

Gathering of Personally-Identifying InformationĬertain visitors to Printful websites choose to interact with Printful in ways that require Printful to gather personally-identifying information. Printful only discloses logged in user and commenter IP addresses under the same circumstances that it uses and discloses personally-identifying information as described below, except that commenter IP addresses and email addresses are visible and disclosed to the administrators of the blog/site where the comment was left. Printful also collects potentially personally-identifying information like Internet Protocol (IP) addresses for logged in users and for users leaving comments on Printful blogs/sites. From time to time, Printful may release non-personally-identifying information in the aggregate, e.g., by publishing a report on trends in the usage of its website. Printful purpose in collecting non-personally identifying information is to better understand how Printful visitors use its website. Like most website operators, Printful collects non-personally-identifying information of the sort that web browsers and servers typically make available, such as the browser type, language preference, referring site, and the date and time of each visitor request. It is Printful policy to respect your privacy regarding any information we may collect while operating our websites. Sign up to receive the Daily Dot’s Internet Insider newsletter for urgent news from the frontline of online.Printful operates Printful and may operate other websites. How the FTC can use ‘data minimization’ to immediately strengthen consumer privacy How little tech is turning the tide in the fight against big techįTC warns of ‘huge surge’ in social media scams Read more about Big Tech Congress barrels forward with EARN IT Act, determined to end encrypted messaging online The company claims to have “a zero- tolerance policy for willfully dishonest reporting,” but says nothing about what course of action Real America’s Voice takes if its factual reporting offends a reader. The rest of the line about how it addresses errors appears to cut off mid-sentence, simply ending with “should we ever err in our reporting.” Real America’s Voice is a conservative outlet billing itself as an “audience driven news platform.” It claims to be “dedicated to bringing our viewers truthful and accurate reporting” and to engage in “a thorough fact-checking process for all news.” Real America’s Voice didn’t respond to a request for comment sent via Facebook messenger Thursday afternoon. Adam Carter/Telegramĭiaz didn’t say whether she had anything to do with the outlet removing the piece. The story still appears in a Google search, but the link returns a 404 error. She also encouraged her subscribers to give the outlet a second chance. “I contacted the folks over at Real America’s Voice and because they are patriots, it seems they’ve removed that column,” Diaz wrote. Less than an hour later, Diaz said that Real America’s Voice had deleted the article. One of Diaz’s Telegram subscribers also posted a screenshot of part of the article, which is credited to a site admin. “I find it hard to believe that they would run that on purpose when War Room is broadcast on there, and that shows audience is a LOT of MAGA,” wrote one, referring to Steve Bannon’s show. Her subscribers were scandalized that Real America’s Voice would report the truth about the 2020 election. “With ‘friends’ like these, who needs enemies?” “Real America’s Voice is embarrassing with this,” Diaz wrote.

“The former president continues to spread the false conspiracy theory that he won the election,” Diaz wrote on Telegram, quoting an article on the site about Ivanka Trump testifying about the Capitol riot. On Wednesday, a quote from the right-wing Real America’s Voice caught Diaz’s attention. Shortly thereafter, she wrote victoriously that the site took down the article.ĭiaz was one of the earliest proponents of the QAnon conspiracy theory about a cabal of Satan-worshippers who rape children and consume their flesh.Īfter Trump lost, Diaz kept spreading false theories about widespread voter fraud. A QAnon influencer recently complained about a right-wing website accurately reporting that former President Donald Trump keeps lying about the election being stolen.
