all should read this and spread the accounts
really funny how things are growing and cannot die
Q
cue
Anons are able to always find a way around the censorship.
Daily Dot article even tells the new accounts names
kek
https://www.dailydot.com/debug/qanon-twitter-ban-evasion/
QAnon accounts banned by Twitter have already returned, with over 100,000 followers
The ban has proved ineffectual at best.
Jul 30, 2020, 8:54 am* Tech Mike Rothschild Mike Rothschild
Last week, Twitter announced that after over two years of almost unchecked growth by the QAnon conspiracy theory, it was taking steps to crack down on the activity of believers, including targeted harassment and sharing of links to QAnon websites.
The effectiveness of that measure, however, is questionable. Major promoters, supposedly banned, are still rampantly posting.
QAnon, which holds that a military intelligence team is using the message board 8kun to leak clues to their upcoming (and forever delayed) purge of deep state sex traffickers, has grown explosively on Twitter since late 2017.
Twitter has outsized importance in the Q movement, as popular QAnon promoters use it to decode Q’s posts, share videos and memes, alert Q acolytes to possible deep state “comms” hidden in tweets, and attempt to win over new converts.
From March to June 2020, there were over 12 million tweets that mentioned Q or one of its associated catchphrases, according to a new report from extremism research think tank the Institute for Strategic Dialogue.
Many of these tweets are also part of direct harassment swarms carried out against high-profile users who have fallen afoul of the Q movement, including Chrissy Teigen, Lady Gaga, Patton Oswalt, and Tom Hanks. And since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, Twitter has seen a massive spike in QAnon disinformation and harassment, driven by the unchecked spread of coronavirus conspiracy theory videos like “Plandemic.” And just weeks earlier, Twitter was part of an explosive, QAnon-driven conspiracy theory that furniture giant Wayfair was using its website to sell missing children to traffickers.
So the site taking steps to curb the conspiracy theory’s reach was greeted as positive news by journalists and Twitter users alike, even if Q fans rolled it into their conspiracy theory that the site was hopelessly under the sway of deep state-linked celebrities.
Y’all have a rampant pedophile community on your site & you’re spending your time banning QAnon people because Chrissy Teigen had a temper tantrum. https://t.co/Jzred7JRTl
— Ashley StClair🇺🇸(@stclairashley)
July 22, 2020
Twitter initially announced it would suspend 7,000 Q-related accounts responsible for abuse or ban evasion, stop recommending QAnon accounts in searches, suppress QAnon-friendly hashtags in trending topics, and prevent links to QAnon sites from being shared.
A week later, Twitter has indeed taken some of these steps. Some high-profile Q accounts have been banned, and it’s no longer possible to send direct messages with links to Q sites.
Overall, mentions of QAnon and its related hashtags are down across the board.
“From July 15th to the 22nd there were one million QAnon posts from 427,000 unique authors,” extremism researcher and Ph.D. candidate Marc-André Argentino told the Daily Dot. “From the 22nd to the 28th there have been 809,000 posts, down 34 percent, from 302,000 unique authors,” a number down 14 percent from just before the ban.