Clicky

Subscribe for premier reporting on free speech, privacy, Big Tech, media gatekeepers, and individual liberty online.

Surfshark pulls sponsorship of news outlet over tweet

If you’re tired of censorship and surveillance, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.

Virtual private network (VPN) provider Surfshark announced that it has pulled its sponsorship of independent media outlet The Post Millennial after its editor-at-large Andy Ngo was targeted with what he describes as a “hoax orchestrated by a white man to silence a gay journalist of color who dared to report on the man’s restraining order.”

An Antifa activist, who has been a subject of Ngo’s previous reporting, tagged Surfshark in a tweet, accused Ngo of working with “Proud Boys and Capitol rioters to target journalists with death threats,” and asked the company why it runs ads on The Post Millennial.

Ngo has previously reported on the activist being forced to turn in his firearm because of a restraining order. According to Ngo, the activist has retaliated with “baseless conspiracy theories & tagging businesses that do advertising with @TPostMillennial [The Post Millennial].”

“He’s spreading defamatory lies (& quickly deleting the tweets but I have receipts),” Ngo said.

But Surfshark responded to the Antifa activist’s tweets by taking the claims at face value, thanking the activist, and cutting ties with The Post Millennial.

As it cut ties with the independent media outlet, Surfshark also claimed: “Media freedom is one of our core values.”

“You fell for a hoax orchestrated by a white man to silence a gay journalist of color who dared to report on the man’s restraining order,” Ngo said in response to Surfshark pulling its sponsorship.

After the initial tweet, Surfshark doubled down on the decision by telling the activist that sponsoring The Post Millennial “definitely was” an oversight.

Surfshark also responded to another account making similar allegations against Ngo with “true.”

And when independent journalist Tim Pool called out Surfshark for pulling the sponsorship, Surfshark defended its actions again.

“We’re not supporting or dismissing anyone,” Surfshark tweeted. “Our core goal is protecting people’s digital privacy & security, and we just don’t want to be involved in someone else’s conflicts or ideological disagreements.”

This isn’t the first time a brand has pulled its sponsorship of an independent media outlet in response after a Twitter complaint. In March, Men’s grooming company Harry’s pulled its sponsorship of conservative media outlet The Daily Wire after a complaint from a Twitter account with two followers.

If you’re tired of censorship and surveillance, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.

Read more

A skyscraper with the Google logo on top, emerging from a sea of clouds at sunset.

Google’s Empire Cracks

As Google faces mounting antitrust scrutiny, its legal and PR battles intensify, with potential remedies threatening to reshape the tech giant’s iron grip on search, Android, and digital advertising.

Reclaim The Net Logo

Join the pushback against online censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance.

Already a member? Login.

Share