Business Standard

PayPal cuts off Alex Jones’ Infowars, joining tech giants

- NATHANIEL POPPER

PayPal has become the latest tech giant to cut off Infowars, the conspiracy website run by the right-wing provocateu­r Alex Jones. Infowars was informed by PayPal on Thursday night that it would have 10 business days to find a new payment processor.

PayPal handles all transactio­ns, including credit cards, for the Infowars online store. The store has been a significan­t source of revenue for the company, selling vitamins and nutritiona­l supplement­s, as well as Infowarsbr­anded apparel. PayPal has also handled donations that Infowars receives from its supporters.

PayPal acted weeks after Twitter, Facebook and other large tech companies blocked Infowars from their services. Most of those companies said the site had violated their policies by promoting hate speech and misinforma­tion.

PayPal said it had made its decision not because of any policy violation but because Infowars’ “promotion of hate and discrimina­tion runs counter to our core value of inclusion.”

“Our values are the foundation for the decision we made this week,” PayPal added.

The aggressive steps against Infowars have become fodder for claims that Silicon Valley companies are biased against conservati­ve voices — an opinion expressed by President Trump and a number of Republican officials. Jeff Sessions, the United States attorney general, plans to meet with Republican state attorneys general next week to discuss the tech industry, competitio­n and free speech.

Mr. Jones attended a recent Senate hearing where Twitter’s Jack Dorsey and Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg discussed efforts by their companies to deal with disinforma­tion on their platforms. And after a separate House hearing that directly addressed Republican claims that Twitter was biased against conservati­ves, Mr. Jones tried to confront Mr. Dorsey on Mr. Dorsey’s way out.

After the phaseout period of 10 business days, PayPal will stop doing any business with Infowars and its subsidiari­es, like the site Prison Planet, a PayPal spokesman said. The spokesman declined to cite any specific problems that had led to the decision, but said that after “extensive reviews” the company had “found many instances of content that promoted hate and discrimina­tory intoleranc­e against certain communitie­s and religions.”

This is not the first time PayPal has waded into politicall­y fraught territory. In 2010, it cut off payments to WikiLeaks. More recently, PayPal stopped working with neo-Nazi and alt-right websites.

Since being barred from Facebook and Twitter, Infowars has had to find new online platforms, and its audience has fallen off significan­tly. But PayPal’s decision may be particular­ly damaging, because it will be much harder for Infowars to find another company to handle transactio­ns for the site.

For now, Infowars is still able to sell at least some of its goods on Amazon and eBay, where its payments are not handled by PayPal.

An article on the Infowars site that announced PayPal’s decision said the move was a “political ploy designed to financiall­y sabotage an influentia­l media outlet just weeks before the midterm elections.”

The article said PayPal had told Infowars the decision was made because Infowars had violated its “acceptable use policy.” PayPal’s spokesman said its decision went beyond the violation of any single policy.

PayPal acted weeks after Twitter, Facebook and other large tech companies blocked Infowars from their services. Most of those firms said the site had violated their policies by promoting hate speech and misinforma­tion

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