SkySilk Cloud Services

SkySilk Cloud Services is an American web infrastructure company based in Los Angeles.[1][2][3] According to Data Center Dynamics, SkySilk has points of presence in both Los Angeles and New York.[1] SkySilk appears to be hosted by a facility in Los Angeles operated by data-center provider QuadraNet.[1]

In February 2021, they took over the hosting of the controversial social media network Parler. In relation to their hosting of Parler, SkySilk representatives said that "Skysilk does not advocate nor condone hate, rather, it advocates the right to private judgment and rejects the role of being the judge, jury, and executioner."[4][5] According to Ars Technica, Parler's traffic from SkySilk passes through an ISP based in Ohio called CloudRoute. Ars Technica reported that "CloudRoute and SkySilk seem to be connected in some way and may ultimately be part of the same company", though they noted the CEO of CloudRoute denied such a connection.[6]

References

  1. Sebastian Moss. Parler returns, hosted by SkySilk in an LA data center Data Center Dynamics, 2021-02-16, retrieved 2021-02-17^
  2. Michael Grothaus. Here's the rationale for SkySilk enabling Parler to get back online Fast Company, 2021-02-16, retrieved 2021-02-16^
  3. Bobby Allyn, Rachel Treisman. After Weeks Of Being Offline, Parler Finds A New Web Host NPR.org, 2021-02-15, retrieved 2021-02-16^
  4. Michael Grothaus. Here's the rationale for SkySilk enabling Parler to get back online Fast Company, 2021-02-16, retrieved 2021-02-16^
  5. Bobby Allyn, Rachel Treisman. After Weeks Of Being Offline, Parler Finds A New Web Host NPR.org, 2021-02-15, retrieved 2021-02-16^
  6. Jon Brodkin. Parler says it's back without "Big Tech" after being kicked off Amazon Ars Technica, 2021-02-15, retrieved 2021-02-17^