‘Free speech’ social platform Gab goes offline after fatal Pittsburgh shooting

Offline: Gab is taking time off the internet, under immense pressure following the Pittsburgh attack.

By Johnny Lieu

Gab has gone offline.

The self-described “free speech social media platform” is taking time off the internet, after landing under the spotlight when the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting suspect was revealed to be a poster and user on the site.

Gab posted a message on its homepage, announcing that the site will be “inaccessible for a period of time” as it works “around the clock” to transition a new hosting provider.

The platform has been banned by PayPal, and fellow online payment service Stripe is looking to cut off the site. Gab’s new hosting service, Joyent, reportedly will suspend the site from 9 a.m. ET on Monday, Oct. 29.

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Gab’s domain registrar, GoDaddy, has also asked for the platform to take its business elsewhere.

“We have informed Gab.com that they have 24 hours to move the domain to another provider, as they have violated our terms of service,” GoDaddy told Mashable in a statement.

“In response to complaints received over the weekend, GoDaddy investigated and discovered numerous instances of content on the site that both promotes and encourages violence against people.”

Publishing platform Medium has also recently suspended Gab’s account, under which the social site had made a statement stating that it “unequivocally disavows and condemns all acts of terrorism and violence.” This statement has now been made unavailable.

Mashable has reached out to Medium for comment.

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JUST IN: Shots fired into Republican Party office in Florida!

Thankfully no one was hurt. But volunteers showed up to the Volusia County Republican Party satellite office this morning to find the front windows broken out and four bullet holes in the office:

ORLANDO SENTINEL – At least four shots were fired into the Volusia County Republican Party’s office in South Daytona, police said Monday.

No one was injured, according to South Daytona police Capt. Mark Cheatham, but the shooting broke the offices’ front window and caused some damage to the drywall inside.

Cheatham said a volunteer reported the incident on Monday, which could’ve happened between Sunday afternoon and Monday morning at the office located at 2841 South Nova Road.

No eyewitnesses have been identified and investigators are in the process of tracking down surveillance footage from neighboring businesses, Cheatham said.

Here’s more from the Volusia County Republican chair on what happened:

I don’t know if this has been on the big TV newsers this morning, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, etc, but my suspicion is that it hasn’t been since no one was hurt.

It’s just a shame that all this crap is happening up against he last week before election day, when many are already voting.

Right-wing Bolsonaro wins Brazilian election in landslide despite mass protests

Right-wing Bolsonaro wins Brazilian election in landslide despite mass protests

 

Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing candidate from Brazil’s Social Liberal Party (PSL), has won the presidential election run-off, beating Fernando Haddad of the Workers’ Party after a campaign riddled with controversy.

With 99 percent of the ballots counted, Bolsonaro, dubbed “Tropical Trump” for his populist rhetoric, is ahead with 55.1 percent of the vote. His main opponent, left-leaning Haddad, is trailing with 44.9 percent.

Bolsonaro, a former army captain, has become a polarizing figure in Brazil because of his anti-LGBT, sexist and racist remarks.

He has represented the state of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil’s congress since 1991.

The 63-year-old politician easily won the first round on October 7, finishing far ahead of the field with an overwhelming 48 percent. While it was not enough to secure the presidency in the first round, polls predicted a problem-free run-off victory for Bolsonaro.

History might have gone the other way if popular former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva had not been banned from running for office in early September. The Workers’ Party founder, known simply as Lula, is serving a 12-year sentence for corruption. However, before his presidential bid was rejected by the court, Lula was leading the polls.

Bolsonaro’s all but certain victory in the second round has sparked a vibrant protest movement that has seen thousands of women taking to streets to say “Ele nao” or “Not him” in Portuguese. Many of those who staunchly oppose Bolsonaro’s ascent to the highest office point to an array of controversial statements he made through the years and which he never recanted.

A military man, Bolsonaro saw virtues in the dictatorship that ran Brazil in 1964-1985, saying in an interview in 2016 that “the dictatorship’s mistake was to torture but not kill.” His scandalous remarks on homosexuals, rape, African-Brazilians, women, refugees who he once branded “the scum of the earth,” have resurfaced in the media, making international headlines.

Bolsonaro has come to power on the promise to fight corruption in a country that has been plagued by high-profile scandals in the recent years, as well as on the back of a liberal economic program. Bolsonaro vowed to reduce public debt by 20 percent through privatization of public companies, carry out pension reform, and lower the age of criminal responsibility from 18 to 16. Even before his election, Bolsonaro appointed banker Paulo Guedes to lead a newly-established economic ministry that would combine the current ministry of finance and planning with the ministry of industry and trade.

An advocate of gun rights, Bolsonaro has proposed loosening gun ownership laws, and threatened to unleash a war on drugs in Brazil.

BUSTED: The Truth About Democrat Mobs and The Media

The media continues to run cover for their foot soldiers, denying that any mobs exist at all. The problem is, this is the internet and their lies are easily debunked. Democrat mobs have been a distinctive problem since before the election. The media just pretends it never happened. And who remembers the tea party? Remember how non-violent they were yet still demonized endlessly in the media? Yeah I remember too. #jobsnotmobs #walkaway #maga

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Gab Booted By Hosting Company After Synagogue Shooting

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“They have given us until 9am on Monday to find a solution” 

By Tyler Durden

Update2: Gab’s Chief Technology Officer, Ekrem Büyükkaya, announced on Sunday that he was leaving the company because the “attacks from the American press have been relentless for two years now and have taken a toll on me personally.”

Gab, through Torba, has always pitched itself as an alternative to Silicon Valley social media sites, attracting a user base of people who believe companies like Twitter and Facebook are deliberately censoring their views. In 2016, when Twitter strengthened its policy against “hateful conduct” and banned a number of far-right and white supremacist accounts, Torba said Gab gained 60,000 users in eight days.

The platform itself is a combination of many of the sites that Gab would like to replace. The site works like a hybrid of Reddit and Twitter, where users can post character-limited messages, and respond, comment and vote other users’ posts up or down. Alex Jones, who has 55,000 followers on Gab, often promotes his live broadcasts there since he has been banned from YouTube and Twitter. –My San Antonio

Update: Gab has secured a new host:

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Following the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, social media network Gab was given notice by its hosting provider, Joyent, that they have until Monday to move the website elsewhere before they would disable it.

In a Sunday tweet, Gab said: “@joyent, Gab’s new hosting provider, has just pulled our hosting service. They have given us until 9am on Monday to find a solution. Gab will likely be down for weeks because of this. Working on solutions.”

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Gab came under fire immediately after the shooting when it was revealed that suspected attacker Robert Bowers was an active user who frequently ranted against Jews and President Trump. His last post on Gab reads in part: “Screw your optics, I’m going in” shortly before killing 11 people at the Tree of Life congregation in Squirrel Hill.

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Hours after the shooting, PayPal severed ties with Gab with no explanation:

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In August, Microsoft threatened to cease hosting services for Gab over two anti-Semitic posts, according to founder Andrew Torba, who deleted the posts and subsequently moved hosts to Joyent.

Reactions to Gab’s “deplatforming” have ranged from shock to applause.

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As Gab and others noted yesterday following PayPal’s decision, Robert Bowers posted to other social media networks, while plenty of bigoted, threatening and “hateful” content exists on the likes of Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and elsewhere. 

Claire McCaskill runs ad saying she’s ‘not one of those crazy Democrats’

Campaign spot is airing on radio stations in rural Republican parts of the state

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. talks to supporters during a campaign stop Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018, in Kansas City, Mo. McCaskill is facing challenger, Missouri Attorney General and Republican U.S. Senate candidate Josh Hawley in the upcoming election. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. talks to supporters during a campaign stop Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018, in Kansas City, Mo. McCaskill is facing challenger, Missouri Attorney General and Republican U.S. Senate candidate Josh Hawley in the upcoming election. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) more >

 – The Washington Times – Thursday, October 25, 2018

In the final stretch of a tight Senate race in increasingly red Missouri, Sen. Claire McCaskill turned against her own party in a new campaign radio ad that declares she is “not one of those crazy Democrats.”

The unusual message has been hitting the airwaves in central Missouri for about a week, and it debuted as Republican challenger Josh Hawley’s internal campaign polls showed him taking a 7-percentage-point lead in a race that for months has been a dead heat.

The radio spot, which was first reported by CNN, features voices of two middle-aged men discussing the race. They take a few shots at Mr. Hawley for being a “man in a hurry” and spending to much time at the gym before turning their attention to the two-term incumbent.

“I don’t always agree with Claire McCaskill but she works hard, fighting against those tariffs, doing all those town halls,” the first man says. “Claire’s not afraid to stand up against her own party.”

The second man interjects: “Yep and Claire’s not one of those crazy Democrats. She works right in the middle and finds compromise.”

The McCaskill campaign refused to answer questions from The Washington Times about whom the candidate considers to be “crazy Democrats.”

Recent polls by news organizations still show the race in a virtual tie, but the national Republican Party is touting the internal polling.

Mr. Hawley, the state attorney general, has hammered the incumbent senator for being beholden the Democratic Party and doing the bidding of Minority Leaders Nancy Pelosi in the House and Charles E. Schumer in the Senate, while ignoring the will of Missourians.

He highlights her opposition to President Trump’s Supreme Court picks and her support of gun control and sanctuary cities.

Ms. McCaskill has cast herself as an “independent voice” and a “bipartisan dealmaker” throughout the campaign in a state Mr. Trump won by nearly 19 points in 2016, rendering her one of the most vulnerable Democrats this cycle and putting Missouri on the front line in the battle for control of the Senate.

Now she has amped up that message for the closing days of the campaign.

Democrat strategist Brad Bannon said Ms. McCaskill played it smart by targeting the radio at Republicans and independents in deep-red rural Missouri.

“You can target a message with radio. Running this ad in the St. Louis market with a concentration of Democrats would be a mistake,” he said. “It’s time to galvanize the base. Running the ad in rural areas would be a good way to rally independent voters.”

In the final debate of the race Thursday, Ms. McCaskill insisted she was a moderate who could find common ground with Mr. Trump.

“Clearly we can work together on some things,” she said at the debate hosted by KMBC-TV in Kansas City.

She also blamed both parties for the extreme political division in the country. “We’ve got to turn down the temperature,” Mrs. McCaskill said, according to a St. Louis Post-Dispatch report.

Earlier in the debate, however, she echoed a common Democrat attack on the president, saying “I don’t like it that he lies all the time. I don’t get why he feels the need to do that.”

Mr. Hawley said there should be no confusion about his opponent’s partisan allegiance.

“She’s a liberal Democrat,” he said. “It’s a record that doesn’t work for Missouri.”

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