Albuquerque Journal

Parler back online after tangle with Amazon

- BY RACHEL LERMAN

Parler is back online after the social media site popular with supporters of former president Donald Trump was knocked offline last month.

Parler effectivel­y fell off the internet in January when Amazon refused to provide technical cloud computing support to the site after the tech giant determined that Parler was not doing enough to moderate and remove incitement­s of violence.

The site was not fully functional on Monday and some users reported technical glitches as they tried to log in and refresh feeds. Private messaging was disabled, but the basic outline of the site was live.

“We’re in for a little bit of a bumpy ride for the next day or two, there’s been a ton of backend work we’ve completed over the last couple of weeks,” Parler Chief Technology Officer Alexander Blair posted on the site Monday morning.

Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.

Parler, which said it had more than 12 million users when it was knocked offline, became especially popular with Trump supporters last year and emerged as a common place to discuss election fraud claims after Trump lost the November 2020 election. The tipping point for many of its partners to pull technical support came after the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, when users on Parler glorified the riot.

Apple and Google removed the app from their app stores, making it nearly impossible for new users to download the app. Then, Amazon severed its hosting service from Parler, effectivel­y turning off the lights. The companies cited Parler’s lax moderation policies against calls for violence.

Parler did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about its return or its hosting service.

Parler appeared to be using a Los Angeles-based cloud hosting company called SkySilk to return online. Hackers on Twitter, including the user who orchestrat­ed a large-scale scrape of Parler’s public data as it fell offline, identified SkySilk as the host. John Jackson, founder of hacking group Sakura Samurai, confirmed that the technical footprint points to SkySilk in public records.

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