It’s actually true, but Rumble opted to make itself unavailable some time ago, before being blocked, as they decided not to censor accounts. It’s the right call for any platform that allegedly defends free speech. Following legal orders that go against the nation’s very constitution and come from an authority you cannot appeal to is a way to concede and institutionalize censorship, masking it as a defense of democracy (and we know it’s quite the opposite). It’s a shame that some companies, like Meta, comply with this, but I guess money or perhaps political alignment sometimes outweighs the defense of freedom…