The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has concluded an investigation into Rumble Inc. without a decision to take enforcement actions against the video-sharing platform.
“Based on the information we have as of this date, we do not intend to recommend an enforcement action by the Commission against Rumble Inc.,” Ms. Mallet’s letter adds.
Mr. Pavlovski cited the SEC letter in calls for Wired to update its prior reporting about the company.
Ms. Mallet’s Feb. 20 letter stops short of outright clearing Rumble of any wrongdoing.
“We are providing this notice under the guidelines set out in the final paragraph of Securities Act Release No. 5310, which states in part that the notice ’must in no way be construed as indicating that the party has been exonerated or that no action may ultimately result from the staff’s investigation,’” the SEC official told Rumble.
NTD News reached out to Rumble for further comment on what this letter means for the platform going forward but did not receive a response by press time.
CEO Alleges Activists Targeted Rumble With ‘Bogus’ Claims
Rumble was originally formed in Canada in 2013. The company has grown in prominence in recent years, positioning itself as a competitor to YouTube that places more emphasis on free speech and resists pressure to censor content creators.
In 2021, Rumble acquired the content creator subscription-service provider Locals Technology Inc. The video-sharing platform has also partnered with former President Donald Trump’s media company, the Trump Media & Technology Group, providing video and streaming capabilities to the Truth Social platform.
Rumble also acquired the exclusive streaming rights for the third RNC presidential debate in November.
Mr. Pavlovski alleged a coordinated effort to undermine his video-sharing platform after news of the SEC investigation broke last month.
“A short seller creates a bogus report and sends it to the SEC. The SEC investigates the bogus report. Then the short seller talks to the media to get a story about how the SEC is investigating the report that started with him. The media happily writes the story,” Mr. Pavlovski wrote in a Jan. 8 post on social media platform X.
Mr. Pavlovski said Rumble predicted efforts to discredit its user metrics and chose to use Google Analytics to track and report these key user metrics prior to going public.
“They can’t stand Rumble’s mission, but they are going to learn quickly how hard we punch back,” the Rumble CEO wrote last month.
NTD News reached out to the SEC for more details about its now-concluded investigation of Rumble, but the government agency declined to comment.
It’s unclear what role, if any, the Culper Research report on Rumble’s user metrics had on the SEC’s decision to investigate the video-sharing platform.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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