Twitter has suspended the accounts of several members of the American alt-right movement, including the leader of a white nationalist think tank.
The social network has not given an explanation for its actions.
But they come the same week it announced new ways for users to complain about hateful content.
Some alt-right figures have suggested a switch to Gab, an alternative micro-blogging service that promises "free speech for everyone".
But other have their doubts.
"Gab just seems like a pointless echo chamber, there are enough alt-right blogs and forums," wrote one supporter of the movement in a discussion thread about the Twitter suspensions.
"The benefits of Twitter are interacting with normies, influencing discussion and getting alt-right memes trending."
What is the alt-right?
Members of the alt-right movement differ on many points, but are generally outspoken in their attacks on multiculturalism, globalisation and immigration.
Their targets include political correctness and feminism, and they have typically characterised themselves as being anti-establishment.
The election of Donald Trump - a presidential candidate supported by much of the alt-right - could change that.
He has appointed Steve Bannon as his chief strategist. Mr Bannon was formerly executive chairman of Breitbart News, a __news site that specialises in coverage of the alt-right, but does not identify itself as part of it.
That has led some to speculate about whether certain alt-right views could soon become official US policy.
'Cuck' attacks
USA Today was one of the first mainstream __news sites to report the suspensions.
Among them was Richard Spencer, the president of the National Policy Institute, which describes itself as being dedicated to the "identity and future of people of European descent in the United States".
The NPI's own Twitter account and that of its Radix Journal have also been barred by the platform.
Several of the accounts' recent tweets had included the word "cucks" - a term of abuse used by the alt-right to disparage opponents. It is derived from cuckold and signifies the target is in some way weak.
It is not clear, however, whether this was related to Twitter's action.
"[This] is corporate Stalinism in the sense that there is a great purge going on, and they are purging people on the basis of their views," Mr Spencer said in a video he posted to YouTube.
"I and a number of other people who just got banned were not even trolling."
He added he now planned to use Gab instead.
USA Today identified four other high-profile alt-right figures who had also been suspended.
The Southern Poverty Law Center - an Alabama-based anti-hate group - welcomed the news.
"Good riddance," it tweeted.
The group said it had previously asked Twitter to remove more than 100 white supremacists' accounts.
Twitter typically allows users accused of abusive behaviour to return after a temporary lockout.
However, it permanently banned Breitbart technology editor Milo Yiannopoulos in July, when it said he had helped incite abuse against the actress Leslie Jones.
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