Traditional social media networks are experiencing a backlash from users as they continue to âcancelâ or otherwise censor conservative views. As a result, alternative âfree speechâ social media providers such as MeWe and Parler are seeing a surge of new users to their platforms.
Here are three of those social media Davids challenging the tech Goliaths:
1. Parler (Alternative to Twitter)
The lack of content moderation and what appears to be targeted âfact-checkingâ of users is driving a flood of new subscribers to Parler. As of Nov. 16, 10 million total users have signed onto Parler, the Henderson, Nevada-based social networking application advertising itself as a haven for âreal conversation.â For comparison, however, Twitter reports 330 million active users.
Parler and other services, such as MeWe and Rumble, have managed to attract millions of members via their lenient free speech policies. Parler, for example, promises not to censor its users on the basis of their opinions and to foster a ânonpartisanâ public space.
Those standards differ significantly from the current approach of Facebook and Twitter, whose latest free speech policies involve actively limiting the spread of “falseâ information and âfake newsââa strategy that became increasingly aggressive in the lead-up to the 2020 presidential election following claims of election interference by Russia in 2016.
So long as users do not incite violence or threaten harm, members will not be âdeplatformedâ for their views on grounds of âmisinformationâ on Parler.
âIn no case will Parler decide what content will be removed or filtered, or whose account will be removed, on the basis of the opinion expressed within the content at issue. Parlerâs policies are, to use a well-known concept in First Amendment law, viewpoint-neutral,â Parlerâs Community Guidelines state.
That policy effectively enables users to post âinaccurateâ content on Parler. Since the site lacks fact-checkers or an independent editorial board, Parler CEO John Matze said, users would instead be âcheckedâ the âold-fashioned wayââthat is, via the âSocraticâ method, which naturally plays out through open debate or the free exchange of ideas.
âYou donât need an editorial board of experts to determine whatâs true and whatâs not,â said Matze. âThe First Amendment was given to us so that we could all talk about issues, not have a single point of authority to determine what is correct and whatâs not.â
Parlerâs hands-off approach appears to be a hit with conservativesâparticularly supporters of President Donald Trumpâwho claim that the tech titansâ recent efforts to crack down on election misinformation have unfairly singled out conservatives and users espousing right-leaning views. Republicans in Congress have similarly accused the social media giants of âpolitically motivated bias and suppression.â
At a Senate hearing on Oct. 28, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, accused Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey of unfairly silencing conservative voices on the platform:
Who elected you, and who put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report and what the American people are allowed to hear?
Cruzâs comments were in response to the removal of a New York Post article from Twitter about the alleged improper business dealings in Ukraine of Hunter Biden, the son of former Vice President Joe Biden. Conservatives have complained for years now about what appears to be the tech titansâ inconsistent censoring of right-wing content, while leaving left-wing posts largely untouched.
2. MeWe (Alternative to Facebook)
Similar to Parler, MeWeâan ad-free social media platform that many liken to Facebookâwas also founded on a commitment to free speech.
MeWe CEO Mark Weinstein told Rolling Stone last year, âIf youâre just a regular person from around the world who has a political point of view and youâre abiding by our terms of service, thatâs none of our business ⌠[but] if youâre a conservative or a liberal, and youâre spewing hate, youâre gonna be out.â
Like Parler, MeWe has a strict policy against promoting violence, along with other standard exemptions to free expression in its user guidelines, such as prohibiting pornography, bots, spam, copyright violations, criminal solicitations, and the like.
Apart from those standard exemptions, the Albuquerque, New Mexico-based social media service describes itself as having absolutely âno newsfeed manipulation, no ads, and no targetingââa policy that sets it apart from its larger Silicon Valley rivals.
The networkâs relaxed free speech policy has shot MeWe to the top of the app charts. The ânext-gen social networkâ is currently listed as the #2 free app in the Apple Store, coming in second only to Parlerâs #1 free app ranking.
3. Rumble (alternative to YouTube)
Likewise, the application Rumbleâa video-sharing website akin to YouTubeâis seeing a surge in popularity. Rumble dubs itself the âfree speechâ alternative to YouTube.
âWe donât censor political debate or dialogue,â Rumble CEO Chris Pavlovski tweeted on Nov. 10. Like Parler and MeWe, Rumble has skyrocketed to the top of the download charts on the Google and Apple app stores. The company has projected 75 million to 90 million user views on its site for the month of November, up from the 60.5 million views it garnered in October.
The sudden rise of alternative social media sites, such as Parler, MeWe, and Rumble, attest to the market demand for social networks built on âauthenticityâ and âreal user experiences,â not only from conservatives, but from all free speech-minded users.
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