MantaRevan
Emperor
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2011
- Messages
- 1,541
I don't like anonymous, I've never liked anonymous, and that was a stupid move as well. All it says to them is that the bill should be more urgently passed.
Tough beans. The DMV can do the same thing to your driver's license: they can take your license away, any time they please.
No way!! The two cases are completely different. When China shuts down a web site, it is stifling free speech. The specific goal of the Chinese government is to control the people. The U.S. government didn't shut down Megaupload to stifle free speech; the government did it to stifle crooks. Consider: why hasn't the U.S. government jumped onto CFC and shut down this thread?? A thread which certainly is chock-full of dissident ideas.....
Gotcha.![]()
I call "slippery slope" fallacy on Dawgphood.
I don't like anonymous, I've never liked anonymous, and that was a stupid move as well. All it says to them is that the bill should be more urgently passed.
What about all the other people using megaupload for legitimate purposes? What about the US government's censorship of Wikileaks?
Yeah, it's all violation of free speech. Totally ineffective, to boot.
So by this logic Obama would be perfectly justified in shutting down Fox News if he didn't like something said on there. That wouldn't be protected by free speech. Because, hey, the newsreaders are still able to talk to the cameras, it just won't be transmitted. They're still welcome to speak their mind, but they aren't provided with a platform to do it. Similarly, it'd be totally cool to shut down an opposition newspaper, right? Because again, it's just dealing with the platform, not the actually ability of journalists to put pen to paper.Side note: there's no violation of Freedom of Speech anywhere within SOPA. If you post praise for Wikileaks on Twitter, and the government shuts Twitter down, that's not a violation of Free Speech--however if the government arrests you for writing that tweet? That is a violation of Free Speech. The right to Free Speech does not give you the right to be heard; you are not entitled to a platform on which to speak your piece. If somebody wants to provide you a web site? Fine. If somebody wants to shut down the web site you write posts on? Tough.
Nope. Didn't find that anywhere in SOPA. Though I did find a couple other things that are great ideas: immunity for web sites that voluntarily take action against copyright infringers, and proper avenues by which copyright holders are required to follow in order to file a grievance.
Side note: there's no violation of Freedom of Speech anywhere within SOPA. If you post praise for Wikileaks on Twitter, and the government shuts Twitter down, that's not a violation of Free Speech--however if the government arrests you for writing that tweet? That is a violation of Free Speech. The right to Free Speech does not give you the right to be heard; you are not entitled to a platform on which to speak your piece. If somebody wants to provide you a web site? Fine. If somebody wants to shut down the web site you write posts on? Tough.
I would be fascinated to know, in light of the first quoted post, what you actually imagine an "abuse" to be. There doesn't seem to be any degree of censorship that you actually consider unacceptable.That's the thing. This is the United States. This government (even an idiot like Obama) bends over backwards to avoid abusing the powers it has. Given the same powers, places such as China and Syria and North Korea will be much more abusive than the United States is.
Actually, it serves to undermine the current legal narrative against Megaupload.Puh-lease.
All this will do will further strengthen resolve in support of SOPA and PIPA.
Among the target are the Department of Justice' site, the RIAA, MPAA.org, the US Copyright Office, EMI, the FBI, and the french copyright authority the HADOPI.
What do you think of this? Frankly I believe they had it coming. I predicted that this would happen as soon as any major shutdown's happen. I hope this is a smack in the face for SOPA and PIPA. Imagine what could happen if those are passed.
Yeah, they're a cool bunch.If the website broke the law while being sited on American soil, then good for them getting arrested. Anonymous vandalizing the USA shows they have no respect for national sovereignity, nor law, nor democracy.
Here's the "Gotcha!" response graphic:
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(It needed the symbol of the FBI instead of the Republican elephant, but my photoshopping skills weren't up to it tonight.)
Side note: there's no violation of Freedom of Speech anywhere within SOPA. If you post praise for Wikileaks on Twitter, and the government shuts Twitter down, that's not a violation of Free Speech--however if the government arrests you for writing that tweet? That is a violation of Free Speech. The right to Free Speech does not give you the right to be heard; you are not entitled to a platform on which to speak your piece. If somebody wants to provide you a web site? Fine. If somebody wants to shut down the web site you write posts on? Tough.
Democracy in the US is largely a farce on the national scale, anyway, so that's not really signifying anything.
I don't really think you're a real media pirate unless you crash into some big chain store with a real pirate ship and loot out all the DVDs and CDs and games.
The best I could do with only a few minutes while at work.
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