Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his company InfoWars may have had their accounts yanked from Twitter, but that has not erased their presence from the platform. According to a CNN report, Twitter took action on Monday and suspended 18 additional accounts associated with Jones and InfoWars. The decision came after the Daily Beast reported last week that numerous accounts were still sharing InfoWars' content.

All of the newly suspended accounts were "under the InfoWars umbrella," according to a statement from a Twitter spokesperson provided to CNET. Some of those suspended include the InfoWars Store account and the InfoWars "Real News" with David Knight show account.

Twitter claims that it banned the accounts in part because they were trying to circumvent the initial ban of Alex Jones' and InfoWars' primary accounts by sharing content from the conspiracy-theory outlet. The accounts reportedly received "numerous violations and warnings" before finally being suspended. This deluge of suspensions comes after Twitter reportedly already suspended five other accounts for disseminating InfoWars content.

Last month, Twitter permanently banned Alex Jones and InfoWars from its platform after both accounts repeatedly violated the company's abusive-behavior policy. It took the company almost one month to ban Jones and InfoWars after Jones tweeted out a video in which he instructed his followers to get their "battle rifles ready" against the media and other entities. Twitter's first punishment for Jones after that incident was a one-week suspension.

Overall, Twitter was one of the last big tech platforms to give Jones and InfoWars the boot. Over the past summer, YouTube, Spotify, Facebook, and Apple all banned Jones and his platform, leaving InfoWars with fewer options for sharing its disinformation. PayPal also recently joined the chorus, banning Jones from its platform after finding "instances that promoted hate or discriminatory intolerance."

Most tech companies that banned Jones and InfoWars did so because both accounts violated hate-speech rules. However, the steps taken before suspending or banning accounts remains nebulous. YouTube has arguably the most clear set of steps it takes when it considers striking or removing accounts. Others, including Facebook and Twitter, simply cite previous violations, warnings, or incidents when announcing they've suspended an account.