Financial technology company Stripe Inc will no longer process Trump campaign payments, the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.
What Happened: The San Francisco, California-based company is halting payments processing for the Trump campaign for violating its policies against encouraging violence, people familiar with the matter told the Journal.
Stripe terms state that it does not process payments for “high risk” activities including any business or organization that “engages in, encourages, promotes or celebrates unlawful violence or physical harm to persons or property.”
Why It Matters: Last week, outgoing President Donald Trump’s supporters violently stormed the U.S. Capitol.
Since the violence, several tech companies issued permanent bans on Trump including Facebook Inc FB and Twitter Inc TWTR.
Several platforms have since then either removed Trump’s accounts or accounts associated with pro-Trump violence, according to Axios.
These include Reddit, which has banned the subreddit group “r/DonaldTrump,” Amazon.com, Inc AMZN-owned Twitch, and Shopify Inc SHOP, which has removed two stores affiliated with Trump’s organization and his campaign.
Alphabet Inc’s GOOGL GOOG video streaming service YouTube is fast-tracking enforcement against election misinformation.
Earlier, Alphabet, Apple Inc AAPL, and Amazon stopped services to Parler, the conservative alternative to Twitter.
Snap Inc.'s SNAP Snapchat has also disabled Trump’s account as of Wednesday. Pinterest says it is limiting hashtags such as #StopTheSteal.
Photo by Gage Skidmore on Flickr
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