Update (6/2/20): A Roku spokesperson told The Verge, “The channel is no longer on our platform.” The Verge noted that Roku “would not elaborate on why it allowed the [channel] to launch last month.”
Streaming platform Roku allowed a channel dedicated to promoting the dangerous QAnon conspiracy theory to launch on its platform last month. The channel’s creator says he also plans to offer it via Amazon Fire and Apple TV.
“Q Channel - QAnon Channel” describes itself as hosting “opinion based shows for getting the truth out, as we know it, about the Qanon movement.” The channel was announced in May by David Hayes, a QAnon supporter known online as “Praying Medic” who has a large following.
Roku has previously said that it bars from its platform content that is “unlawful, incited illegal activities, or violates third-party rights.” In May 2019, an FBI field office released a memo that listed QAnon as a potential domestic terrorism threat, and the conspiracy theory has been linked to multiple people who have committed threatening and violent acts.
The Roku Q Channel features videos from Hayes and another QAnon account known online as “In Pursuit of Truth” discussing the conspiracy theory and interpreting posts from “Q,” the conspiracy theory’s central figure. In a May 25 video on the Roku channel, Hayes announced that “a few other ‘Q’ decoders” would be joining him on the channel “in the coming days” and that “we are also planning on having our videos available on Amazon Fire and Apple TV at some point in the future.”