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Capitol riots: Parler boss says he has been fired by the board

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The board of self-styled “loose speech-driven” social media platform Parler has fired its chief government John Matze, he said on Wednesday.

Parler became favored by using many US conservatives who objected to content regulations on facebook and Twitter.

It has a long way fewer users than both of its competitors, but grew swiftly the wake of the United States presidential election.

The platform has been in large part offline for the reason that 6 January riot in Washington DC.

  • Parler sues Amazon for pulling the plug
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“On January 29, 2021, the Parler board managed by way of Rebekah Mercer decided to immediately terminate my function as CEO of Parler. I did not take part on this selection,” Mr. Matze said in a memo sent to Parler workforce, at first mentioned by Fox information.

Mr. Matze failed to provide a motive for his termination.

“Over the past few months, I have met consistent resistance to my product vision, my sturdy notion in unfastened speech and my view of ways the Parler website online should be controlled,” the memo said.

Mr. Matze appeared to affirm the tale, posting it to his LinkedIn account, pronouncing “this isn’t a goodbye. Only a see you later for now”.

 

Parler first released in 2018, however its consumer base surged after the 2020 US election, whilst it was the most downloaded app inside the US.

However Parler’s consumer base of 12 million is only a fraction of its rival Twitter, which has extra than three hundred million.

The tech agencies that furnished the infrastructure it had to operate dropped Parler after supporters of the previous President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol constructing in Washington.

 

Amazon’s cloud-website hosting division in addition to Google and Apple’s app stores stated they eliminated Parler because it was unable or unwilling to police content that recommended or incited violence against others.

Parler is suing Amazon net services (AWS), accusing it of breaking anti-trust laws by means of casting off it.

The platform stated AWS’s choice to terminate Parler’s account become influenced by “political animus” and was designed to reduce competition amongst micro blogging offerings, thereby supporting its competitor Twitter.

Although Parler hasn’t launched a full listing of its economic supporters, heiress and Republican birthday celebration donor Rebekah Mercer and conservative commentator Dan Bongino are a number of the companies regarded backers.