Suspended talk of Google Play, Apple makes a 24-hour warning about publications inciting violence at the US Capitol

Google’s Alphabet on Friday suspended the social media service Parler from its app store, citing posts that incited violence and demanded a “robust” content moderation of the app favored by many supporters of the president of the United States , Donald Trump.

Apple also gave the service 24 hours a day on Friday to present a detailed moderation plan, which noted participants using the service to coordinate Wednesday’s siege on the U.S. Capitol building

The actions of the two Silicon Valley companies mean that the network seen as a haven for people kicked out of Twitter may not be available for new downloads at the world’s top mobile app stores in a day. It would still be available in mobile browsers.

Right-leaning social media users in the United States have turned to Parler, the Telegram messaging app, and the handy social site Gab, citing the most aggressive police of political comments on major platforms like Twitter and Facebook. Twitter permanently suspended President Trump’s account on Friday.

By suspending the service, Google, whose software runs on Android phones, cited its policy against apps that promote violence and gave recent examples of Parler, including a Friday post that began “How We Recover Our Country “About twenty or so coordinated hits” and another that promotes a “Millions of Millions March” in Washington.

Parler chief executive John Matze said Friday in a post that Apple was enforcing rules on Parler that did not apply to itself.

In a statement, Google said that “to distribute an app through Google Play, we need apps to implement sound moderation for blatant content. In light of this ongoing and urgent public safety threat, we will suspend listings from the Play app Store until you fix these issues. “

In a letter from Apple’s App Store review team to Parler, seen by Reuters, Apple on Wednesday summoned participants in the crowd that stormed the U.S. Capitol building.

“Content that threatens the well-being of others or is intended to incite violence or other illegal acts has never been acceptable on the App Store,” Apple said in the letter.

Apple gave Parler 24 hours to “remove all nasty content from your app … as well as any content that refers to personal injury or attacks on government facilities now or at any future date.” The company also required Parler to submit a written plan to “moderate and filter this content” from the app.

Apple declined to comment.

Matze, who describes himself as a libertarian, founded Parler in 2018 as a “free speech” alternative to conventional platforms, but began courting right-leaning users while Trump’s prominent supporters s they moved there.

Among those who have joined are commentator Candace Owens, Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani, and right-wing activist Laura Loomer, who handcuffed themselves to the door of the New York office of Twitter to protest against the ban on the site. In November, conservative activist Rebekah Mercer confirmed that she and her family, which includes her father and investor Robert Mercer, have provided funding to Parler.

“Apparently, they believe Parler is responsible for ALL user-generated content on Parler,” Matze said. “That’s why (sic) by the same logic, Apple should be responsible for ALL the actions taken by its phones. Every car bomb, every illegal conversation on a cell phone, every illegal crime committed on an iPhone, Apple must also be responsible, ”he wrote. . “The rules that don’t apply to Twitter, Facebook, or even Apple itself, apply to Parler.”

© Thomson Reuters 2021


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