Trump Reduces Funding for PBS and NPR

Access to a popular news website has been temporarily restricted for visitors from certain areas, leading to confusion and frustration among users. The website, which utilizes Wordfence security measures, issued an HTTP response code 503, indicating that the service is currently unavailable.

The site owner has placed these restrictions for security reasons, specifically to protect against automated bot traffic. Many users are being mistakenly identified as bots, which has triggered the access limitations. If anyone believes they have been wrongly blocked, they are encouraged to reach out to the site owner for assistance.

The block was implemented on May 12, 2025, at 4:47 PM GMT. A message on the site suggests that users should check their VPN settings, as these can sometimes lead to access issues. For those who continue to experience problems, the site has provided an email address for support: support@spectator.org.

Wordfence, the security plugin managing access to the site, is in use on over five million WordPress sites. It is designed to enhance security and prevent unauthorized access. Users with administrative privileges on the site can regain access by entering their email address in a designated form.

As the situation unfolds, users are advised to stay informed about any updates from the site owner regarding access issues. This incident highlights the ongoing challenges that website owners face in balancing security with user access.

Author

  • The American Drudge Report - Always Telling the Truth

    Robert Jerson likes to find the story inside the story. Give him a stack of filings, a half-deleted tweet, and a late-night whistleblower email, and he’ll map the connections before sunrise. A decade in data-driven journalism taught him that headlines rarely show the whole picture, so he follows the footnotes, cross-checks the numbers, and calls the people left out of the press release. His investigations dig into national politics, media ethics, and the digital sleights of hand that shape what we believe. Robert writes for readers who want more than a quick click—he writes so you can see the levers being pulled and decide what you think for yourself.