If you have just clued into the hotly raging debate over the Stop Online Piracy Act or the Protect Intellectual Property Act, thanks to a variety of popular sites replacing their content with anti-SOPA/PIPA messages, your first reflex may to be shout, “I love the Internet, thus I hate SOPA and PIPA.” But there’s plenty more to learn about these complex and controversial bills. Here’s your quick guide to the proposed pieces of legislation and a one-stop shop to resources that can help you learn more.
SOPA stands for the Stop Online Piracy Act, which was introduced in the House in October, and sponsored by Rep. Lamar Smith. A copy of it can be found here. PIPA is the Senate version of the same bill, which was sponsored by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and others, some of whom have begun distancing themselves from the legislation. The bills aim to halt the spread of pirated content on the web by several means, which originally included taking the names of offending sites from the DNS directory — the address book for the Internet. So far, SOPA sponsor Rep. Smith said he would remove the DNS provisions from the bill, while PIPA sponsor Leahy said he would hold hearings on the issue. The bills also seek to force payments processors to halt money flowing to pages that host potentially pirated content. More detailed information can be found here.
While the stated intent behind SOPA is to halt the spread of pirated goods and content from bad actors, the way the bills are written the punishments associated don’t match the crimes. Having pirated content appear on a site, even without the knowledge or action by the site’s owner, can lead to a site being shut down without the owner having a chance to defend itself. It also threatens content hosting sites by cutting off their money flow if they are deemed to be hosting an infringer, until they can otherwise prove they are exempt from the infringement claims. Basically it turns the American idea of innocent until proven guilty to guilty until proven innocent. For more takes on this see a publisher’s comments, a venture capitalist’s and a cloud entrepreneur’s take.
The argument made by those in support of the bills is that intellectual property theft is out of hand and is expedited by the web. Current controls such as the Digital Millenium Copyright Act do not offer a big enough stick to stop bad actors from sharing and spreading priated content and goods. Additionally there is an argument that counterfeiting goods not only results in losses to their original manufacturer, but in the case of food, drugs and even watches, can cause potential harm or inconvenience to the buyer if they are unaware of the subterfuge. Finally, there is an argument that the web is freaking out over the bills for no reason.
For discussions of SOPA, check out this article from my colleague Mathew Ingram, this one offering a historical perspective from Ars Technica, or this fact sheet from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. You could also read the bill.
SOPAr away…
If you’re still living under a rock, while using the internet for all your daily interactions,
PLEASE PLEASE READ THIS..
SOPA, PIPA are, quite simply, efforts by the big media content firms, who show no sense of remorse when gouging consumers the world over, using the ruse that they provide artists a safe return on their works, to continue with their doomed business model. These laws will have the intended? consequence that they will destroy the internet as you use it now.
War is a Racket
Excerpts from an expose’ by General Smedley Butler, a highly decorated American soldier, who calls himself a “high-class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall Street & for the Bankers”.
Eisenhower’s warning coming true?
Power Blackout? Internet Blockout?
Song about SOPA/PIPA
How PIPA and SOPA Violate White House Principles Supporting Free Speech and Innovation | Electronic Frontier Foundation
Let the Defendant, Mr. Obama, rise
Obama sued by Chris Hedges over NDAA
of course, the other cretin who started this mess, the defence contractor who was the erstwhile VPoTUS is roaming free.
Occupy 4 Jobs
Again, it takes foreign press to cover this protest rally.
Ignore everything that has Occupy written before it as “pseudo-activism”.
BCCI: Billionaire Control Cricket in India
An honest appraisal of the serious cancer gnawing away at the national sport of India.