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Leaders in Congress on Friday effectively killed two pieces of anti-online piracy legislation following the increasingly vocal protests of tens of thousands of websites and millions of Internet users. That’s right, the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House and the PROTECT IP Act [...]
It also crucial that it be about resistance against an all-out effort by the elite and their technocrats to turn the internet into an all-encompassing panopticon surveillance and control grid. Contrary to common belief, the internet was not built to be a networked computer system designed to withstand a nuclear war, but as a surveillance and control grid. It was not happenstance that the platform found its way into public use.
Originally posted by blupblup
I hope you guys (ATS Owners) have something in place.
Originally posted by zorgon
Oh wait... was that a secret?
Originally posted by Majic
Bad Inc
reply to post by IwasOnceHappy
At least now they're bothering to try to sway public opinion instead of quietly bypassing it. With so many legislators abandoning ship, they don't have much of a choice now.
The problem with a TV publicity blitz is that it will probably reach mostly people who hadn't heard about SOPA or didn't care, and thus not stir up much in the way of public support no matter how much ad time they buy.
Meanwhile, people who already oppose SOPA will only be reminded it's not really dead, and be energized by such ads to take further action to put even more pressure on legislators to stop it.
Either way, the outlook isn't very promising for the industry moguls. Of course they may try to sneak it in attached to other bills, and while those sorts of antics might work in the background of public apathy, they are a big, big gamble when used to push through unpopular legislation in an election year.
The SOPA opera is far from over, but if the elite interests (who normally don't give a damn about popular opinion, as evidenced by their own comments) are reduced to something as degrading and distasteful as actually having to appeal to the unwashed masses, then the protests are definitely having an effect.
Good.
Originally posted by amongus
SOPA will NOT happen. Get over this people. It WONT happen.
Google, Wikipedia, and the millions of Americans who joined last week’s protest against giving government new authority over the Internet may have missed something: Federal agencies already have that kind of power, at least over websites registered in the US. Under a 2008 law, federal authorities can seize the assets of a company charged with copyright violations. The US Justice Department exercised that muscle on Thursday, when it shut down Megaupload, one of the Internet’s most popular file-sharing sites.
Hope you're right, as Lamar Smith plans to re-introduce SOPA in another form.
Originally posted by amongus
SOPA will NOT happen. Get over this people. It WONT happen.
...Obama signed an international treaty that would allow companies in China or any other country in the world to demand ISPs remove web content in the US with no legal oversight whatsoever
The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement was signed by Obama on October 1 2011, yet is currently the subject of a White House petition demanding Senators be forced to ratify the treaty. The White House has circumvented the necessity to have the treaty confirmed by lawmakers by presenting it an as “executive agreement,” although legal scholars have highlighted the dubious nature of this characterization.
The treaty will also mandate that ISPs disclose personal user information to the copyright holder, while providing authorities across the globe with broader powers to search laptops and Internet-capable devices at border checkpoints.
Throughout Free Ride, Mr. Levine homes in on what he refers to as “Silicon Valley libertarianism that rejects any form of Internet regulation — except, in most cases, when it happens to help the technology business itself.” But the net-neutrality libertarianism here is not the brand that puts much stock in markets and individual rights. “In the world of net neutrality, everyone works for the benefit of all, and individual rights mostly just get in the way. This fits with the trend toward deconstruction, which has made academics ever more skeptical of the Romantic ideal of individual genius. All artists build on the work of others, just as programmers combine existing bits of code.”