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Amazon sued by Trump supporter Parler

The logo for Amazon Web Services (AWS) is seen at the SIBOS banking and financial conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on October 19, 2017 — Reuters/Files
The logo for Amazon Web Services (AWS) is seen at the SIBOS banking and financial conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on October 19, 2017 — Reuters/Files

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Parler LLC, a social media platform favoured by many supporters of US President Donald Trump, sued Amazon.com on Monday, accusing it of making an illegal, politically motivated decision to shut it down to benefit Twitter.

In an antitrust complaint filed with the US District Court in Seattle, Parler said Amazon delivered a “death blow” by abruptly cutting off Web-hosting services on Sunday night, soon after Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google removed the Parler app from their own app stores.

Parler accused Amazon Web Services of hypocrisy for expressing a lack of confidence it could properly police its platform, including by removing content encouraging violence.

It said Amazon did this despite making no threats to suspend Twitter, where a recent top-trending tweet demanded to “Hang Mike Pence,” the US vice president.

“AWS false claims have made Parler a pariah,” and the Web services cutoff “is the equivalent of pulling the plug on a hospital patient on life support,” the complaint said.

Amazon said the lawsuit has no merit.

It said it respects Parler’s right to decide what content to allow, but that Parler has been “unable or unwilling” to remove the “significant” and growing amount of content that “encourages and incites violence,” leading to its service suspension.

Parler wants a court order requiring Amazon to reinstate its account.

It is also seeking triple damages, saying it had over 12 million users and stood to lose millions more as conservatives encourage their Twitter followers to switch to Parler.

Twitter permanently suspended Trump’s personal account, @realDonaldTrump, on Friday night, citing the “risk of further incitement of violence.”

That suspension came two days after the US Capitol was stormed by a mob of Trump supporters, whose conduct Twitter said Trump appeared to condone.

The Republican president had earlier asked Pence to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in the November 3 presidential election at a joint session of Congress. Pence did not, and Congress confirmed Biden’s win.

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