SOPA: Hollywood Finally Gets A Chance to Break the Internet
As promised, here’s the first installment of our closer review of the massive piece of job-killing Internet regulation that is the Stop Online Piracy Act. We’ll start with how it could impact Twitter, Tumblr, and the next innovative social network, cloud computing, or web hosting service that some smart kid is designing in her garage right now.
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The bill sets up a system to punish sites allegedly “dedicated to the theft of US property.” How do you get that label? Doesn’t take much: Some portion of your site (even a single page) must
1.be directed toward the US, and either
2.allegedly “engage in, enable or facilitate” infringement or
3.allegedly be taking or have taken steps to “avoid confirming a high probability” of infringement.
If an IP rightsholder (vaguely defined – could be Justin Bieber worried about his publicity rights) thinks you meet the criteria and that it is in some way harmed, it can send a notice claiming as much to the payment processors (Visa, Mastercard, Paypal etc.) and ad services you rely on.
Once they get it, they have 5 days to choke off your financial support. Of course, the payment processors and ad networks won’t be able to fine-tune their response so that only the allegedly infringing portion of your site is affected, which means your whole site will be under assault. And, it makes no difference that no judge has found you guilty of anything or that the DMCA safe harbors would shelter your conduct if the matter ever went to court.Indeed, services that have been specifically found legal, like Rapidshare, could be economically strangled via SOPA. You can file a counter-notice, but you’ve only got 5 days to do it (good luck getting solid legal advice in time) and the payment processors and ad networks have no obligation to respect it in any event.
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At a minimum, this means that any service that hosts user generated content is going to be under enormous pressure to actively monitor and filter that content.
...as we’ve learned from the DMCA takedown process, content owners are more than happy to send bogus complaints. What happened to Wikileaks via voluntary censorship will now be systematized and streamlined – as long as someone, somewhere, thinks they’ve got an IP right that’s being harmed.
Link to that article.
Moderator Action: I abridged the article for you- please refer to rule 6b of the OT additional rules.
And here's a link to americancensorship.org's articles/petition against this, plus a couple of videos and a giant picture:
Link to video.
Link to video.
Spoiler Big Image :

TL;DR version: There's this bill, or couple of bills, that Congress has been talking about for the past week or two, sponsored by, who else, groups like the RIAA, MPAA, and the US Chamber of Commerce. It effectively lets the US government and the aforementioned groups pretty much destroy websites for even being suspected of violating intellectual property rights, for not doing enough to prevent intellectual property rights from being violated, or for a lot of other similar reasons.
Really TL;DR version: It's an internet censorship bill that will destroy tons of legal websites because really rich companies want more money.
It may just be the worst internet-related bill Congress has ever seriously considered passing. I don't see how anyone can support it. Intellectual Property or no, it has way too much potential for abuse and it blatantly violates the 4th amendment, and probably the 1st, too.
Go click on the link to American Censorship's website, read the stuff there, send the petition if you want to do that. This is pretty serious.
And... let the discussion begin.