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The Onion Signs Restructured Deal to License Infowars from Court-Appointed Manager
يتطور
Business·22.04.2026ملخص الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Onion Signs Restructured Deal to License Infowars from Court-Appointed Manager

The Onion's parent company Global Tetrahedron has signed a new restructured deal to license Infowars from court-appointed manager Gregory Milligan, paying $81,000 monthly for six months. The agreement covers the website, intellectual property, studio rent and utilities, with an option to renew for another six months. Infowars was put up for sale in 2024 after conspiracy theorist Alex Jones lost defamation lawsuits filed by Sandy Hook Elementary School victims' families, whom he had harassed after calling the 2012 massacre a "hoax".

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SCMP Economy
The Onion Seeks Temporary Control of Alex Jones' Infowars in Court-Backed Proposal
يتطور
Business·20.04.2026ملخص الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Onion Seeks Temporary Control of Alex Jones' Infowars in Court-Backed Proposal

The Onion's parent company Global Tetrahedron has submitted a Texas court proposal to lease Infowars' intellectual property and operations for $81,000 per month over six months, with an option to extend. The plan, backed by the court-appointed receiver and Sandy Hook families' lawyers, aims to transform the conspiracy platform into a satirical version. Alex Jones opposes the deal, claiming it amounts to misrepresentation, and insists he will continue broadcasting through an expanded network. A hearing is scheduled for April 30.

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RT News
The Onion Moves to Take Over Infowars in Deal Pending Texas Court Approval
يتطور
Business·20.04.2026ملخص الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Onion Moves to Take Over Infowars in Deal Pending Texas Court Approval

The Onion has reached a deal to take over Infowars, Alex Jones's far-right media company, pending approval by a Texas judge. The satirical website plans to transform the conspiracy theory platform into a parody of itself, paying $81,000 monthly to license the Infowars.com domain. The Sandy Hook families, who won a nearly $1.3 billion defamation judgment against Jones for claiming they faked their children's deaths, support the deal as a way to strip Jones of his platform and potentially collect some owed damages. Jones has criticized the deal and could continue broadcasting under a different name if the sale proceeds.

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NPR Business