By Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times/Redux.

Following an in-depth CNN report from one of the network’s reporters, Oliver Darcy, on Friday, a Twitter spokesperson has admitted that, yes, InfoWars and its alt-right groupthink peddler Alex Jones did indeed violate a number of the social network’s conduct rules. But for now, both accounts get to stay on the site.

Twitter came under pressure from other networks after Apple, Spotify, Facebook, and YouTube removed most of InfoWars’ presence from their sites, citing violations against their hate speech guidelines. Twitter, as is its wont, did nothing. But Darcy’s report, which included a number of tweets from Jones shared to the InfoWars account about Sandy Hook and Parkland conspiracy theories, harassment against individuals based on their gender identity and religious affiliation, and violent videos, finally got a response from the company.

The tweets have since been deleted (not by Twitter, but by someone with access to Jones’ accounts), but a Twitter spokesperson told CNN that among the seven that did violate Twitter’s rules, two of them occurred recently enough that Twitter could use them in the future if the network decides to take action against Jones and InfoWars. The other five were posted before Twitter instituted its new set of rules in December 2017. Previously, Twitter executive Del Harvey published an internal memo saying that if Jones had posted content he could have been banned for, he would have already been banned for it.

“We will continue to review any content that is flagged to us and take action as appropriate,” the spokesperson told CNN.