Amazon Partner GoDaddy Allegedly Kicks Pro-Gun Site Off Servers
Web hosting service and Amazon partner GoDaddy allegedly removed AR15.com from its servers, forcing the site to shift to a backup URL to say visible.

Web hosting service and Amazon partner GoDaddy allegedly removed AR15.com from its servers, forcing the site to shift to a backup URL to say visible.
Free-speech social media platform Gab is back online following recent attempts to blacklist the site by a number of hosting and domain providers.
The FCC cited the blocking of Gab from the Apple and Google stores and the blocking of the Daily Stormer as examples of content blocking.
Millions of Americans cheered the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) proposed repeal of net neutrality, while others remain concerned about the repeal’s effect on the future freedom of the Internet.
Cloudflare chief executive Matthew Prince expressed remorse on Tuesday in an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal, suggesting that his arbitrary decision to remove the Daily Stormer from his company’s services might endanger free speech on the internet.
Net neutrality advocates frequently warn about the perils of internet service providers (ISPs) censoring the internet yet remain remarkably silent when Cloudflare, Google, and other companies censor free speech.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, one of the largest digital rights organizations, has issued a warning to tech companies about censoring neo-Nazis, claiming the same tools will eventually be used against everyone else.
Milo Yiannopoulos joined Breitbart News Editor-In-Chief Alex Marlow on Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM Patriot Channel 125 Monday to discuss website domain provider GoDaddy’s suspension of neo-Nazi site The Daily Stormer.
Popular domain service GoDaddy gave neo-Nazi news site The Daily Stormer 24 hours to move their domain to another provider on Sunday, following a post GoDaddy claimed violates their terms of service.
GoDaddy CEO Blake Irving blamed Silicon Valley’s use of H-1B visas on the “technical illiteracy” of Americans in a post on his official blog.
So-called “unicorn” tech companies in Silicon Valley valued at over $1 billion by private equity investors are becoming “unicorpses.”
Online domain registrar GoDaddy announced that they will no longer sponsor Sprint Cup driver Danica Patrick’s No. 10 Chevrolet race car and will not return to NASCAR.
Web hosting company GoDaddy is notorious for airing risqué Super Bowl ads, however the content in this year’s spot is causing the company to cancel a planned advertisement and apologize, after drawing the ire of animal rights activists.