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Gab, a social networking site popular among the far right, seems to be capitalizing on Twitter bans and Parler’s suspension from the Google store. It says its gaining 10,000 new users every hour.

A stock image of a man seen looking at an Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max tin The Hague on March 2, 2020
A stock image of a man seen looking at an Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max tin The Hague on March 2, 2020

Gab.com, a social networking site popular among the far-right, has reported massive growth over the past few days as tech companies like Twitter crack down on accounts and posts inciting violence.
Gab tweeted that it was receiving over 10,000 new users every hour. 
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Gab.com has reported massive growth following the Capitol insurrection, the removal of high-profile conservatives from Twitter, including President Donald Trump, and the suspension of the Parler app on the Google store. 

Gab, a social networking website popular among the far-right, was founded in 2016 by Andrew Torba who touts it as a vehicle for free speech.

The layout of Gab is similar to Twitter. It displays trending posts in the center, aggregated news to the right,  and a menu and explore section to the left.

In October 2018, Vox reported that Gab had 465,000 to 800,000 users. In July 2020, Fox Business reported that, as of April, the site had over 1.1 million new cumulative registered accounts and 3.7 million monthly visitors worldwide.

This past Wednesday, the day the Capitol was stormed by pro-Trump rioters, Torba reported that site traffic jumped 40%, according to NPR. On Saturday, the site tweeted that it was gaining over 10,000 users an hour, and had received “12m visits in past 12 hours” just before 11 a.m.

—Gab.com (@getongab) January 9, 2021

 

In 2017, Google removed Gab’s app from the Google Play Store for violating it’s hate speech policy. It was rejected from Apple’s App Store for related reasons.  In 2018, the website was dropped by its original domain host, Go Daddy, when it was revealed that gunman accused of killing 11 congregants in a Pittsburgh synagogue was a frequent poster on the site.

 

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