Telegram’s Bans on Extremist Channels Aren’t Really Bans

In the wake of the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, people concerned about online extremism turned their attention to the encrypted messaging app Telegram, where a Hamas-aligned group posted graphic images of the group’s attacks to a channel that now has 1.9 million followers. That content was then shared widely across social media. Following public pressure on Apple and Google several weeks into the Israel-Hamas war, Telegram “restricted” two of the major channels used by Hamas. But it did not, as it may appear to some users, ban them.

A WIRED investigation reveals that rather than ban or delete Hamas channels or those run by right-wing extremist groups, Telegram

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