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Parler
Parler
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Key Information

Parler (pronounced "parlor") is an American alt-tech social networking service associated with conservatives.[6] Launched in August 2018, Parler marketed itself as a free speech-focused and unbiased alternative to mainstream social networks such as Twitter and Facebook.[7][8][9] Journalists described Parler as an alt-tech alternative to Twitter, with its users including those banned from mainstream social networks or who oppose their moderation policies.[10][8][11][12]

Parler received criticism for its content policies, which some journalists and users claimed were more restrictive than the company portrayed.[13][14][15] Conservatives praised Parler as offering an alternative to censorship they claim to endure on more mainstream platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter.[16]

Parler's userbase grew exponentially during 2020 with minimal content moderation.[17][18] After reports that Parler was used to coordinate the 2021 United States Capitol attack, several companies denied it their services.[19] Apple and Google removed Parler's mobile app from their app stores, and Parler went offline on January 10, 2021, when Amazon Web Services canceled its hosting services.[20][21][22] Before it went offline in January 2021, according to Parler, the service had about 15 million users.[23] Parler called the removals "a coordinated attack by the tech giants to kill competition in the marketplace".[17] Parler resumed service on February 15, 2021, after moving domain registration to Epik.[24] A version of the app with added content filters was released on the Apple App Store on May 17, 2021.[25][26][27] Parler returned to Google Play on September 2, 2022.[28]

Parler was acquired by the digital media conglomerate Starboard on April 14, 2023, and was shut down on the same day.[29] According to a statement by Starboard on the website's holding page, now removed, this was a temporary measure to allow the site to "undergo a strategic assessment".[30][31]

On December 15, 2023, the company was sold to a new co-owner group consisting of Ryan Rhodes, Elise Pierotti and Jaco Booyens. Ryan Rhodes was appointed CEO.[32] A 2024 relaunch was hinted at by the new ownership soon after the company purchase. In January 2024, the company's external social media outlets officially restarted operations to announce the relaunch. The platform itself remains inaccessible, but the website has been restored.

History

[edit]

Parler was founded by John Matze Jr. and Jared Thomson in Henderson, Nevada, in August 2018. The company's name was taken from the French word "parler", meaning "to speak".[1][33][11] The name was originally intended to be pronounced as in French (French pronunciation: [paʁ.le] , English approximation: PAR-lay), but is now pronounced as the English word "parlor" (/pɑːrlər/ PAR-ler).[34][35] The Wall Street Journal first reported in November 2020 that conservative investor Rebekah Mercer had funded Parler, and Mercer has since been revealed to have been a co-founder of the company.[2][1][33][36] According to Mercer, she co-founded Parler to counter the "ever-increasing tyranny and hubris of our tech overlords".[37] Thomson serves as the chief technology officer, and Matze was Parler's chief executive officer from its founding until January 2021.[38][5] Both are alumni of the University of Denver computer science program, and were roommates while in college.[11][36] Some other Parler senior staff also attended the school.[11]

2018–2019

[edit]

Parler launched in August 2018, billing itself as an unbiased and free speech alternative to larger social media platforms, such as Twitter and Facebook.[34][39][40] The service was relatively unknown until a December 2018 tweet by conservative commentator and activist Candace Owens brought 40,000 new users to Parler, causing Parler's servers to malfunction.[39][41] The service initially attracted some Republican personalities, including then-Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, Utah Senator Mike Lee, and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, as well as some who had been banned from other social media networks, such as right-leaning activists and commentators Gavin McInnes, Laura Loomer, and Milo Yiannopoulos.[10][34] Reuters wrote that Parler had "mostly been a home for supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump" until June 2019. Matze told the news organization that although he had originally intended Parler to be bipartisan, he had focused its marketing efforts toward conservatives as they began to join the service.[10]

In May 2019, Parler had 100,000 users.[34][39] In June 2019, Parler said its user base more than doubled after around 200,000 accounts from Saudi Arabia signed up to the network. Largely supporters of Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the users migrated from Twitter after alleging they were experiencing censorship on the platform. Although Twitter did not acknowledge removing posts by Saudi users that might have triggered the exodus, the company had previously deactivated hundreds of accounts that had been supportive of the Saudi government, which Twitter had described as "inauthentic" accounts in an "electronic army" pushing the Saudi government's agenda.[10][42] The influx of new accounts to Parler caused some service interruptions, making the site at times unusable.[42] Parler described the Saudi accounts as part of "the nationalist movement of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia", and encouraged other users to welcome them to the service.[10] Some of the Saudi users tweeted the '#MAGA' hashtag and photos of President Trump with the Saudi royal family in order to curry favor with the Trump-supporting and far-right users on the service.[42] The Saudi accounts found a mixed reception among the existing user base; though some welcomed the Saudi users, others made Islamophobic remarks, and some expressed beliefs that the new accounts were bots.[10]

2020

[edit]
In June 2020, Dan Bongino (pictured) announced he had purchased an "ownership stake" in Parler.[43] The company has declined to provide a full list of owners.[44]

Parler experienced a surge in signups in mid-2020.[45] In May, Twitter sparked outrage among President Trump and his supporters when it flagged some of the president's tweets about mail-in ballots as "potentially misleading".[46][47][48] In response, Parler published a "Declaration of Internet Independence" modeled after the United States Declaration of Independence, and began using the "#Twexit" hashtag (a portmanteau of "Twitter" and "Brexit"). Describing Twitter as a "Tech Tyrant" that censored conservatives, the campaign encouraged Twitter users to migrate to Parler.[49] Conservative commentator Dan Bongino announced on June 16 that he had purchased an "ownership stake" in Parler, in an effort to "fight back against" what he described as "Tech Tyrants" Facebook and Twitter.[43] Parscale, who at the time was managing the Trump campaign, endorsed Parler in a tweet on June 18, also writing, "Hey @twitter your days are numbered", and including a screenshot of a tweet from President Trump which Twitter had flagged as "manipulated media".[45]

On June 19, right-wing English media personality Katie Hopkins was permanently suspended from Twitter for violating their policies on "hateful conduct".[50][51] An account falsely claiming to be hers appeared on Parler shortly after the ban, and was quickly verified by Parler. After the impersonator account had collected $500 in donations solicited on Parler, purportedly to sue Twitter over the ban, Parler removed it. A Twitter account affiliating itself with the hacktivist group Anonymous claimed responsibility for the imposture on June 20, and said they would donate the money they had collected to Black Lives Matter groups, a movement Hopkins had mocked in the past. Parler's then-CEO Matze made a public apology, with Parler acknowledging that the impersonator had been "verified by an employee improperly".[50] Hopkins herself joined Parler on June 20, with Matze posting that he had personally verified her account.[52][53] The incident drew some attention to Parler within the United Kingdom. Thirteen Members of Parliament had joined as of June 23, and some British right-wing and conservative activists endorsed the service over Twitter.[50]

On June 24, 2020, The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump campaign was looking for alternatives to social media networks that had restricted their posts and advertising, and that Parler was being considered.[54][55] Beginning in mid-2020, Parler negotiated with The Trump Organization, offering a 40% stake in the social network in exchange for Trump making Parler his primary social media platform. As a part of the deal, Trump would have had to post all his content to Parler at least four hours before publishing it to other networks.[36] According to Michael Wolff, Trump representatives also included the condition that Parler ban anyone speaking negatively about Trump, which Parler did not accept.[56] The White House Counsel's office reportedly halted the negotiations on the grounds that such a partnership would violate ethics rules as long as Trump was president. The general counsel for the nonpartisan watchdog non-profit Project On Government Oversight, Scott Amey, said there ought to be an "immediate criminal investigation" into the Trump administration over the negotiations.[36]

Texas Senator Ted Cruz published a YouTube video on June 25, in which he denounced other social media platforms for "flagrantly silencing those with whom they disagree" and announced that he was "proud to join Parler".[57] Other prominent Republican and conservative figures also joined in June, including Ohio Representative Jim Jordan, New York Representative Elise Stefanik, and former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley.[55]

Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing President of Brazil, joined Parler on July 13;[58][59] Four months earlier in March 2020, Twitter had removed some of President Bolsonaro's posts for violating their rules on spreading disinformation related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[59][60] Earlier in July, his son Flávio Bolsonaro had endorsed Parler on Twitter. As a result, Parler experienced a wave of signups from Brazil in July.[59] According to Bloomberg News on July 15, 2020, Brazilian users made up over half of all Parler signups that month.[45]

On October 1, 2020, Reuters reported that people associated with the Russian Internet Research Agency, a group known for their interference in the 2016 presidential election, had been operating social media accounts on both mainstream and alt-tech platforms. One of the accounts, named Leo, identified in an FBI probe as a "key asset in an alleged Russian disinformation campaign", had been spreading "familiar and completely false" information, including claims that mail-in voting was prone to fraud, that President Trump was infected with coronavirus by leftist activists, and that Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden was a "sexual predator".[61] Axios reported that the account had not found much of an audience on mainstream platforms, but had caught on among the alt-tech platforms; the Twitter account had fewer than 200 followers, but had 14,000 on Parler.[62] Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn all took actions to suspend the accounts from their platforms.[63] The Washington Post reported on October 7 that Parler had declined to terminate the account after being informed of its connections to the disinformation organization, stating they did not need to act because they had not been contacted directly by U.S. law enforcement.[61]

Also in October, as Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube acted to ban content supporting the far-right QAnon conspiracy theory,[64] thousands of QAnon proponents migrated to Parler.[65][66] Similar actions by Facebook against organizations promoting violence prompted some members of the Proud Boys and adherents of the boogaloo movement to move to Parler.[66]

Parler experienced a wave of signups following the 2020 U.S. presidential election from American conservatives, concerned that their posts – or those of other conservatives on mainstream social networks – would be affected by the platforms' efforts to quash misinformation about the election.[66][67][68] The app was downloaded nearly a million times in the week following Election Day on November 3, and rose to the top of both the Apple App Store's and the Google Play Store's lists of most popular free apps. Following the election, The Verge reported that Parler had become a "central hub for many of the conservative protests against recent election results", including the Stop the Steal conspiracy theory, which alleged widespread electoral fraud in the 2020 presidential election.[69][70] The surge had largely abated by December 2020, with downloads of the app returning to numbers similar to before the election.[71][72] According to findings from Stanford researchers published on January 28, 2021, Parler registered 7,029 new users per minute during the election.[73]

A verified account on Parler claiming to be Ron Watkins, the former site administrator of 8chan and son of 8chan owner Jim Watkins, made several posts on November 15, 2020, appearing to confirm theories that his father was Q, the anonymous figure behind the QAnon conspiracy theory.[74] It was later determined that security researcher Aubrey Cottle had taken advantage of Parler security flaws to change the name of an already-verified Parler account, giving it the appearance of belonging to and having been verified as Watkins.[16] This incident led to a feud between Watkins and Parler investor Dan Bongino, with Watkins publicly criticizing Parler's security on Twitter and describing the service as "compromised". Bongino responded by tweeting insults at Watkins.[75][76]

2021

[edit]

Parler was among the social media services used to plan the storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.[77][78][79] On January 2, Parler notified the FBI about material that Parler's lawyers found sufficiently alarming to warrant law enforcement attention, including posts by a user who declared that January 6 would be "the final stand where we are drawing the red line at Capitol Hill".[80] On January 5, the Secret Service warned the Capitol Police about an individual who intended to attend the rally and incite violence, and whose Parler posts included threats of violence against police.[81] Mentions of "civil war" on Parler increased fourfold in the hours just prior to the storming.[82] According to BuzzFeed News, after the riot at the Capitol, Parler had been "overrun" with death threats, encouragement of violence, and calls for Trump supporters to join another armed march on Washington, D.C. on the day before the inauguration of Joe Biden.[22] Activists, including Sleeping Giants, and employees of technology companies that had been providing services to Parler began to pressure those companies, which included Google, Apple, and Amazon, to deny service to Parler.[23]

Parler experienced a wave of downloads after Twitter permanently suspended President Donald Trump from their platform due to his remarks about the storming of the Capitol. This led Parler to become the top downloaded app on the Apple App Store on January 8.[83]

Shutdown by service providers

[edit]

On January 8, two days after the storming of the Capitol, Google announced that it was pulling Parler from the Google Play Store, contending that its lack of "moderation policies and enforcement" posed a "public safety threat".[84][85] Also on January 8, Apple informed Parler that they had received complaints about its role in the coordination of the riot in Washington D.C., the existence of "objectionable content" on the service, and that they had observed that "the app also appears to continue to be used to plan and facilitate yet further illegal and dangerous activities," in violation of Parler's own guidelines forbidding such content. Apple requested Parler submit a "moderation improvement plan" within 24 hours or face removal from the App Store. On Parler, Matze posted that Parler would not "cave to pressure", and accused Apple of being anti-competitive.[86] Apple followed through with their warning the next day, removing Parler from the App Store on January 9.[87] Ahead of the shutdown, some Parler users issued calls for violence and armed protests at state capitols and circulated conspiracy theories about Apple.[88] Apple CEO Tim Cook later explained that in the company's view, "free speech and incitement of violence" do not have "an intersection".[89] Cloud communications company Twilio ended service to Parler, which made the service's two-factor authentication system stop working; Okta also denied them access to their identity management service, resulting in Parler losing access to some of their software tools.[23] In addition, the database company ScyllaDB terminated its relationship with Parler, who had been using Scylla's Enterprise database.[90]

On January 9, Amazon announced that it would suspend Parler from Amazon Web Services, effective at 11:59 p.m. PST the next day. Echoing Google's rationale for dropping its version of the Parler app, Amazon said Parler's failure to police violent content made the site "a very real risk to public safety".[22][91][92] Parler went offline when Amazon withdrew its cloud computing services as scheduled.[21][93] On January 11, Parler sued Amazon under antitrust law, saying the suspension of services was "apparently motivated by political animus", and had been carried out with the intention of benefiting Twitter by reducing competition.[94] U.S. District Judge Barbara Rothstein ruled in Amazon's favor ten days later.[95][96] Parler also denied Amazon's claims that it failed to properly moderate content.[97] On March 2, Parler withdrew a federal antitrust lawsuit they had filed against Amazon two months prior, but filed a new lawsuit against the company in state court. The new lawsuit alleged Amazon had breached terms in their contract and defamed Parler.[98][99] Amid the lawsuit, in mid-April 2021, Amazon accused Parler of trying to conceal its ownership.[100] On September 17, 2021, Seattle federal district Judge Barbara Rothstein approved Parler's request that its complaint against Amazon be heard in King County Superior Court.[101]

Some applauded the technology companies' decisions to deny service to Parler. Others raised concerns about private enterprises determining what remains online. Ben Wizner, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), told The New York Times that he was concerned about neutrality when it came to Internet infrastructure providers such as Amazon AWS and app stores.[102] Evelyn Douek, a lecturer and content moderation researcher at Harvard Law School, told The Wall Street Journal she thought an argument could be made to defend the infrastructure providers' decision to deny service to platforms who do not adequately moderate content, but wondered if similar amounts of violent content might exist elsewhere in platforms they were serving.[23] Paul Levinson, a professor at Fordham University, wrote in The Conversation that although he believed the de-platforming violated the "spirit of the First Amendment", it was warranted due to the incitement to violence on the Parler site.[103]

After the shutdown, Parler users were reported to have migrated to other alt-tech websites including BitChute, Clapper, CloutHub, DLive, Gab, MeWe, Minds, Rumble, and Wimkin, as well as encrypted messaging services including Telegram and Signal.[104][105][106]

Content scraping

[edit]

Following the storming of the Capitol and just before Parler went offline, a researcher scraped roughly eight terabytes of public Parler posts. The posts scraped made up 99% of publicly-accessible Parler posts, including more than a million videos, which maintained GPS metadata identifying the exact locations where the videos were recorded. The researcher said her intention was to make a public record of "very incriminating" evidence against those who took part in the storming. The data dump was posted online, and the researcher has said the data will eventually be made available by the Internet Archive.[107][108] According to Ars Technica and Wired, the reason the researcher was able to scrape the data so easily was because the Parler website had poor coding and poor security.[108][109] According to Wired, although all posts downloaded by the researcher were public, because Parler did not scrub metadata, GPS coordinates of many users' homes had likely been exposed.[109] As of January 15, 2021, Gizmodo had mapped out the locations of around 70,000 of the GPS coordinates linked to videos scraped from Parler.[110] Videos scraped from Parler were used as evidence during the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump.[111]

Investigations

[edit]

On January 21, 2021, the chairwoman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, Carolyn Maloney, called for an FBI probe into Parler, including its role in the storming of the Capitol. Maloney said her committee intends to open an investigation into Parler.[112][113] On February 8, 2021, the committee asked Parler for information relating to who owns or has funded the company, any business ties to Russia, and its alleged offer of an ownership interest in the company to former president Donald Trump during his term.[112][114]

On August 27, 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives select committee investigating the storming of the Capitol demanded records from Parler (alongside 14 other social media companies) going back to the spring of 2020.[115]

Departure of John Matze

[edit]

Parler's board, led by Rebekah Mercer, dismissed John Matze from his role as Parler's CEO on January 29.[116][117] Matze sent a memo to Parler staff in which he said that "I did not participate in this decision" to terminate him and that he had "met constant resistance to [his] product vision, [his] strong belief in free speech and [his] view of how the Parler site should be managed".[38] In interviews following his firing, Matze noted that his termination may have been related to a dispute within the company regarding his belief that the company needed to "crack down" on domestic terrorism and violence and be "a little more pragmatic while still respecting free speech", but he was "not exactly sure" why he had been fired.[118][119] Matze also said his suggestion to implement a moderation policy to remove extremist content was overruled by Mercer.[116]

Amy Peikoff, Parler's Chief Policy Officer, provided a statement to Fox News in which she disputed Matze's memo to staff as "inaccurate and misleading", though she did not specify to which statements she was objecting.[36][119] Parler investor Dan Bongino published a video on Facebook after Matze's departure, accusing Matze of "really bad decisions" leading to Parler being taken offline and causing app stability issues, and saying that Matze "decided to make this public, not us. We were handling it like gentlemen."[120]

On February 19, Parler briefly banned Matze's account before restoring it later that day after BuzzFeed News contacted a Parler spokesperson about the banning.[121] This banning came after Matze made a post on Parler asking his followers what they thought the "fair market value" of the company was.[121]

On March 22, in Clark County, Nevada, Matze filed a lawsuit against Parler's board, alleging that Rebekah Mercer and Parler's board members engaged in a scheme to steal Matze's share in Parler.[122]

Return online and subsequent events

[edit]

Matze wrote in a Parler post on January 9 that Parler could be unavailable for a week as they worked to "rebuild from scratch" and move to a new service provider.[87] In an interview with Fox News on January 10, Matze said Parler had faced trouble in finding a new service provider, contradicting a previous Parler post in which he had said many vendors were vying for their business.[123] He also said others had refused to work with Parler: "Every vendor, from text message services to email providers to our lawyers, all ditched us, too, on the same day."[123][102] Interviewed by Reuters on January 13, Matze said he did not know if or when Parler would return to operation.[90] On January 17, Matze posted a message on the site's homepage, promising to "welcome all of you back soon".[124] Matze also claimed that Parler could be back online by the end of January.[125]

According to a January 12 Wall Street Journal report, other cloud hosting platforms that could potentially host Parler would be Google Cloud Platform, Microsoft Azure, or the Oracle Cloud platform. As of publication, Parler had not contacted Microsoft, and would not be using Oracle for cloud hosting; Google declined to comment, but the Journal noted that Google had denied Parler a position in the Play Store. The Journal also noted that Parler could consider using smaller cloud hosting companies, but that some technologists doubted such companies' ability to provide stable hosting to such a heavily used service. One such smaller provider, DigitalOcean, let it be known that they would not accept Parler as a customer.[126]

On January 10, Parler transferred their domain name registration to Epik, a domain registrar and web hosting company known for hosting far-right websites such as Gab and Infowars.[127][126][128] Vice noted that through this move, Amazon Web Services was again indirectly providing services to Parler, as Epik uses AWS to host many of their DNS servers.[129] On January 17, Parler brought their website back online, hosting only a static page without any of the functionality of the Parler service.[124] Parler's web hosting provider was unknown,[130] but it was noted that they were receiving protection from distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks from the Russian-owned cloud services company DDoS-Guard.[131][132][130] This move was criticized in The New York Times and Wired as routing traffic through Russia, and may enable the Russian government to surveil Parler's users and provide data to Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB).[133][130] Both Epik and DDoS-Guard said they were not providing Parler with webhosting.[134][130]

The Parler service returned online for existing users on February 15, with a redesigned website and logo, and said they would open the service to new signups the following week. Parler posts from before the service went offline are no longer available.[25][97] Parler announced that their redesigned site will monitor violent content with human and artificial intelligence and that they will hide posts that attack a person based on sex, sexual orientation, race, or religion with a "trolling filter", however, users are allowed to click through the filter and view the content.[135] Parler's new host is SkySilk Cloud Services, a web infrastructure company based in Los Angeles who said of their hosting of Parler that "Skysilk does not advocate nor condone hate, rather, it advocates the right to private judgment and rejects the role of being the judge, jury, and executioner."[136][137] SkySilk also said they believe Parler is "taking the necessary steps to better monitor its platform".[97] Mercer helped finance Parler's return online.[138]

On February 25, Apple denied Parler's request to be re-added to the App Store, concluding that the changes Parler had made to their terms of service were not adequate. Apple added that "simple searches reveal highly objectionable content, including easily identified offensive uses of derogatory terms regarding race, religion and sexual orientation, as well as Nazi symbols" on the service.[139]

In late March, Parler claimed in a letter to the House Oversight Committee that "in the days and weeks leading up to January 6th, Parler referred violent content from its platform to the FBI for investigation over 50 times, and Parler even alerted law enforcement to specific threats of violence being planned at the Capitol."[140]

In April, Parler signed up for Salesforce's email services.[141]

A modified version of the Parler app was released on the App Store on May 17. It blocks posts identified by Parler as "hate", though they are still available on the web and on other versions of Parler. The app also includes additional features for reporting "threat[s] and incitement".[142][143][27]

In August, Parler CEO George Farmer asked for an apology from Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and others after a Reuters report said that the FBI found little evidence that the storming of the Capitol was planned and organized in advance.[144]

On September 14, Parler announced that they would sponsor NASCAR Xfinity Series driver J. J. Yeley's No. 17 car during a race at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway later in September.[145]

On December 20, Parler announced that they would expand their business into non-fungible tokens (NFTs).[146]

2022

[edit]
Kanye West agreed to buy ownership of Parler and the deal was called off several weeks later.

On January 5, 2022, left-leaning liberal think tank New America released a report titled "Parler and the Road to the Capitol Attack". According to Mother Jones, the report is "a deep and retrospective dive through an estimated 183 million now-public posts" on Parler that discusses Parler's role in the 2021 Capitol attack and the platform's role in the spread of disinformation.[147][148]

On January 11, a ransomware group joined Parler and started using the platform to aid its extortion efforts. Prior to joining Parler, the group had accounts on Tumblr and Twitter, which were both removed.[149]

On January 22, Farmer claimed that Parler was "unfairly scapegoated" in the aftermath of the Capitol attack and alleged there was a conspiracy against him by Big Tech companies.[3]

On February 9, Parler announced that former First Lady Melania Trump would exclusively use Parler for communications and that the platform would become her "social media home".[150]

In early March, Parler announced that they would launch a marketplace for NFTs called DeepRedSky.[151]

In late June, Tampa Bay lawyer Dale Golden filed a lawsuit against Parler after receiving unsolicited promotional text messages from Parler and alleged that the platform had violated Florida's Telephone Solicitation Act (FTSA).[152]

On September 2, Parler's app became available again on Google Play Store, after Parler reportedly agreed to moderate posts that are shown in the Android version of the app.[28]

Also in September, Parler announced a restructuring of their platform and company that would focus on providing services to businesses that have the potential of being forced off the Internet for hosting controversial content. Toward that end, they created a new parent company, Parlement Technologies Inc., which purchased Dynascale Inc., a cloud service provider.[153]

Kanye West purchase bid

[edit]

On October 17, Parler's parent company stated that Kanye West had agreed to buy ownership of the platform. This came after West was blocked from Instagram and Twitter for antisemitic remarks.[154] The deal was expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2022,[155] but was terminated in December by mutual agreement.[156] Parler accidentally doxxed over 300 of its VIP members by including their email addresses in its announcement of West's purchase.[157]

2023 acquisition and shutdown

[edit]

On April 14, 2023, digital media conglomerate Starboard announced that it had acquired Parler's parent company Parlement Technologies, and that it would temporarily shut down the social site while it prepared a revamped version.[29]

The website's home page was initially replaced with a holding page containing a statement by Starboard saying that "No reasonable person believes that a Twitter clone just for conservatives is a viable business any more" and that "the Parler app as it is currently constituted will be pulled down from operation to undergo a strategic assessment".[158] For a period of time, the page was a simple purple/pink background emblazoned with the Parler brand and logo, and a message that read, "Coming Soon."

2024 relaunch

[edit]

On February 9, 2024, Parler's social media outlets announced a relaunch of the social media service, simultaneously updating the website with a form to allow visitors to register for announcements regarding the platform's reopening.[159][160]

In April 2024, Parlement Technologies, Parler's former parent, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, listing total assets and liabilities of between $10 million and $50 million.[161]

Usage

[edit]

Parler had fewer than a million users until early 2020.[162] In the last week of June 2020, it was estimated that the Parler app had more than 1.5 million daily users.[55] As of July 15, 2020, Parler had 2.8 million total users and had been downloaded 2.5 million times, nearly half of which were in June.[13][45] Throughout June and July, Parler on several occasions was highly listed both on the Apple App Store and on the Google Play store, in various categories and overall.[15] The Parler app was downloaded nearly a million times in the week following Election Day in the United States on November 3, and became the most popular free app both on the Apple App Store and on the Google Play Store.[69] Parler remained the most downloaded app in the United States for five days in early November.[75] The New York Times reported that Parler had added 3.5 million users in a single week,[163] and during that month the service had about four million active users, and more than ten million total.[68][2] In December 2020, Parler had around 2.3 million daily active users.[72] Fast Company reported that, as of December 5, both the number of daily active users and the rate of new downloads had dropped from their November peak, and CNN reported on December 10 that downloads had "plummeted" and were returning to the numbers Parler was experiencing before the election.[71][72] Parler again topped the App Store downloads chart on January 8, 2021, shortly after then-President Trump was permanently suspended from Twitter and also shortly before Parler was removed from the App Store by Apple.[83][87] As of January 2021, Parler reported having 15 million total users.[23] According to Sensor Tower, Parler has received 11.3 million global downloads from both the App Store and the Play Store.[164] Also according to Sensor Tower, app downloads for Parler had dropped from 517,000 in December 2020 to 11,000 in June 2021.[165] According to a May 2022 Pew Research Center poll, 38 percent of American adults have heard of Parler, while only 1 percent regularly get their news from Parler.[166]

Despite the wave in signups in mid-2020, and the larger surge in November of that year, some journalists and researchers expressed doubt that Parler will remain popular or enter mainstream usage. According to TheWrap, after several weeks of more than 700,000 downloads a week, Parler's weekly downloads subsided back into the low 100,000s during mid-July.[167] Bloomberg News also reported that downloads of the app had substantially slowed following the initial mid-2020 wave, and described Parler's June download numbers as a "small fraction" of apps like TikTok, which receives tens of millions of downloads a month.[45] Parler's user base, though it grew substantially in mid- and late 2020, remained much smaller than its competitors'.[13][44][41] As of November 2020, Twitter had 187 million users a day and Facebook had 1.8 billion users a day, whereas Parler had four million active users and eight million total.[68] Slate wrote that alternative social networks like Parler "normally ... just don't get that big."[15] When Parler's download and usage activity diminished following the November surge in popularity, the vice president of insights at the app analytics company Apptopia said to CNN, "The data trends resemble a fad, and a short-lived one at that ... Parler had a very good spike. People were interested, it's in the news, it receives downloads. ... But it appears, in our data, that there is no staying power."[72]

Although some high-profile figures have created accounts on Parler, many of them remain more active, and have substantially larger follower bases, on mainstream social networks.[8][13][41][168] Mic questioned how long Parler's spike in popularity would last, citing as an obstacle the reluctance among those with large Twitter followings to migrate to a new service.[49] The Daily Beast noted in July and October 2020 that many high-profile conservatives who opened accounts on Parler in the previous month had since stopped using the service, while remaining active on mainstream social networks.[169][170] Some have described Parler as a backup in case Twitter bans them.[45][169] CNN interviewed Trump supporters in December 2020 about their social media use and found that "almost none" had completely abandoned Twitter and Facebook.[171] The same month, OneZero reported that Parler users were gathering in Facebook groups to complain that Parler's interface was difficult to operate, to share concerns about having to submit identification to be verified, and to express regrets that their friends and family had not joined.[172]

User base

[edit]

Parler has a significant user base of conservatives.[173][174][175][155][176] The app also has a number of high-profile Republican users, including Senators Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, as well as Fox News host Sean Hannity.[55][177] The Anti-Defamation League wrote in November 2020 that "Parler has attracted a range of right-wing extremists" including Proud Boys; proponents of the QAnon conspiracy theory; anti-government extremists including members of the Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, and other militia groups; and white supremacists including members of the alt-right and far-right accelerationists such as the terrorist group Atomwaffen Division.[7][162] Leaked GPS coordinates from Parler also revealed that users of the site include police officers in the United States and members of the U.S. Armed Forces.[178] Parler was also used by at least 14 UK Conservative Party Members of Parliament; several ministers including cabinet minister Michael Gove and a number of prominent UK conservative commentators joined the app.[179] Some right-wing news companies including Breitbart News, The Epoch Times, and The Daily Caller also had accounts on Parler.[180]

Researchers, journalists, and Parler users have observed the lack of ideological diversity on the service,[75][41][181] and that Parler has served as an echo chamber for right-wing extremists and Trump supporters.[187] In mid-2020, alt-right activist and Trump supporter Jack Posobiec compared the service to a Trump rally, saying Parler lacks the "energy" Twitter draws from having communities of people with differing viewpoints.[41][181] Around the same time, extremism researcher and professor Amarnath Amarasingam said of Parler, "talking to yourself in the dark corners of the internet is actually not that satisfying," and that he was skeptical Parler would excite the far right without left-leaning users with whom they can interact and fight.[15] In June 2020, Matze said he wanted to see more debate on the platform and offered a "progressive bounty" of $10,000 to liberal pundits with at least 50,000 Twitter or Facebook followers who would join; receiving no takers, he later increased this amount to $20,000.[41][55]

Jason Blazakis, the director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute, told The Hill in November 2020 that he thought extremist users migrating to Parler was a good thing: "these people are leaving those platforms and no longer trying to red pill individuals to see their conspiracy theories on large platforms like Facebook and Twitter." He said Parler's size might result in a smaller audience for those pushing conspiracy theories and spreading misinformation.[188] Angelo Carusone, president of the progressive media watchdog group Media Matters for America, has said of Parler, "The self-segmenting of this group to Parler will intensify their extremism. No doubt about that. But it will also weaken the influence of the right wing by siphoning off a segment of users, many of whom will be the most engaged users."[185]

Parler is one of a number of alternative social network platforms, including Gab and BitChute, that are popular with people banned from mainstream networks such as Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Reddit, and Instagram.[189][190] Deen Freelon and colleagues writing in Science characterized Parler as among alt-tech websites and services that are "dedicated to right-wing communities", and listed the service along with 4chan, 8chan, BitChute, and Gab. They noted there are also more ideologically neutral alt-tech services, such as Discord and Telegram.[191] Joe Mulhall of the UK anti-racism group Hope Not Hate has categorized Parler among the "bespoke platforms" for the far-right, which he defines as platforms which were created by people who themselves have "far-right leanings". He distinguishes these from "co-opted platforms" such as DLive and Telegram, which were adopted by the far-right due to minimal moderation but not specifically created for their use.[192]

Content

[edit]

Parler is known for its conservative content.[173][174][175][155][176][excessive citations] Parler has said they will not fact-check posts on the platform, a decision BBC News in 2020 says has allowed misinformation to spread more easily on the platform than on mainstream social networks. In particular, BBC News noted the presence of posts spreading the QAnon conspiracy theory, as well as misinformation surrounding the 2020 U.S. presidential election, COVID-19, child trafficking, and vaccines.[66] The Verge noted in November 2020 that Parler had become a "central hub" for the Stop the Steal conspiracy theory relating to the 2020 U.S. presidential election.[69] In 2019 and 2020 respectively, The Forward and The Bulwark observed the presence of antisemitic conspiracy theories as well as others.[8][193] An analysis of posts from the week leading up to the Capitol storming found that 87% of the links shared on Parler were to misinformation websites, including Islamophobic and QAnon sites.[194] According to Stanford University's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Parler had become an "echo chamber" for "unfounded conspiratorial allegations of deliberate theft and plotting".[3]

Matze told The Forward in 2019 that he was unaware of antisemitic content on Parler, but he was unsurprised it was there. He believes removing hateful content only further radicalizes people, saying, "If you're going to fight these peoples' views, they need to be out in the open. ... Don't force these people into the corners of the internet where they're not going to be able to be proven wrong."[8] Extremism expert Chip Berlet said of Matze's opinions on hateful content: "I think he's full of it. ... I think he knows exactly what he's creating, he's encouraging people who basically don't like other folks in the country ... it's balogna, this is a place for people to fester in their own bigotry."[8] In December 2020, the Houston Chronicle argued that "Beneath the thin guise of the app’s self-proclaimed emphasis on 'free speech' lies the ability to say not just a hypothetical 'anything,' but specifically to share racist slurs and violent threats toward political opponents."[9] Political scientist Alison Dagnes has said of Parler's stance on speech on the platform: "I don't think you can have it both ways. ... There is no such thing as civilized hate speech."[8]

In late 2020, Parler revised their site guidelines, which had previously prohibited pornography and obscenity, to permit the posting of "adult sex or nudity".[49][195] A review by The Washington Post in December that year found that pornography was "surging" on Parler, and "threaten[ed] to intrude on users not seeking sexual material". The Post observed that pornographic videos began playing without label or warning, and that a filter to label and require an additional click to view explicit content was not being uniformly applied to pornographic images. The report also noted that conspiracy theory content overlapped with pornography, observing that searches for QAnon-related hashtags retrieved "numerous pornographic images".[195][75][196]

A study co-written by Annalise Baines, Muhammad Ittefaq and Mauryne Abwao published in the journal Vaccines found that Parler provided an echo chamber for vaccine misinformation and conspiracy theories.[197][198]

Moderation

[edit]

Parler describes itself as a free speech platform, and its founders have proclaimed that the service engages in minimal moderation and will not fact-check posts. They have also said they will allow posts that have been removed or flagged as misinformation on other social media networks such as Twitter.[13][44] Matze said in an interview with CNBC on June 27, 2020, "We're a community town square, an open town square, with no censorship ... If you can say it on the street of New York, you can say it on Parler."[55] The service has been popular among conservatives who allege Twitter and Facebook has been biased against them when moderating content or flagging misinformation, praising Parler for offering an alternative to these mainstream platforms.[16][66][55][199][excessive citations]

However, the site has been criticized by users and journalists who believe its content policies are more restrictive than the company portrays, and sometimes more restrictive than those of the mainstream social media platforms to which it claims to be an unbiased free speech alternative.[50][14][15][200][excessive citations] Parler's guidelines disallow content including blackmail, support for terrorism, false rumors, promoting marijuana, and "fighting words" directed towards others.[46][55] The site initially forbade the posting of pornography, obscenity, or indecency, but later modified its guidelines to allow the posting of "adult sex or nudity".[195][16] Parler says their moderation policy is based on the positions of the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Supreme Court, although Gizmodo has described this as "nonsensical", noting that the FCC moderates only public airwaves, not internet content, and that some of Parler's rules are more restrictive than restrictions imposed by either the FCC or the Supreme Court.[14] The Independent wrote in November 2020, "Despite positioning itself as a libertarian platform promoting freedom of expression, Parler's community guidelines are more than 1,500 words and include rules that go far beyond legal requirements."[201] Wired wrote in November 2020 that Parler enforced its guidelines inconsistently, and that the service either "prioritizes conservative speech rather than free speech" or "is set up to amplify its influencers, rather than create a space for anyone to be heard".[202]

In June and July 2020, Parler banned a spate of left-wing accounts, including parody accounts and accounts that were critical of Parler or the prevailing viewpoints on the service.[13][46][203][204] Mic wrote that Parler had used the personal information provided during signup to ban those they had identified as "teenage leftists";[49] Will Duffield of the Cato Institute wrote that Matze had also apparently instituted a blanket ban on antifa supporters.[205] After a surge in popularity among conservatives in November 2020, The Independent noted that Parler had again been accused of removing left-leaning users and removing content that contradicted or was critical of popular opinions expressed there.[201] In January 2021, Ethan Zuckerman and Chand Rajendra-Nicolucci wrote in a report for the Knight First Amendment Institute that Parler's invitation on its front page, "'Speak freely and express yourself openly, without fear of being "deplatformed" for your views,' often isn't borne out in reality as Parler regularly bans trolls who hold opposing viewpoints."[206]

On June 30, 2020, after the wave of bans, Matze published a Parler post outlining some of the service's rules.[13][14] Some of them, such as one asking users not to publish photos of feces, were described by The Independent as "bizarre".[207] Slate and Gizmodo noted that the top reply to Matze's post identified that "Twitter allows four of the five things that Parler censors."[14][15] Some of the clauses in Parler's user agreement have been criticized as "unusual" and seemingly contradictory to its mission, including one that allows Parler to remove content and ban users "at any time and for any reason or no reason", and one that would require a user to pay for any of Parler's legal expenses incurred as a result of their use of the service.[44][15][46][169][excessive citations]Ars Technica reported in November 2020 that the clause requiring users to cover legal fees had been removed from Parler's user agreement following negative media coverage.[208]

Matze told The Washington Post he does not see Parler's guidelines as contradictory to its stance on free speech.[13] As of July 2020, Parler had a team of 200 volunteer moderators.[13] Matze told Fortune magazine the same month that he wanted to expand the moderation team to 1,000 volunteers.[48] In November 2020, The Wall Street Journal reported all moderation was still being handled by volunteers, which Parler calls "community jurors".[2] In January 2021, The Wall Street Journal reported that Parler had increased its moderation team to 600 people, and began paying them. They also had begun hiring full-time employees to moderate the service.[23]

In January 2021, Parler executives acknowledged that rules-violating content had remained on the platform, which they attributed to their volunteer team of moderators being overwhelmed by large backlogs of posts to review. Parler executives also reported there had been an increase in calls for violence on the platform leading up to the riots at the Capitol. Parler's chief of policy, Amy Peikoff, told The Wall Street Journal she had directed moderators to report such threats to law enforcement, and that she "was concerned that there was actually going to be some sort of violence on the 6th".[23]

Appearance and features

[edit]

Parler is a microblogging service that is both a website and an app. After being removed from the Apple App Store in January 2021, a version of the app with added content filters was released in May 2021. The app was formerly available on the Google Play Store, but was also removed in January 2021.[207] Users who register for accounts are able to follow the accounts of other users.[209] Unlike Twitter, the feed of posts – called "parleys" – from followed accounts appears to a user chronologically, instead of through an algorithm-based selection process.[45][209][210] Parleys are limited to 1,000 characters in length, and users can "vote" or "echo" the posts of other users whom they follow, functions that have been compared to Twitter's "like" and "retweet" functions.[44] A direct messaging feature is also built into the platform, allowing users to privately contact each other.[44] Public figures are verified on the app with a gold badge, and parody accounts are identified with a purple badge.[55] Anyone who verifies their identity by providing government-issued photo identification during signup is identified with a red badge.[44] Spammers have exploited this two-tier verification system by providing documentation to verify their identity, obtaining a red badge, and changing their account name. The red badge persisted after the name change.[211] Parler refers to users of its service as Parleyers.[13]

Forbes described Parler as "like a barebones Twitter" in June 2020.[209] The same month, Fast Company wrote that Parler was "well-designed and organized", also noting its similarity to Twitter.[183] The Conversation described the service in July 2020 as "very similar to Twitter in appearance and function, albeit clunkier".[212] CNN has said Parler resembles a "mashup of Twitter and Instagram".[72][213]

Registration and verification

[edit]

Creating an account and using Parler is free. Signup requires both an e-mail address and a phone number.[49] At the point of registration, users have the option of supplying a photo of themselves and a scan of the front and back of their government-issued photo identification to have their account verified by Parler.[210][44] In order to join Parler's "influencer network", the company may ask for users' social security or tax identification numbers.[204]

According to Matze, the identification document scans submitted by users who choose to have their accounts verified are destroyed after verification. However, the requirement for ID scans to become verified has prompted conspiracy theories about Parler's retention and use of user information.[210][214] Matze has also said the service requires users to provide their phone number because people who can stay anonymous online say "nasty things".[204]

Individual users can optionally set their account to view Parleys only from other verified users. According to Matze, the purpose of the verification feature is to allow users to minimize their contact with trolls and bots.[210][215]

Security

[edit]

Several publications and researchers have criticized Parler's security.

In November 2020, security researcher Aubrey Cottle renamed an already-verified Parler account to spoof the identity of Ron Watkins, the former site administrator of 8chan. Speaking to The Washington Post after the hoax, Cottle described Parler's security as a "joke".[16] The Daily Dot also described "what appeared to be some pretty serious security flaws" in Parler in a report pertaining to the incident.[76] Watkins himself was vocally critical of Parler and its security on Twitter after the spoofing incident, describing the service as "compromised".[75][76]

Also in mid-November, security researcher Kevin Abosch claimed to have discovered weaknesses in Parler's user verification information, alleging 5,000 accounts were compromised in July 2020. Matze calling the alleged hack "fake", adding that the service is protected by "multiple layers of security".[216][217][218] As of late November, no evidence that the site used vulnerable WordPress technology as claimed had surfaced.[219][220]

In January 2021, following the storming of the Capitol and just before Parler went offline, a researcher scraped roughly eighty terabytes of public Parler posts. The scraped data included more than a million videos, which maintained GPS metadata identifying the exact locations where the videos were recorded, as well as text and images. Some of the data included posts that users had attempted to delete.[221][107] The researcher stated her intention was to make a public record of "very incriminating" evidence against those who took part in the storming. The data dump was posted online, and the researcher has said the data will eventually be made available by the Internet Archive.[107][108] According to Ars Technica and Wired, the reason the researcher was able to scrape the data so easily was due to the Parler website's poor coding quality and security flaws. There was no authentication or rate limiting on the API, and deleted posts were "soft deleted": a flag was added to hide them, but they were not actually deleted.[108][109][222] According to Wired, although all posts downloaded by the researcher were public, because Parler didn't scrub metadata, GPS coordinates of many users' homes had likely been exposed.[109]

Company

[edit]

Parler was founded in 2018 by John Matze and Jared Thomson. In November 2020, The Wall Street Journal reported that Rebekah Mercer, an investor known for her support of conservative individuals and organizations, had helped fund Parler. After the report was published, Mercer described herself as having "started Parler" with Matze, and she has been described by CNN as a co-founder of the company.[2][1][33]

Parler has not disclosed the identities of its owners; however, Dan Bongino publicly announced in June 2020 that he had purchased an "ownership stake" of unspecified value.[44][43] In November 2020, Matze wrote in a Parler post that Parler was owned by "myself, a small group of close friends and employees", and had as investors Bongino and Parler chief operating officer Jeffrey Wernick[68] In November 2020, a manipulated image circulated on social media of a Fox News chyron that appeared to report that George Soros, a billionaire philanthropist and the frequent target of antisemitic conspiracy theories, was a majority owner of Parler. Soros does not own Parler and Fox News never reported the claim; the image had been digitally altered from a photo of a television showing a Fox broadcast about a different subject.[223][224][202]

On January 29, 2021, Parler's board, controlled by Mercer, terminated Matze from his position as CEO.[38] In a memo Matze sent to Fox Business, he claimed that "I did not participate in this decision" to terminate him and that he had "met constant resistance to [his] product vision, [his] strong belief in free speech and [his] view of how the Parler site should be managed".[38] In interviews, Matze said his termination may have been related to a dispute within the company regarding the limits of free speech and his belief that the company needed to "crack down" on domestic terrorism and violence.[118][38] Matze also had all his Parler shares stripped from him when he was fired.[225] With Matze gone, an executive committee of Mercer, British lawyer Matthew Richardson, and former Tea Party activist Mark Meckler runs the company.[226][36] Parler announced on February 15, 2021, that Mark Meckler would serve as the company's interim CEO while they searched for someone to take the position.[25][227] Parler announced on May 17, 2021, that they had named George Farmer as CEO. Farmer is a former candidate for and financial supporter of the Brexit Party (now known as Reform UK) in the United Kingdom.[228][229] Prior to joining Parler, Farmer worked at Red Kite, a hedge fund founded by his father Michael Farmer, Baron Farmer, a former treasurer of the United Kingdom's Conservative Party, and was the former head of Turning Point UK, a British offshoot of the American conservative nonprofit organization Turning Point USA.[37]

On March 2, 2021, NPR reported that Parler's lawyers had written in a legal filing that the company's valuation was "approaching $1 billion".[225]

On October 12, 2021, Parler announced in an email that they would be moving their headquarters from Henderson, Nevada to Nashville, Tennessee.[230][231]

Seth Dillon, the CEO of conservative Christian news satire website The Babylon Bee, has been listed as a director of Parler.[232]

As of November 2020, Parler had about thirty employees.[2]

On December 15, Parler was bought from Starboard by Ryan Rhodes, Elise Pierotti and Jaco Booyens.[32]

Funding

[edit]

In a June 27, 2020, interview with CNBC, Matze said he wanted to raise an institutional round of financing soon, although he expressed concerns that venture capitalists might not be interested in funding the company because of ideological differences.[55] Fortune wrote in June 2020 that the company planned to add advertising to the service soon.[44] They also planned to generate revenue based on an ad matching scheme whereby companies would be matched with Parler influencers to post sponsored content, with Parler taking a percentage of each deal.[44][209] Slate has questioned Parler's business model, writing that Parler's plan to rely on advertising revenue "seems far from foolproof" given the 2020 advertising boycotts of Facebook by some large brands who objected to hateful content on the platform.[15] NBC also questioned whether corporations would be interested in advertising alongside "controversial material" on Parler.[68] Matze said in an interview on June 29, 2020, that the business was not profitable.[233] As of January 2021, Parler had not received any known venture capital, although in February 2021, Buzzfeed News reported that Parler had recently sought to obtain funding from J. D. Vance's venture-capital firm Narya Capital.[68][222][36] In January 2022, Parler raised $20 million in funding.[232]

In September 2022, Parler announced $16M in Series B funding, for a total of $56M in funding to date.[234]

See also

[edit]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Parler is an American social networking service founded in August 2018 by John Matze Jr. and Jared Thomson in Henderson, Nevada, designed as a free speech-oriented alternative to mainstream platforms like Twitter and Facebook, featuring minimal content moderation to foster open discourse. The platform gained significant traction in late 2020, particularly among conservative users dissatisfied with content restrictions on larger networks following the U.S. presidential election, positioning itself as a "non-biased free speech driven entity." In January 2021, after the U.S. Capitol riot, Parler faced deplatforming when Apple and Google removed it from their app stores and Amazon Web Services terminated hosting, citing failures in moderating violent content, which led to a near-total shutdown and highlighted disparities in Big Tech enforcement standards. Parler relaunched in February 2021 using alternative infrastructure and has since navigated multiple ownership transitions, including a 2023 shutdown deemed non-viable by then-owners before a 2024 revival under new leadership emphasizing creator empowerment and authentic engagement. As of 2025, the platform remains operational, expanding with initiatives like the ParlerPay digital wallet launched in February and publicly challenging past deplatforming decisions for accountability.

History

Founding and Launch (2018)

Parler was founded in August 2018 by John Matze and Jared Thomson, software developers and graduates based in . Matze, who became the company's first CEO, and Thomson developed the platform as a service modeled after but with a focus on unrestricted expression, responding to user frustrations with on established networks. The platform launched publicly that month, branding itself as an "unbiased" where users could post short messages called "parleys" without algorithmic suppression or , emphasizing principles of free speech over corporate oversight. Early funding included investment from , a conservative donor and daughter of hedge fund manager , who provided backing through her . Though marketed as non-partisan, the founders' conservative leanings and the platform's anti-censorship stance positioned it to appeal primarily to users skeptical of mainstream tech companies' policies. Initial adoption was modest, with the app available on and Android app stores and a web version, but it gained traction among those seeking alternatives to perceived biases in platforms like and . Parler operated as a private company under Matze and Thomson's leadership, with no immediate public funding rounds disclosed at launch.

Early Growth and Positioning (2019)

Parler continued to position itself in 2019 as a emphasizing free speech and minimal , distinguishing it from platforms like and , which its founder John Matze criticized for perceived political bias and censorship of conservative viewpoints. Matze, who co-founded the platform with Jared Thomson, promoted Parler as an "unbiased" space for open discourse, allowing users greater latitude in posting without fear of algorithmic suppression or account suspensions based on ideological content. This stance appealed primarily to conservative users and those distrustful of mainstream tech companies' moderation policies, though the platform maintained basic rules against illegal activities like threats of violence. User growth remained modest through early 2019, reflecting Parler's niche positioning amid competition from established networks. By May 2019, the platform had reached approximately 100,000 users, indicating steady but limited adoption since its 2018 launch. In June 2019, Parler reported a significant boost when around 200,000 accounts from joined, more than doubling its user base to over 200,000; this influx was attributed to regional interest in uncensored platforms amid local restrictions, though it highlighted Parler's international appeal beyond its core U.S. conservative audience. Despite this, overall engagement stayed low compared to major platforms, with Parler relying on word-of-mouth promotion and visibility rather than large-scale . The platform's early operations in 2019 were headquartered in , under Matze's leadership, focusing on technical improvements like enhanced features to support user retention. Parler's commitment to transparency included statements from Matze affirming no shadow-banning or viewpoint-based deboosting, positioning it as a counter to what users perceived as Silicon Valley's left-leaning enforcement of community standards on rival sites. This era laid the groundwork for later surges, as early adopters valued the platform's resistance to content controls that they argued stifled dissenting political speech.

Surge in Adoption (2020)

In the first half of 2020, Parler saw moderate user growth amid growing dissatisfaction with content moderation on mainstream platforms like and , particularly regarding discussions on policies and political viewpoints. By late June 2020, the platform's user base increased from 1 million to 1.5 million within a week, driven by endorsements from conservative figures seeking alternatives to perceived . The platform's adoption accelerated dramatically following the U.S. on November 3, , as users migrated in response to restrictions on election-related content by larger social networks. Between November 3 and November 8, Parler recorded nearly 1 million app downloads, pushing total installations to approximately 3.6 million. On November 9 alone, downloads exceeded 500,000, propelling the app to the top of both Apple and rankings for social media and news categories. This influx expanded Parler's registered user accounts from 4.5 million in early November to 7.6 million by November 11, and further to about 8 million shortly thereafter, with CEO John Matze attributing the growth to users weary of "" on dominant platforms. The surge primarily involved conservative-leaning individuals, including supporters of then-President , who viewed Parler as a haven for unmoderated expression amid crackdowns on claims of electoral irregularities. By late November, the platform had attracted over 10 million members, reflecting a broader shift toward alternatives promising minimal content intervention.

Deplatforming by Tech Giants (January 2021)

On January 8, 2021, Google suspended Parler's app from the Google Play Store, stating that it had identified instances of "posting that seeks to incite ongoing violence" in violation of Play Store policies, and required Parler to implement stronger content moderation before reinstatement. The decision followed the January 6 U.S. Capitol riot, during which Parler hosted discussions among users involved in or supportive of the events, though Google emphasized enforcement of longstanding rules against glorification of violence rather than retroactive content review. Apple followed on January 9, 2021, by removing Parler from the after Parler failed to submit a plan within 24 hours to address "threats of violence and plans to incite illegal conduct," as evidenced by user posts reviewed by Apple. Apple's statement highlighted Parler's inadequate processes for moderating objectionable content, noting that the platform "appears to continue to be used to plan and facilitate yet further illegal and dangerous activities" post-Capitol events. Later that day, (AWS) notified Parler of its intent to suspend hosting services effective January 10, 2021, citing Parler's inability to comply with AWS due to ineffective , which posed "a very real risk to public safety." AWS had previously engaged Parler over multiple violations, including violent threats, but deemed proposed remediation—such as hiring more moderators amid a user surge—as insufficient to prevent ongoing risks. The suspension rendered Parler inaccessible online, as it relied on AWS for infrastructure. Parler CEO John Matze responded by framing the actions as politically motivated targeting conservative viewpoints, arguing that the platform's commitment to minimal moderation aligned with free speech principles and that tech giants applied inconsistent standards compared to left-leaning content on competitors like . Parler subsequently sued AWS, alleging and anticompetitive behavior, though the suit was dismissed in June 2021 on grounds that AWS's decisions fell within its contractual discretion as a private provider. These events underscored the dependency of alternative platforms on dominant tech infrastructure and the leverage wielded by app stores and cloud providers in enforcing content policies.

Temporary Shutdown and Data Scraping (January-February 2021)

On January 8, 2021, removed the Parler app from its Play Store, citing violations of policies against content inciting violence, particularly in the wake of the U.S. Capitol riot on January 6. Apple followed on January 9, suspending Parler from the after determining the platform had failed to implement adequate moderation for user-generated threats and plans for civil unrest. These actions severely limited new downloads and updates, though existing users could still access the web version temporarily. Amazon Web Services (AWS), Parler's primary cloud host, suspended services on January 10, 2021, after reviewing posts that glorified violence and outlined further illegal actions, stating Parler had not demonstrated effective content moderation plans despite repeated requests. The suspension took effect overnight, rendering Parler entirely offline by January 11, as the platform lacked immediate alternative infrastructure. Parler filed a lawsuit against AWS alleging anticompetitive behavior and breach of contract, but a federal judge denied a preliminary injunction on January 21, upholding the termination due to Parler's inadequate safeguards against harmful content. Prior to the full shutdown, an anonymous operative using the handle @donk_enby exploited Parler's unprotected to scrape over 70 terabytes of , including more than 15 million posts, 25,000 videos, user profiles, and GPS metadata from approximately 2.7 million unique devices. This extraction, completed in roughly 10 hours between and 10, was not a traditional hack but systematic public harvesting enabled by Parler's lack of rate-limiting or on its endpoints. The scraped archive was released on platforms like the , facilitating subsequent analyses; for instance, researchers in February mapped geolocated posts to track user movements during the Capitol events, revealing patterns of coordination. Parler characterized the scraping as an unlawful breach exposing private user information, though legal experts noted that publicly accessible data collection does not constitute unauthorized access under prevailing U.S. laws. The incident highlighted Parler's vulnerabilities in , with no evidence of or access controls sufficient to prevent bulk exports, and raised concerns among users about doxxing risks from exposed data tied to inflammatory posts. By late , portions of the dataset had been used in academic studies to quantify extremist on the platform, though Parler maintained the and scraping were politically motivated efforts to suppress conservative voices.

Relaunch and Internal Turmoil (2021)

Parler resumed operations on February 15, 2021, after approximately one month of downtime, utilizing a newly developed independent technology stack that avoided dependence on major cloud providers like Amazon Web Services. The platform migrated its domain registration to Epik and implemented in-house hosting solutions to restore functionality, though app store availability remained limited due to ongoing restrictions from Apple and Google. This relaunch aimed to position Parler as a resilient alternative emphasizing reduced reliance on big tech infrastructure. The relaunch efforts were overshadowed by acute internal divisions, culminating in the abrupt termination of co-founder and CEO John Matze on January 29, 2021, by a board majority controlled by principal investor Rebekah Mercer. Matze publicly stated that the decision surprised him and stemmed from irreconcilable differences over the company's future direction, asserting he had faced "constant resistance" from the board to his proposals for maintaining open discourse without devolving into an echo chamber or platform of "perpetual antagonism." Mercer, a conservative donor with significant financial backing for Parler, did not immediately comment on the ouster, but sources indicated tensions arose from Matze's push for content policies that balanced free speech with measures to mitigate risks of deplatforming, contrasting with the board's preference for minimal intervention. Following Matze's exit, Mercer appointed , co-founder of the Tea Party Patriots, as interim CEO to oversee the relaunch transition. The turmoil escalated when Matze was stripped of all his equity shares upon departure, prompting him to file a in March 2021 against Mercer and Parler, alleging "arrogant " of his ownership stake and a hijacking of the company by board members who prioritized personal agendas over stakeholder interests. Matze claimed in the suit that his ouster violated agreements and sought damages exceeding $10 million, highlighting governance fractures that delayed operational recovery and eroded internal trust amid the platform's precarious rebuilding phase. These conflicts underscored broader debates within Parler over moderation standards and sustainability, as the company navigated investor influence versus executive autonomy in a post-deplatforming environment.

Ownership Bids and Shifts (2022)

On October 17, 2022, Parlement Technologies, Parler's parent company, announced that Ye (formerly ) had entered into an agreement to acquire the platform for an undisclosed sum. The deal followed Ye's suspension from and earlier that month after he posted content deemed antisemitic, including praise for in a subsequent Infowars interview. Parler, which had raised approximately $56 million in funding up to that point, positioned the acquisition as a means to render Ye "uncancelable" and expand its reach beyond conservative audiences. Company executives anticipated closing the transaction in the fourth quarter of 2022, subject to customary conditions. The agreement drew scrutiny due to Parler's history as a haven for right-leaning users deplatformed elsewhere, and Ye's public statements, which included threats against Jewish people and endorsements of theories. Parler's leadership emphasized the potential for broader mainstream appeal under Ye's involvement, citing his cultural influence despite ongoing controversies. By December 1, 2022, the parties mutually terminated the deal, with Parler stating that Ye's recent remarks—particularly his explicit antisemitic tirades—prevented alignment with the platform's values of open discourse without endorsement of hate. Ye did not publicly contest the termination, amid his escalating fallout with advertisers and financial institutions like . No alternative bids were publicly disclosed during this period, leaving Parler's ownership structure unchanged from prior investor-led stabilization efforts post-2021 relaunch.

Acquisition and Temporary Closure (2023)

On April 14, 2023, conglomerate Starboard acquired Parler from its parent company, Technologies, with the deal terms undisclosed but projected to be financially accretive by the end of the second quarter of 2023. Starboard, a right-leaning firm, indicated plans to integrate Parler into a broader ecosystem rather than maintain it as a standalone modeled after (now X). Immediately following the acquisition, Starboard temporarily shut down Parler's website and app, taking the platform offline to reassess its operations and strategy. The company cited Parler's lack of viability as a pure social media alternative amid competitive pressures and prior financial challenges, emphasizing a shift toward expanded functionalities beyond user-generated content posting. This acquisition came after a failed October 2022 agreement for rapper (then known as Ye) to purchase a majority stake in Parler, which had collapsed due to West's public controversies and advertiser backlash. Under Starboard's ownership, Parler remained dormant through the remainder of 2023, with no public timeline for relaunch specified at the time of closure.

2024 Relaunch and Ongoing Developments

In December 2023, Parler was acquired by PDS Partners, LLC, a Texas-based entity comprising former Elise Pierotti-Rhodes, her brother as incoming CEO, and anti-human trafficking advocate Jaco Booyens as adviser. The new ownership announced plans for a relaunch in the first quarter of 2024, emphasizing a return to the platform's free speech roots while implementing stricter measures against illegal content such as promotion, exploitation material, and . The app returned to Apple's in March 2024 following a nearly year-long hiatus, with stating the platform would prioritize improvements and avoid direct competition with larger networks. Parler resumed operations in early , achieving an official public launch on , , described by the company as restoring the "true public square" with enhanced , user , and content tools. , a former Republican staffer, led initial efforts to rebuild infrastructure, including integrations for better creator tools and partnerships aimed at . By September , the platform introduced PlayTV, a decentralized video streaming service enabling unfiltered broadcasting to rival and , followed by the Burst feature in November for short-form video content with advanced creator controls. On October 3, 2024, Parler Technologies, LLC, acquired PDS Partners to bolster platform independence through expanded infrastructure, coinciding with PlayTV's rollout. Leadership transitioned by early 2025, with Elgebaly assuming the CEO role; at CPAC in February 2025, Elgebaly affirmed commitments to resilience against while upholding minimal beyond legal mandates. In February 2025, Parler acquired select software and hardware assets from the bankrupt (formerly ) to enhance its . These developments positioned Parler as a niche alternative focused on conservative users and independent creators, though adoption metrics remained modest compared to mainstream platforms.

Company and Leadership

Founders and Key Executives

Parler was founded in 2018 by software engineers John Matze and Jared Thomson, both graduates of the , who established the company in , with the aim of creating a free-speech-oriented platform. Matze, who had prior experience in social media development, served as the initial (CEO), while Thomson took on the role of (CTO), overseeing technical operations and platform development. Rebekah Mercer, a conservative donor and daughter of hedge fund manager , played a pivotal role as an early investor and board member, providing significant financial backing that enabled the platform's launch and growth; some accounts describe her involvement as co-founding due to her strategic influence, though Matze and Thomson handled the operational founding. Matze led Parler through its early expansion, emphasizing minimal to differentiate from mainstream platforms, until his dismissal by the board—chaired by Mercer—on January 29, 2021, amid internal disputes following the platform's ; Matze later sued, alleging wrongful termination and forfeiture of his approximately 40% ownership stake. Subsequent leadership changes included , a Tea Party activist, serving as interim CEO starting in May 2021 to guide the platform's relaunch after hosting issues. George Farmer, a British businessman, husband of commentator , and former chairman of , assumed the CEO role around the same period, steering Parler through ownership transitions until mass layoffs in early 2023 under parent company Parlement Technologies; Farmer's tenure focused on app store reinstatements and conservative alignments. No further permanent CEO appointments have been publicly detailed post-2023 acquisition and relaunch efforts.

Ownership Changes and Governance

In June 2020, conservative commentator acquired an unspecified ownership stake in Parler, joining founder John Matze among key stakeholders amid the platform's early growth. This investment aligned with Bongino's promotion of Parler as a free-speech alternative, though the exact equity percentage remained undisclosed. Following Parler's in January 2021, internal governance tensions emerged, including the February 2021 dismissal of CEO John Matze by the board—comprising Bongino and investor —which Matze contested in a alleging improper ouster without cause. Matze was briefly reinstated before departing, highlighting opaque decision-making in the privately held entity's board structure, which prioritized investor control over operational leadership. By October 2022, rapper Ye (formerly ) announced a bid to acquire Parler, but the deal collapsed amid controversies surrounding Ye's public statements. On April 14, 2023, digital media conglomerate Starboard acquired Parler from parent company Parlement Technologies, immediately suspending operations for a strategic reassessment to integrate it into broader media offerings, with the transaction expected to be financially accretive by Q2 2023 end. In December 2023, Parler was sold to PDS Partners LLC, a Texas-based entity led by co-owners Ryan Rhodes (appointed CEO), Elise Pierotti (former chief marketing officer and co-owner), and Jaco Booyens, facilitating a planned relaunch in early 2024 focused on enhanced moderation and user safety. As a private limited liability company, Parler's governance remains owner-driven, with limited public disclosure on board composition or formal policies beyond operational decisions tied to ownership shifts. On February 7, 2025, Parler merged or was acquired by Triton DataCenter, potentially bolstering its technical infrastructure under the existing ownership framework.

Platform Features and Technology

Core User Interface and Functionality

Parler's core user interface revolves around a mobile-first design available on and Android apps, with web access, featuring a central timeline feed displaying "Parleys"—user-generated posts limited to 1,000 characters that may include text, images, or videos—from followed accounts in chronological order. The home screen emphasizes simplicity with a prominent compose for rapid posting, alongside tabs for feeds, profiles, search, and notifications, promoting unfiltered user expression without heavy algorithmic curation. Key interactions enable users to upvote Parleys for endorsement (without downvote options), echo (repost) content to amplify reach, and add threaded comments for discussion, fostering direct similar to early platforms but with extended character limits to encourage substantive discourse. Users manage profiles to showcase bios, followers, and media, while a hashtag-based search facilitates discovery of trending topics or individuals. Post-2024 relaunch updates refined the interface for smoother navigation, incorporating larger touch areas, draft saving for unfinished posts, pinned Parleys on profiles, and engagement streaks to reward consistent activity. Distinctive functionalities include "Bursts," a dedicated short-form video for vertical, TikTok-style and scrolling, integrated with native video players for seamless playback, and direct messaging for private exchanges, all underscoring the platform's commitment to user-controlled content dissemination.

Registration, Security, and Privacy Measures

User registration on Parler involves a straightforward process accessible via the platform's website or , requiring an , , and in some cases a phone number for verification. The setup emphasizes minimal , with users prompted to create a profile including basic details such as a username and optional biographical information before accessing core features like posting and following. No mandatory identity verification or extensive profiling is enforced at signup, aligning with the platform's free speech orientation that avoids heavy gatekeeping seen on competitors. Parler's security history includes notable vulnerabilities exposed during its 2021 shutdown period, when the absence of fundamental protections—such as , , challenges, and proper data purging—enabled automated scraping of over 70 terabytes of public content, including posts, images, videos, and metadata from approximately 15 million users. This incident, often mischaracterized as a traditional hack, stemmed from unsecured public endpoints rather than encrypted breaches, resulting in no reported compromise of private credentials but widespread exposure of user-generated material. An earlier event involved a third-party vendor breach that leaked some user emails and usernames, though Parler maintained its core remained intact. Post-2024 relaunch under new ownership, Parler asserts implementation of "robust security measures" including enhanced data protection protocols, though independent verification of specifics like two-factor authentication, , or remains limited in public disclosures. The platform's terms prohibit activities posing security risks, such as unauthorized data access, and it receives DDoS protection from unnamed providers. Privacy measures on Parler involve collecting user such as name, , phone number, , profile photo, date of birth, and during registration and usage, with policies stating that this information supports account management and content delivery but is not sold to third parties. Users can control post visibility through , and the platform claims transparent handling without the extensive practices of mainstream networks, though it reserves to share with affiliates or for legal compliance. Account deletion is not and requires contacting support, a limitation noted in user reports and policy fine print. Following the relaunch, enhanced controls and non-sale commitments are highlighted, positioning Parler as prioritizing user over extraction.

Innovative Tools and Integrations

Parler introduced ParlerPay on February 10, 2025, as a standalone application designed to facilitate payments, tap-to-pay transactions, and management of digital assets, leveraging for enhanced security and transparency in financial interactions within the platform . This tool aims to empower users with direct control over transactions without reliance on traditional banking intermediaries, positioning Parler as a hub for integrated economic activity alongside social networking. Complementing its core feed, Parler launched PlayTV on September 30, 2024, a -powered video streaming service that enables content creators to broadcast live and on-demand videos with minimal interference, emphasizing unfiltered distribution and viewer . PlayTV integrates features like Burst, introduced on November 18, 2024, which supports one-touch video sharing, built-in editing tools, and rapid deployment to audiences, facilitating quick content creation and global reach without algorithmic suppression. These video tools differentiate Parler by tying content monetization potential to verification, allowing creators to retain value from viewer interactions. In its 2024 relaunch, Parler incorporated a native video player and direct messaging service to streamline sharing and private communications, reducing dependency on external apps and enhancing user retention through seamless in-platform functionality. Mobile updates, such as those rolled out to the app on April 3, 2025, added streaks for consistent tracking, draft post saving, and pinned content options, fostering deeper community interactions without third-party plugins. While Parler maintains an algorithm-free feed to prioritize chronological posting, these integrations reflect a strategic pivot toward self-contained tools that support creator economies and privacy-focused data handling.

Content Policies and Moderation

Free Speech Philosophy and Guidelines

Parler espouses a philosophy of maximal free expression modeled on First Amendment principles, positioning the platform as a "true public square" and where users can share viewpoints without fear of ideological censorship. This stance emerged in response to perceived biases in mainstream , with founders and subsequent leadership, including CEO , emphasizing user autonomy and counter-speech—debate and rebuttal—as preferable to removal of content deemed offensive or hateful. The platform commits to viewpoint neutrality, avoiding moderation based on political alignment while relying on user-driven tools like muting and blocking to manage interactions. Under its Community Guidelines, updated as of May 8, 2024, Parler permits broad discourse but prohibits content facilitating illegal or directly harmful acts, including threats of violence, to , , , promotion, spam, , and any form of or exploitation. Zero-tolerance policies apply to child exploitation material, mandating immediate removal and reporting to , while other violations may trigger warnings, content filters, or account suspensions at the platform's discretion to maintain operational integrity. infringements and automated bots are also restricted, but guidelines explicitly reject "oppressive " and encourage open dialogue, applying sensitivity filters rather than blanket removals where feasible. Following the 2024 relaunch, Parler leadership affirmed continuity in this minimal-moderation approach, adapting only to ensure compliance with policies against extreme violence or illegality while upholding free speech as core to user engagement and platform sustainability. Guidelines remain flexible, subject to revision without prior notice, prioritizing platform safety without compromising ideological openness. This framework has drawn praise from free speech advocates for resisting pressures but criticism from others for potentially enabling unchecked prior to enhanced post-January 6, 2021.

Enforcement Practices and Evolution

Parler's initial enforcement practices emphasized minimal intervention, with moderation primarily reactive and based on user reports rather than proactive monitoring or algorithmic filtering. The platform's guidelines prohibited illegal content such as child exploitation material but refrained from censoring political opinions, , or controversial viewpoints to align with its free speech ethos. This approach drew criticism for enabling unchecked dissemination of potentially harmful material, culminating in the platform's by Apple, , and following the , 2021, U.S. Capitol events, where insufficient tools for content removal and reporting were cited as violations of policies. In response, internal tensions arose; CEO John Matze advocated for enhanced moderation measures, including product improvements for stability and effectiveness, but was dismissed by the board, including investor Dan Bongino, who prioritized uncompromised free speech over concessions to big tech demands. Subsequent ownership changes, including sales in 2022 and 2023, led to a strategic pivot: new management committed to excluding violent, terrorist, or exploitative content while preserving open discourse on non-illegal topics. By early 2024, Parler implemented algorithmic tools to detect and label offensive language, such as racial slurs, enabling masking or removal, alongside human moderators trained in identifying child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE) material. These reforms facilitated Parler's return to app stores and a full relaunch in 2024, with empirical analyses indicating a causal link between the moderation shift and substantial reductions in platform toxicity, including and threats, as measured by difference-in-differences models comparing pre- and post-change . now balances compliance with legal and standards—such as mandatory CSAE reporting and proactive scanning—against the platform's core principle of limited ideological , though critics argue the changes dilute its original uncensored appeal. Ongoing developments under leaders like Bongino emphasize over expansive human review to sustain viability amid from distributors.

User Base and Engagement

Demographics and Growth Metrics

Parler's user base experienced rapid expansion following its launch in August 2018, initially attracting a modest audience of approximately 100,000 users by May 2019. Growth accelerated significantly in late 2020 amid dissatisfaction with content moderation on mainstream platforms, with the platform reporting 10 million users by November and adding 2 million new users in a single day post-U.S. presidential election. By January 2021, prior to its temporary shutdown, Parler claimed 15 million total accounts and around 4 million active users, reflecting a surge driven largely by conservative-leaning individuals seeking alternatives to Twitter and Facebook. Following by major app stores and cloud providers in January 2021, Parler relaunched in on independent but saw sustained declines in . Monthly visits dropped to about 1.6 million by early 2024, representing an 8% decline over the prior six months, with further reduction to 137,000 unique visitors by late 2023 according to data. A planned relaunch in 2024 under new ownership, following a December 2023 acquisition, aimed to restore the website and develop a , but no significant rebound in user metrics has been reported as of mid-2025, amid ongoing challenges in a competitive market favoring larger platforms. Demographically, Parler's audience has been predominantly U.S.-based, with user activity mapping closely to in Republican-leaning areas and aligning with pro-Trump voter profiles. The platform attracted a higher proportion of veterans and active-duty personnel compared to the general population, per a Disqo survey of users. Politically, it has been characterized as a hub for conservative viewpoints, with prominent users including right-leaning media figures and a user base skewed toward Republican identifiers, though exact partisan breakdowns remain unquantified in large-scale surveys. In terms of age and gender, recent analytics indicate the largest user cohort falls in the 45-54 age range, with 57.8% male and 42.2% female visitors. An early analysis of legacy users found 93% identifying as white, exceeding the U.S. population proportion of 72%. International spikes occurred, such as 200,000 Saudi accounts in 2019 and Brazilian influxes, but these did not alter the core domestic, conservative demographic. Overall retention and daily active users have remained low post-2021, with only 1% of U.S. adults regularly accessing news on the platform as of 2022.

Usage Patterns and Retention

Parler's user engagement peaked during periods of political controversy, notably surging around the 2020 U.S. presidential election, with daily active users expanding 4-5 times from late October to early November 2020 and exceeding 5 million by November 9. App downloads reached 1 million over five days that month, driven by cohorts reacting to election outcomes, comprising 85% of new users post-November 3. Activity concentrated on specific days, such as Sundays and Mondays during the surge, before stabilizing at elevated but reduced levels. Retention proved challenging, with roughly 10% of first-time users from post-election cohorts continuing activity after two weeks, and about 20% persisting beyond three days in some groups. Overall platform from 2018 to January 2021 recorded 183 million posts across 4 million users, indicating sporadic rather than consistent long-term participation. on January 11, 2021, precipitated a sharp decline in daily active users through February, though aggregate activity on fringe platforms including Parler did not abate as users redistributed efforts. Among retained users, 52% reported satisfaction with news consumption experiences as of 2022, higher than dissatisfaction rates but reflecting a niche base. Subsequent relaunches in 2021 and 2024 under new ownership yielded limited disclosed metrics, with traffic dipping to 1.62 million visits monthly by early 2022, signaling persistent churn outside event-driven spikes.

Controversies and Criticisms

Allegations of Extremism and January 6 Role

Following the breach of the U.S. Capitol on , 2021, Parler was accused by advocacy organizations and media outlets of enabling through its permissive content policies, which allegedly allowed far-right users to coordinate logistics and express violent intentions related to the events. Specific claims included Parler posts discussing travel to , carpools to the Capitol, and rhetorical support for disrupting the electoral certification, with some users referencing or activities. However, Parler's terms of service prohibited direct calls to or illegal acts, and the platform stated it removed such content when identified, including posts inciting harm during the unrest. Federal investigations, including those by the FBI, uncovered limited evidence of centralized coordination for the Capitol breach originating on Parler or any single platform, with the attack characterized as largely spontaneous rather than a pre-orchestrated plot. Parler cooperated with authorities by providing user data that aided in identifying over 100 participants in the events, and the platform had proactively shared multiple warnings with the FBI in the preceding weeks, including a January 2, 2021, post from a Georgia user explicitly threatening to "storm the Capitol" and detailing rally plans. reviews of intelligence failures noted that agencies like the FBI and DHS overlooked or under-prioritized tips from , including those from Parler, amid broader dismissals of potential threats. The allegations contributed to Parler's rapid : Apple removed the app from its store on January 8, 2021, citing insufficient moderation of "" in user posts; followed suit the same day for similar reasons; and terminated hosting services on January 10, arguing Parler repeatedly violated policies by failing to implement effective controls against . Parler contested these actions in , asserting they constituted anticompetitive of conservative viewpoints, but a federal judge denied reinstatement, finding no by AWS. Critics of the , including Parler executives, argued the platform's role was overstated compared to mainstream sites like and , where primary organizing groups for the "Stop the Steal" rally operated, and emphasized that Parler's user base amplified post-election grievances without uniquely driving criminal acts. Following the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot, major technology companies took actions to restrict Parler's availability, citing insufficient to prevent violent or unlawful posts. Google suspended Parler from its Play Store on January 8, 2021, stating the app failed to demonstrate plans for improved moderation of that could incite violence. Apple followed on January 9, 2021, removing the app from its after reviewing posts deemed to encourage illegal activity, with the company noting Parler's policies did not effectively prohibit such material. (AWS), Parler's cloud hosting provider, suspended services effective January 11, 2021, after determining the platform hosted content violating AWS's terms, including threats of violence; this led to Parler becoming inaccessible online. Parler responded by filing a federal lawsuit against AWS on , 2021, alleging for terminating services without the standard 30-day notice and claiming discriminatory treatment compared to other platforms with similar content. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington denied Parler's request for a preliminary on January 22, 2021, ruling that AWS had not breached its agreement, as the terms permitted immediate suspension for serious policy violations, and Parler failed to show irreparable harm outweighing AWS's interests. Parler later withdrew its federal antitrust claims against AWS in March 2021, refiling in state court, but no favorable outcomes were secured, highlighting courts' reluctance to compel private infrastructure providers to host controversial content absent clear contractual or antitrust breaches. Separate class-action lawsuits by Parler users against AWS sought reinstatement, arguing the suspension harmed access to a lawful platform, but these efforts did not result in mandated service restoration. Parler did not pursue successful litigation against Apple or , and legal analyses emphasized that such deplatforming by private entities does not implicate violations, as no government compulsion was involved. In response, Parler migrated to alternative hosting providers, relaunching in February via Siberian data centers before shifting to U.S.-based services like SkySilk. By September 2025, Parler publicly demanded explanations from Apple, , and Amazon for applying inconsistent standards to other platforms with violent content, framing the 2021 actions as amid broader debates on tech monopoly power.

Debates on Moderation Balance

Parler's founding moderation policy prioritized free speech by prohibiting only content illegal under U.S. law, such as direct threats or child exploitation, while permitting political discourse banned on platforms like and . This stance positioned Parler as a refuge for conservatives facing , but critics contended it inadequately addressed , conspiracy theories, and election misinformation, fostering an environment conducive to . The debate intensified after the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol , when unmoderated posts on Parler explicitly called for violence against officials, prompting Apple and to remove the app from their stores on January 8 and 9, 2021, respectively, citing failures to prevent the spread of dangerous content. Parler defended its approach as legally compliant and accused of , noting that similar or worse content persisted on mainstream platforms without equivalent repercussions, a claim echoed in later critiques of inconsistent industry standards. Internal tensions surfaced when CEO John Matze proposed adjustments to regain access, leading to his firing by the board, including investor , on February 1, 2021, highlighting a rift between absolutist free speech advocates and those favoring pragmatic restrictions for platform viability. Following a 2022 acquisition involving Bongino and others, Parler adopted enhanced , incorporating AI detection and human review to ban violence, harassment, and illegal activity, which enabled its return to s. Empirical studies of these shifts reveal causal reductions in : severe threats dropped significantly post-2022, while less extreme problematic content persisted at lower levels, and shared news factuality improved, suggesting effective targeting of harms without broad . Debates endure, with some users decrying the changes as erosion of Parler's core mission and migrating to unregulated alternatives like Gab, while proponents argue the balance mitigates legal and infrastructural risks from hosting providers and stores, preserving a viable for dissenting views amid dependencies. By , Parler maintains this hybrid model, prohibiting explicit threats and while emphasizing viewpoint neutrality, though skepticism persists regarding enforcement consistency given prior laxity.

Business Model and Funding

Revenue Streams and Sustainability

Parler's has historically centered on , with an emphasis on influencer-based partnerships that align with its user demographics, alongside sales of branded merchandise and an NFT marketplace launched to capitalize on trends. These streams were designed to avoid reliance on mainstream ad networks perceived as censorious, but implementation has yielded limited scale due to advertiser hesitancy linked to the platform's association with conservative and controversial content. In August 2025, Parler secured a and $6 million from Amaze Holdings to expand creator commerce features, allowing users to sell physical and digital products directly to followers through integrated tools. This initiative builds on earlier explorations of premium subscriptions and tokenized assets, aiming to diversify beyond ads by fostering direct monetization for high-engagement creators. Financial sustainability remains precarious, with the platform raising about $56 million in total funding to offset operational costs amid repeated and hosting disruptions, including a full shutdown in January 2021 and a relaunch in early on proprietary cloud infrastructure. Declining user engagement and competition from larger networks have hampered ad growth, forcing dependence on investor infusions and alternative tech integrations like for long-term viability claims.

Investment History and Financial Challenges

Parler was initially funded by conservative investors, including , whose involvement was first reported by in November 2020. The platform completed a $16 million Series B funding round, which supported its early growth and acquisition of private infrastructure to enhance operational independence. In January 2022, Parler raised an additional $20 million through a funding round disclosed in an , amid efforts to rebuild following prior disruptions. Aggregate funding across rounds has been estimated at $76.2 million by PitchBook data as of 2025. The platform encountered significant financial strain after its deplatforming by major app stores and cloud providers in the wake of the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol , which severed access to key distribution channels and revenue potential from broader user acquisition. This led to a complete operational shutdown in February 2021, requiring emergency investor intervention for relaunch under new technical partnerships. Sustained challenges included high costs for self-hosting, limited in a polarized market, and reliance on niche , which constrained scalability compared to mainstream competitors. Parlement Technologies, Parler's former parent company under Mercer control, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on April 15, 2024, listing liabilities exceeding assets and seeking creditor reorganization despite having divested the platform in 2023. The filing highlighted ongoing debts from platform operations, including legal fees and infrastructure investments, underscoring persistent viability issues for alternative social networks dependent on ideological alignment rather than mass-market economics. Subsequent asset acquisitions by Parler entities, such as Dynascale in September 2022 and Edgio's EdgeCast components for $7.5 million in February 2025, reflect attempts to vertically integrate services amid funding constraints, though these have not resolved underlying revenue shortfalls.

References

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