Trump plans to create his own platform in response to his expulsion from Twitter | International



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After Twitter decided to permanently suspend the account of Donald trump, the outgoing president condemned the decision made by the social network and announced that is planning to create its own messaging platform.

“They will not silence us!” Trump exclaimed in a statement distributed by the White House after learning of the closure of the @realDonaldTrump account.

We have been negotiating with several more sites, and we will have a big announcement soon, while also looking at the possibilities of building our own platform in the near future.He added.

In relation to Twitter, the outgoing president said that “he has gone further and further in prohibiting freedom of expression,” and accused them of having “coordinated with the Democrats and the radical left”To delete your account.

In this regard, he stated: “They have silenced me and YOU, the 75 million great patriots who voted for me.” He also spoke out against the protections enjoyed by Twitter and other social networks, which exempt them from legal consequences for what third parties publish on their websites.

@realDonaldTrump had issued more than 55,000 messages for more than eleven years and in it he had accumulated 89 million followers.

The social network had temporarily suspended Trump’s account last Wednesday for 12 hours. During the day today decided to permanently close its space to avoid “further incitement to violence”.

Twitter explained that tweets Trump, in which he defended his voters and announced that he would not attend Joe Biden’s inauguration on January 20, were being interpreted on social networks as “a reversal of his previous commitment” to an “orderly transition.” In addition, his messages “can serve as encouragement to those who may be considering violent acts (by making it clear) that the investiture would be a ‘safe’ objective, because he will not attend,” they added from the social network.

Twitter is the most definitive measure of the technological ones against Trump’s speech after the assault on the Capitol, but not the only one: both Facebook and Instagram blocked the president’s access to his account at least until the handover is completed on January 20, and Twitch and Snapchat have deactivated his profile indefinitely.

Many Trump supporters spread their messages less and less on Twitter and more on a recently created alternative social network called Parler, but that platform has also begun to suffer consequences after the attack on the Capitol: this Friday, Google removed its application from its virtual store.



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