Parler partially reappears with support from Russian technology firm

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Frederick Foresight, Jan 19, 2021.

  1. https://www.reuters.com/article/usa...rt-from-russian-technology-firm-idINL1N2JT1S7

    Parler, a social media website and app popular with the American far right, has partially returned online with the help of a Russian-owned technology company.

    Parler vanished from the internet when dropped by Amazon Inc’s hosting arm and other partners for poor moderation after its users called for violence and posted videos glorifying the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    On Monday, Parler’s website was reachable again, though only with a message from its chief executive saying he was working to restore functionality.

    The internet protocol address it used is owned by DDos-Guard, which is controlled by two Russian men and provides services including protection from distributed denial of service attacks, infrastructure expert Ronald Guilmette told Reuters.

    If the website is fully restored, Parler users would be able to see and post comments. Most users prefer the app, however, which remains banned from the official Apple Inc and Google stores.

    Parler CEO John Matze and representatives of DDoS-Guard did not reply to requests for comment.

    Last Wednesday, Matze told Reuters the company was in talks with multiple service providers but declined to elaborate.

    DDoS-Guard has worked with other racist, rightist and conspiracy sites that have been used by mass murderers to share messages, including 8kun. It has also supported Russian government sites.

    DDoS-Guard’s website lists an address in Scotland under the company name Cognitive Cloud LP, but that is owned by two men in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, Guilmette said. One of them told the Guardian recently that he was not aware of all of the content the company facilitates.

    Parler critics said it was a potential security risk for it to depend on a Russian company, as well as an odd choice for a site popular with self-described patriots.

    Russian propaganda has stoked political divisions in the United States, supporting outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump and amplifying false narratives about election fraud but also protests against police brutality.

    Parler, which disclosed it has over 12 million users, sued Amazon last Monday after the ecommerce giant and cloud services provider cut off service, citing poor moderation of calls to violence.

    In an update on Monday, Parler.com linked to a Fox News interview in which Matze said he was “confident” Parler would return at the end of January.
     
    Nobert likes this.
  2. Parler's partial return is supported by a Russian tech firm with links to racist and conspiracy-theory sites

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/parler-partially-reappears-support-russian-235732520.html


    • Parler's new static webpage uses an internet protocol address owned by DDoS-Guard.

    • The Russian tech company has been linked to racist, far-right, and conspiracy sites.

    • Parler critics said it was a potential security risk for it to depend on a Russian company.
    Parler, a social media website and app popular with the American far right, partially returned online on Sunday - with the help of a Russian-owned technology company.

    Parler was dropped by website host Amazon Web Services (AWS) on January 11. AWS said the platform "poses a very real risk to public safety." The site has since registered its domain with Epik and returned on Sunday as a static page containing a brief note from CEO John Matze.

    The internet protocol address it used is owned by DDoS-Guard, which is controlled by two Russian men and provides services including protection from cyberattacks known as distributed denial of service attacks, infrastructure expert Ronald Guilmette told Reuters.


    DDoS-Guard has worked with racist, far-right, and conspiracy sites.

    Matze and representatives of DDoS-Guard did not reply to Reuters' requests for comment.

    On Wednesday, January 13, Matze told Reuters the company was in talks with multiple service providers, but declined to elaborate.

    Matze has since said he's "confident" Parler will be fully operational by the end of January, and that the platform managed to retrieve its data from Amazon.

    Evgeniy Marchenko, one of DDoS-Guard's two founders and owners, told The Guardian that the company is a global information security service, and said it hosted "thousands of websites." This includes Russian government sites and neo-Nazi site the Daily Stormer.

    It also previously worked with controversial Washington-based internet provider VanwaTech, which hosts the website of 8kun, a social-media site popular among QAnon supporters and used by rioters to plot the Capitol siege.

    "We are not related to any politic issues and don't want to be associated in any sense with customer hosting such toxic sites like QAnon/8chan," Marchenko told The Guardian.

    Parler critics said it was a potential security risk for it to depend on a Russian company, as well as an odd choice for a site popular with self-described patriots.

    Russian propaganda has stoked political divisions in the US, supporting outgoing US President Donald Trump and amplifying false narratives about election fraud and protests against police brutality.

    Parler, which describes itself as a "nonpartisan" haven for free speech, had become a hub for President Donald Trump's supporters after many of their Twitter accounts were purged from the social media site, alongside Trump's own.

    In the days after the Capitol siege on January 6, it became a haven for far-right activity and misinformation because of its lax stance on moderating content. Trump himself considered joining the site with the name "Person X," Matze previously said.

    Following the siege, Google and Apple swiftly barred the app from their app stores, and AWS took Parler offline. Parler has since hit the tech giant with an antitrust lawsuit, disputing Amazon's claims that it repeatedly warned Parler about violent content.


     
  3. You gotta love the irony. It doesn't get better than this.
     
  4. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    I thought I posted they'd find themselves hosted on Chinese or Russian servers before it was all said and done and the cultists would line up to give their data to a hostile power. Alas I can't find my post.

    Will be lulzy when Biden rolls out the Russian sanctions
     
    Frederick Foresight likes this.