The Mercury News Weekend

Judge says Amazon not required to restore Parler

- By Matt O’Brien

Amazon won’t be forced to immediatel­y restore web service to Parler after a federal judge ruled Thursday against a plea to reinstate the fastgrowin­g social media app, which is favored by followers of former President Donald Trump.

U.S. District Judge Barbara Rothstein in Seattle said she wasn’t dismissing Parler’s “substantiv­e underlying claims” against Amazon, but said it had fallen short in demonstrat­ing the need for an injunction forcing it back online.

Amazon kicked Parler off its webhosting service on Jan. 11. In court filings, it said the suspension was a “last resort” to block Parler from harboring violent plans to disrupt the presidenti­al transition.

The Seattle tech giant said Parler had shown an “unwillingn­ess and inability” to remove a slew of dangerous posts that called for the rape, torture and assassinat­ion of politician­s, tech executives and many others.

The social media app, a magnet for the far right, sued to get back online, arguing that Amazon had breached its contract and abused its market power. It said Trump was likely on the brink of joining the platform, following a wave of his followers

who flocked to the app after Twitter and Facebook expelled Trump after the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol.

Rothstein said she rejected “any suggestion that the public interest favors requiring AWS to host the incendiary speech that the record shows some of Parler’s users have engaged in.” She also faulted Parler for providing “only faint and factually inaccurate speculatio­n” about Amazon and Twitter colluding with one another to shut Parler down.

Parler said Thursday it was disappoint­ed by the ruling but remains confident it will “ultimately prevail in the main case,” which it says will have “broad implicatio­ns for our pluralisti­c society.”

Parler CEO John Matze had asserted in a court filing that Parler’s abrupt shutdown was motivated at least partly by “a desire to deny President Trump a platform on any large socialmedi­a service.” Matze said Trump had contemplat­ed joining the network as early as October under a pseudonym. The Trump administra­tion last week declined to comment on whether he had planned to join.

Amazon denied its move to pull the plug on Parler had anything to do with political animus. It claimed that Parler had breached its business agreement “by hosting content advocating violence and failing to timely take that content down.”

Parler was formed in May 2018, according to Nevada business records, with what co-founder Rebekah Mercer, a prominent Trump backer and conservati­ve donor, later described as the goal of creating “a neutral platform for free speech” away from “the tyranny and hubris of our tech overlords.”

Amazon said the company signed up for its cloud computing services about a month later, thereby agreeing to its rules against dangerous content.

Matze told the court that Parler has “no tolerance for inciting violence or lawbreakin­g” and has relied on volunteer “jurors” to flag problem posts and vote on whether they should be removed. More recently, he said the company informed Amazon it would soon begin using artificial intelligen­ce to automatica­lly prescreen posts for inappropri­ate content, as bigger social media companies do.

Amazon last week revealed a trove of incendiary and violent posts that it had reported to Parler over the past several weeks. They included explicit calls to harm high-profile political and business leaders and broader groups of people, such as schoolteac­hers and Black Lives Matter activists.

Google and Apple were the first tech giants to take action against Parler in the days after the deadly Capitol riot. Both companies temporaril­y banned the smartphone app from their app stores. But people who had already downloaded the Parler app were still able to use it until Amazon Web Services pulled the plug on the website.

Parler has kept its website online by maintainin­g its internet registrati­on through Epik, a U.S. company owned by libertaria­n businessma­n Rob Monster. Epik has previously hosted 8chan, an online message board known for traffickin­g in hate speech. Parler is currently hosted by DDoSGuard, a company whose owners are based in Russia, public records show.

DDoS-Guard did not respond to emails seeking comment on its business with Parler or on published reports that its customers have included Russian government agencies.

Parler said Thursday it is still working to revive its platform. Although its website is back, it hasn’t restored its app or social network. Matze has said it will be difficult to restore service because the site had been so dependent on Amazon engineerin­g, and Amazon’s action has turned off other potential vendors.

The case has offered a rare window into Amazon’s influence over the workings of the internet. Parler argued in its lawsuit that Amazon violated antitrust laws by colluding with Twitter, which also uses some Amazon cloud services, to quash the upstart social media app.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Amazon says it kicked Parler off its web-hosting service on Jan. 11 as a “last resort” to block the service from promulgati­ng violence.
STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Amazon says it kicked Parler off its web-hosting service on Jan. 11 as a “last resort” to block the service from promulgati­ng violence.

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