The Morning Call

Trump backers seek new sites after online backlash

- By David Klepper and Amanda Seitz

Online supporters of President Donald Trump are scattering to smaller social media platforms, fleeing what they say is unfair treatment by Facebook, Twitter and other Big Tech firms looking to squelch misinforma­tion and threats of violence.

Those efforts, prompted by the deadly rampage Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol, will likely succeed, according to social media and misinforma­tion experts. But the crackdown could send some of Trump’s fiercest supporters retreating to spaces on the internet where conspiracy theories and violent rhetoric run rampant.

“We’re going to see less opportunit­y to radicalize new people” on mainstream platforms, Kate Starbird, a leading misinforma­tion expert at the University of Washington, said last week. “But for those who are already radicalize­d, or already down the rabbit hole with conspiracy theories, this might not make a difference if the places they go become echo chambers.”

For years, mainstream tech companies had been the target of conservati­ve ire, with complaints that Facebook and Twitter enforce their policies with a political bias. The platforms also have been criticized for allowing harmful conspiracy theories and hate speech to thrive on their sites.

Then came an unpreceden­ted response from the tech companies to the Capitol riot, fueled in part by false and misleading social media posts that undermined faith in the U.S. election.

Twitter banned Trump’s account, as well as 70,000 accounts associated with the far-right QAnon conspiracy theory. Facebook and Instagram suspended Trump through the end of his term and removed posts fraudulent­ly claiming that the U.S. election was stolen. Snapchat also banned Trump, and on Jan. 13, YouTube suspended his channel for at least a week.

Some conservati­ve users had briefly found refuge on Parler, only to see the conservati­ve alternativ­e to Facebook go dark Jan. 11 when Amazon stopped providing hosting services. Parler sued Amazon over the ban; Amazon responded by arguing the platform’s “unwillingn­ess” to remove posts threatens public safety.

The crackdown prompted many conservati­ve posters to consider more obscure alternativ­e platforms such as Gab, which has marketed itself to Trump supporters. Gab CEO Andrew Torba, who describes himself as a “Christian entreprene­ur and American populist,” posted Jan. 13 that 1.7 million users signed up in the past four days.

Other platforms attracting Trump supporters include Signal and Telegram, messaging services already used by individual­s and groups with different ideologies around the world, as well as a growing list of lesser-known platforms, such as Rumble, MeWe and CloutHub.

Many of these smaller sites already were havens for extremists and conspiracy theorists who have been kicked off Twitter, YouTube and Facebook, said Jared Holt, a disinforma­tion researcher for the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank.

It’s also possible some on the far right may take greater advantage of encrypted messaging services offered by Signal, Telegram and WhatsApp, making it harder for researcher­s, journalist­s and government officials to monitor for signs of threats, according to James Ludes, a former congressio­nal defense analyst and disinforma­tion expert who runs the Pell Center for Internatio­nal Relations and Public Policy at Salve Regina University in Rhode Island.

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