Gab.com, a two-year-old "free speech" social media site that became a haven for right-wing extremists who felt limited by Twitter and Facebook's content moderation policies, came under new scrutiny last week following the revelation that the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting suspect expressed his anti-Semitic views there.

A day after shooting suspect Robert Bowers allegedly entered a Pittsburgh synagogue and fatally shot 11 congregants last weekend, Gab went offline. Domain registrar GoDaddy had given the company 24 hours to find another hosting service, and companies like PayPal, Medium, Stripe, and hosting service Joyent blocked it.

But it appears Gab has found a new online home: Epik Inc., a domain name registrar company based in Sammamish, Washington, according to the Washington Secretary of State's website.

In a press release on Saturday, Epik CEO Rob Monster explained why he had decided to support Gab's cause.