Speak it's a social networks very popular with supporters of Trump, conservatives, QAnonists ed right-wing extremists. After the assault on Washington Congress, prepared and coordinated also on the platform, has been removed from the App Store, Google Play and the servers of Amazon walking offline. Following the ban of Apple, Google and Amazon, the far-right social network is back online thanks to a Russian company, DDoS-Guard, a hosting service owned by Evgenii Marchenko and Aleksei Likhachev, which protects Parler from cyber attacks.
With his help, Parler now has a temporary webpage that hosts a screen with some messages, including that of the founder John matze, which promises "our return is inevitable". Parler, abandoned by large technological companies after being used to incite violence, was born in 2018 presenting itself as a platform that promises free speech to its users, and also as an alternative to social networks such as Twitter and Facebook.
Parler, the far-right social network is back online thanks to a Russian company
In November 2020 the social network had 4 millions of active users and 10 million total users. After supporters of then-President Trump stormed the Capitol, Amazon stopped hosting Parler's website on its servers due to the site's reluctance and inability to remove content that incited and planned rape. , torture, and the murder of public officials and private citizens. Following the assault a Capitol Hill, also <br><br>Donald Trump has been blocked by the most popular social networks, such as Facebook, Instagram e Twitter, for violating social media policies, encouraging insurrection and verbal and physical violence.
Parler, whose motto is "Read news, speak free", is a popular social network among the alt-right and conspiracy theorists, created by John Matze e Jared Thomson. After the removal from Amazon's servers, the social network found itself without a host that could allow it to continue its online activity. Parler's CEO said the social platform may never return and that the company's fate is uncertain. Furthermore Parler filed a lawsuit against Amazon, arguing that AWS's actions violated antitrust laws, which were a clear breach of contract, a politically unjustified and unfair choice, and that Amazon's suspension was a deadly blow to the company and devastating financially.
Speak offline after the ban of Apple, Google and Amazon
After suing Amazon Web Services, a federal judge has Denied Parler's request for a court order that can prevent Amazon from removing the social media app from its platform, marking yet another setback for Parler to get back online. Judge Barbara Rothstein issued a ruling a few days ago, stating that Parler did not meet the legal requirements for a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction. This means that the court will not force Amazon to allow Parler to return to its cloud hosting platform.
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