An Australian court on Monday rejected a bid by the country's cyber safety regulator to extend a temporary order for Elon Musk-owned X to block videos of the stabbing of an Assyrian church bishop, which authorities had called a terrorist attack. Federal Court judge Geoffrey Kennett said the application to extend the injunction granted last month had been refused. The legal tussle has sparked heated exchanges between Musk and senior Australian officials including Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who called Musk "an arrogant billionaire" for his objections to take down the video.
Dow Jones futures: Inflation reports loom with the stock market near record highs. Taiwan Semiconductor is in buy range.
A man is dead after a canoe he was using capsized in Halifax Sunday morning, the Plymouth Country District Attorney’s office says.