Others who’ve been active on the alternative social network Parler in recent weeks include Fox News host Sean Hannity, radio personality Mark Levin, far-right activist Laura Loomer, Senator Ted Cruz and Congressman Devin Nunes. Eric Trump also has an account verified by Parler as does Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.
Parler, founded in 2018 by John Matze and Jared Thomson, bills itself as “unbiased social media” and a place where people can “speak freely and express yourself openly without fear of being ‘deplatformed’ for your views,” according to its website and App Store description. It looks like a mashup of Twitter and Instagram, with its main feed, follower counts and ways to share posts and links.
It’s also rife with misinformation, including a stream of baseless allegations of voter fraud, such as false assertions that “millions” of votes were either lost or switched from Donald Trump to Joe Biden.
“A lot of people are just discovering Parler for the first time, but it’s been around for a while in terms of being an echo chamber for both right-wing news, but also for misinformation,” said Joan Donovan, an expert in online extremism and disinformation and research director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University.
Singer Joy Villa, a vocal supporter of President Trump, told her nearly 250,000 Twitter followers to go follow her on Parler earlier this week. She said she previously had one of her YouTube videos temporarily removed, and she feels that conservatives are being “disenfranchised” on the larger social media platforms.
“There’s a lot of shadow banning, censorship and over saturated ‘fact checking’ to the detriment of being able to freely post anything, even on the President of the United States,” Villa told CNN Business in an email. “I love that Parler is transparent with who views my posts, and that they promote and actually support free speech and free thought.”
Facebook, Twitter and other social networks have stepped up efforts to crack down on misinformation, which comes amid an outcry from prominent conservatives that their voices are being disproportionately censored.
It’s not just Parler that’s getting a boost. The app of right-wing media outlet Newsmax has climbed the app charts recently and other social apps like MeWe and video-sharing platform Rumble are also gaining steam, both of which promise not to clamp down people’s voices.
Oren Segal, vice president at the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, warned that while Parler has become popular with conservatives, it’s also attracting extremists. He worries this could expose non-extremists to radical viewpoints.
“We have seen, time after time, that extremists always look for alternatives to migrate to if they are finding difficulties on the platforms on which they’re established,” Segal said. “If a lot of people start migrating onto a platform to hear the Laura Ingrahms and Sean Hannitys, but are getting a steady dose of Proud Boys … that may normalize the fringes in a way that normally it wouldn’t.”
(The Proud Boys are a group whose ideology has been labeled “misogynistic, Islamophobic, transphobic, and anti-immigration” by the ADL).
“When these minor apps get popular, they don’t work,” said Harvard’s Donovan. “People try to have some kind of mass exodus from some of the major platforms and they can’t because the user experience is just poor.”