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2008 (ban applied in 2007) [17] Skepta (Joseph Junior Adenuga) United Kingdom: Rapper Punching a man at a nightclub in Melbourne in 2016. 2019 Tyler, The Creator (Tyler Gregory Okanoma) United States: Rapper Alleged promotion of violence against women. 2019 (ban claimed to be in effect around 2015) Mike Tyson United States: Professional boxer
Internet censorship in Australia is enforced by both the country's criminal law [1] [2] as well as voluntarily enacted by internet service providers. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has the power to enforce content restrictions on Internet content hosted within Australia, and maintain a blocklist of overseas ...
"Australia's social media ban for children makes global headlines as some news outlets ask if their country could be next". ABC News. London. Archived from the original on 3 December 2024; Given, Lisa M. (28 November 2024). "Australia's social media ban for kids under 16 just became law. How it will work remains a mystery".
Australia approved on Thursday a social media ban for children aged under 16 after an emotive debate that has gripped the nation, setting a benchmark for jurisdictions around the world with one of ...
Weather. 24/7 Help. ... Yet experts are divided on whether a blanket ban like Australia’s is the right solution, worrying that a polarized debate risks creating a one-size-fits-all solution ...
Tasmania was (at the time) the only Australian state in which homosexuality (specifically "gay male sexual activity") was illegal. The festival has now moved to Melbourne. Banned in Tasmania, still unrated by the Australian Classification Board. As the law changed soon after this incident, the films would presumably be allowed in Tasmania and ...
Melbourne isn’t the only major city having second thoughts about the benefits of e-scooters. Paris, once one of the biggest e-scooter-riding cities in Europe, voted to ban rented electronic ...
Norman Lindsay's Redheap was the first book to be banned from import into Australia, in May 1930, under the Commonwealth Customs Act 1901. [28] This was before the establishment of the Commonwealth Book Censorship Board in 1933 by Prime Minister Joseph Lyons ' United Australia Party, which was renamed the Literature Censorship Board in 1937. [ 29 ]