeeding — in tackling this content is vital to protect the community and raise safety standards across the industry, especially where this most abhorrent of content is concerned.”

Telegram, which was fined Aus$958,000 (US$613,000), has 28 days to pay the penalty, seek more time to pay, or try to get it withdrawn.

If it decides not to pay, the commission can seek a penalty in the federal court.
Telegram’s Russian-born founder and chief executive Pavel Durov was arrested in August last year at a Paris airport and later charged with several counts of failing to curb extremist and terrorist content on the app.

French prosecutors also claimed the Dubai-based platform had failed to take action against child sexual abuse imagery.

Durov, who was released on a five-million-euro (US$5.3 million) bail, later announced a crackdown on illegal content.

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