Nevada-based Parler asked a federal court for a restraining
order to block Amazon Web Services from cutting off access to internet servers.
The suit comes amid a wave of action by online giants
blocking access to supporters of President Donald Trump in the wake of last
week's US Capitol invasion and purported plans for new violent demonstrations,
especially on the day President-elect Joe Biden is due to take office.
The lawsuit said Parler was due to go dark late Monday, but
web trackers said it already was offline early in the day and had failed to
find a new hosting service.
Shutting down the servers would be "the equivalent of
pulling the plug on a hospital patient on life support," the lawsuit said.
"It will kill Parler's business -- at the very time it is set to
skyrocket."
Parler alleged Amazon was violating antitrust laws and
acting to help social rival Twitter, which has banned Trump and other accounts
promoting violent actions.
"AWS's decision to effectively terminate Parler's
account is apparently motivated by political animus. It is also apparently
designed to reduce competition in the microblogging services market to the
benefit of Twitter," the complaint said.
Amazon said there was "no merit" to the lawsuit.
"We respect Parler’s right to determine for itself what
content it will allow," an AWS spokesperson said.
"However, it is clear that there is significant content
on Parler that encourages and incites violence against others, and that Parler
is unable or unwilling to promptly identify and remove this content, which is a
violation of our terms of service."
Amazon said it had been in contact with Parler "over a
number of weeks" and that during that time "we saw a significant
increase in this type of dangerous content, not a decrease, which led to our
suspension of their services Sunday evening."
'War' on speech
In a series of posts on Parler before the site went down,
CEO John Matze accused the tech giants of a "war on free speech."
Matze also denied allegations that it enables violent
content.
"Our team worked hard to produce a strong set of
community guidelines, which expressly forbids content which incites or
threatens violence, or other activity which breaks the law," he said in a
statement.
But he also maintained that it is problematic to police all
content because "Parler is not a surveillance app, so we can't just write
a few algorithms that will quickly locate 100 percent of objectionable
content."
The lawsuit is the latest twist in a tussle between online
operators and supporters of the president which hit a new phase after the siege
of the US Capitol last week.
Twitter and Facebook each suspended Trump's account, while
online payment service Stripe said it would stop handling transactions on
Trump's website following last week's assault.
Parler, which launched in 2018, operates much like Twitter,
with profiles to follow and "parleys" instead of tweets.
In its early days, the platform attracted a crowd of
ultraconservative and even extreme-right users. But more recently it has signed
up many more traditional Republican voices.
Trump supporters expressed outrage at the news the platform
was being taken down.
Ahead of the shutdown, the president's son, Donald Trump
Jr., complained that "big tech has totally eliminated the notion of free
speech in America."
The platform drew fierce criticism in 2018 when
investigators found that the shooter who killed 11 people in an attack on a
Pittsburgh synagogue had earlier posted anti-Semitic messages on the site.