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Amazon employees call for company to cut ties with Parler after deadly U.S. Capitol riot

 Key Points

  • A group of representatives of Amazon companies are approaching the organization to stop offering cloud management to Parler, a popular web-based media request by Trump's allies, following a series of disruptive riots in the U.S. House. Recently.
  • "We cannot take part in the assassination and brutal attacks on our beloved government," Amazon staff wrote in a tweet.
  • On Saturday night, Parler-educated on Amazon currently will not offer cloud management in the area, the suspension produced results on Sunday at 11:59 p.m. PT.


Amazon employees call for company to cut ties with Parler after deadly U.S. Capitol riot


A consolidation of Amazon company employees is approaching the organization to stop offering cloud management to Perler, a web-based media application popular with Trump's partners.

On Twitter on Saturday, a group representing the Amazon Employees for Climate Justice said Amazon Web Services should "deny Perler's administration until it removes abusive posts, including the President's inauguration." AWS provides cloud management to the Parler who owns its site.


On Saturday night, an educated Parler on Amazon would by this time not be offering cloud management in the area, the suspension produced results on Sunday at 11:59 p.m. PT. The choice means that if Parler is unable to find another cloud provider on Sunday night, the site will be disconnected from customers.


Several media outlets reported that Amazon had recently suspended Parler, but the site was still accessible to CNBC employees as it was early in the morning on the East Coast.


Agents from Amazon and Parler immediately responded to the request for inclusion.


Parler Editor and CEO John Matze lashed out at a post on his Parler account late Saturday night, saying "We are very close to Facebook or Twitter over the years. I hope Amazon, Google, the - Apple has teamed up to try to reassure rivals. "


Amazon is the latest tech goliath to cut ties with Parler in the wake of the recent US State house riots. Google on Friday removed Parler from its Android customer application store, the Google Play Store. BuzzFeed News reported on Friday that Apple had taken steps to pull Parler out of its App Store.


Parler, posted in 2018, has emerged as a popular category for President Trump’s allies in recent years by charging himself as a free speech option unlike traditional online media management like Twitter and Facebook.


Screenshots of the Parler app seen by CNBC customers presenting clues to releasing employees, such as arms-handling calls at a formal launch in the not-too-distant future. Adequate AWS implementation strategy states that it prohibits clients from using their administration "for any illegal, unsafe, false, disruptive or hateful use."


Amazon has recently cut ties with customers who have ignored its standards. In 2019, Amazon re-evaluated the dating site used by Gab, a web-based news website looking for presidents, after ignoring Amazon's tactics on something funny.


The AECJ has had some success in setting expectations that were previously heard. Last April, the group organized an "online tour" in protest of the organisation's work. In addition, the gathering is widely called for by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos' decision to announce a comprehensive environmental change plan, after the gathering proposed a change at the organization's 2019 investor conference.

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