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Report: SOPA explained: What it is and why it matters

In Internet on January 20, 2012 at 12:56 pm

The tech industry is abuzz about SOPA and PIPA, a pair of anti-piracy bills. Here’s why they’re controversial, and how they   would change the digital landscape if they became law.

What is SOPA? SOPA is an acronym for the Stop Online Piracy Act. It’s a proposed bill that aims to crack down on copyright   infringement by restricting access to sites that host pirated content.

SOPA’s main targets are “rogue” overseas sites like torrent hub The Pirate Bay, which are a trove for illegal downloads of   movies and other digital content.

Content creators have battled against piracy for years — remember Napster? — but it’s hard for U.S. companies to take action   against foreign sites. So SOPA’s goal is to cut off pirate sites’ oxygen by requiring U.S. search engines, advertising networks   and other providers to withhold their services.

That means sites like Google wouldn’t show flagged sites in their search results, and payment processors like eBay’s PayPal   couldn’t transmit funds to them.

Both sides say they agree that protecting content is a worthy goal. But opponents say that the way SOPA is written effectively   promotes censorship and is rife with the potential for unintended consequences.

Silicon Valley woke up and took notice of the implications when SOPA was introduced in the House of Representatives in October.   But its very similar counterpart, PIPA, flew under the radar and was approved by a Senate committee in May. PIPA is now pending   before the full Senate and scheduled for a vote on January 24, though some senators are pushing for a delay.

Isn’t copyright infringement already illegal? Yes. The 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act lays out enforcement measures.

Let’s say a YouTube user uploads a copyrighted song. Under the current law, that song’s copyright holders could send a “takedown   notice” to YouTube. YouTube is protected against liability as long as it removes the content within a reasonable timeframe.

When it gets a DMCA warning, YouTube has to notify the user who uploaded the content. That user has the right to file a counter-motion   demonstrating that the content doesn’t infringe on any copyrights. If the two sides keep disagreeing, the issue can go to   court.

The problem with DMCA, critics say, is that it’s useless against overseas sites.

SOPA tackles that by moving up the chain. If you can’t force overseas sites to take down copyrighted work, you can at least   stop U.S. companies from providing their services to those sites. You can also make it harder for U.S. Internet users to find   and access the sites.

But SOPA goes further than DMCA and potentially puts site operators on the hook for content their users upload. A site could   be deemed a SOPA scofflaw if it takes “deliberate actions to avoid confirming a high probability” that its service will be   used for copyright infringement. That kind of swampy language has tech companies spooked.

“YouTube would just go dark immediately,” Google public policy director Bob Boorstin said at a conference last month. “It   couldn’t function.”

Who supports SOPA, and who’s against it? The controversial pair of bills, SOPA and PIPA, have sparked an all-out war between   Hollywood and Silicon Valley. In general, media companies have united in favor of them, while tech’s big names are throwing   their might into opposing them.

SOPA’s supporters — which include CNNMoney parent company Time Warner, plus groups such as the Motion Picture Association   of America — say that online piracy leads to U.S. job losses because it deprives content creators of income.

The bill’s supporters dismiss accusations of censorship, saying that the legislation is meant to revamp a broken system that   doesn’t adequately prevent criminal behavior.

But SOPA’s critics say the bill’s backers don’t understand the Internet’s architecture, and therefore don’t appreciate the   implications of the legislation they’re considering.

In November, tech behemoths including Google and Facebook lodged a formal complaint letter to lawmakers, saying: “We support   the bills’ stated goals. Unfortunately, the bills as drafted would expose law-abiding U.S. Internet and technology companies   to new uncertain liabilities [and] mandates that would require monitoring of web sites.”

Where does the bill stand now? SOPA was once expected to sail quickly through committee approval in the House. But after a   massive pushback from tech companies and their supporters, it’s being extensively reworked. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor   has said SOPA won’t come up for a committee vote as-is.

That means the bill could change a lot from day to day — and one major tenet of the original legislation has already been   removed. As originally written, SOPA would have required Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to sites that law   enforcement officials deemed pirate sites.

But the White House said its analysis of the original legislation’s technical provisions “suggests that they pose a real risk   to cybersecurity,” and that it wouldn’t support legislation that mandates manipulating the Internet’s technical architecture.

The White House’s statement came shortly after one of SOPA’s lead sponsors, Texas Republican Lamar Smith, agreed to remove   SOPA’s domain-blocking provisions.

Smith’s office says it’s still planning to work through amendments to the bill, but his representatives declined to estimate   how long that will take. They plan to resume revision of the bill in February.

A markeup process once expected to take days is now likely to last for months. As the outcry around SOPA grows louder, the   bill’s momentum in Congress appears to be fading.

What are the alternatives? One option, of course, is that Congress does nothing and leaves the current laws in place.

Alternative legislation has also been proposed. A bipartisan group of House members has begun drafting the Online Protection   and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act (OPEN), a compromise bill.

Among other differences, OPEN offers more protection than SOPA would to sites accused of hosting pirated content. It also   beefs up the enforcement process. It would allow digital rights holders to bring cases before the U.S. International Trade   Commission (ITC), an independent agency that handles trademark infringement and other trade disputes.

OPEN’s backers have posted the draft legislation online and invited the Web community to comment on and revise the proposal.

SOPA supporters counter that the ITC doesn’t have the resources for digital enforcement, and that giving it those resources   would be too expensive.

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Report: Google Joins Online SOPA Protest

In Internet on January 19, 2012 at 9:02 am

WASHINGTON — Google will join thousands of tech activists, entrepreneurs and corporations on Wednesday in protesting the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act, a controversial bill that has generated national outrage among Internet experts.

On Wednesday, more than 7,000 websites are expected to voluntarily “go dark,” by blocking access to their content to protest the bill, according to organizers of SOPAStrike.com. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid plans to bring the measure to a vote next week. Some of the biggest names on the Internet plan to participate in the blackout, including Wikipedia, Mozilla, Reddit and WordPress. On Tuesday, Google stopped short of vowing to take down its popular search engine, but said it would change its home page to show solidarity with protesters.

“Like many businesses, entrepreneurs and web users, we oppose these bills because there are smart, targeted ways to shut down foreign rogue websites without asking American companies to censor the Internet,” said a Google spokeswoman in a written statement provided to HuffPost. “So tomorrow we will be joining many other tech companies to highlight this issue on our U.S. home page.”

While Hollywood movie studios and major record labels have lauded the bill as a robust effort to crack down on online copyright violations, Internet experts maintain that the tools proposed for the legislation would hamper efforts to improve online security and threaten the basic functioning of the Internet.

Tech companies have been raising objections to the bill since the Senate version, the Protect IP Act, was introduced last spring.  Free speech experts also argue that the measure’s basic anti-piracy tool would risk seriously violating the First Amendment in allowing the government and private companies to shut down entire websites accused of piracy without a trial or even a traditional court hearing.

In addition to the Web protests, thousands of New York City tech activists and entrepreneurs are preparing for a Wednesday protest outside the Manhattan offices of Sens. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Kristin Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). Both Schumer and Gillibrand formally support Protect IP. Increasingly in recent years the Big Apple has become an active hub for tech firms, with many new companies and their venture capital supporters locating there rather than Silicon Valley.

The anti-SOPA event is being organized NY Tech Meetup, a trade group representing all aspects of the New York technology community. The group is expecting more than 1,500 members and speakers from leading tech companies to show up at the Wednesday protest, from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m, at the senators’ Manhattan offices, at 780 Third Ave.

“We’re gonna have people get on a soapbox with a bullhorn,” NY Tech Meetup Chairman Andrew Rasiej told HuffPost. “We’re not in a theater; we’re in the street protesting.”

The White House announced on Saturday its formal opposition to SOPA and Protect IP, setting off a legislative scramble on Capitol Hill as lawmakers on both sides of the issue sought to shore up support ahead of the Senate vote.

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Report: Wikipedia Blackout: Jimmy Wales Announces Protest Of SOPA, PIPA On January 18 (UPDATE)

In Internet on January 19, 2012 at 8:11 am

Wikipedia Blackout

Wikipedia has issued an official statement confirming a planned blackout on January 18. Scroll down for update. Wikipedia has apparently joined the ranks of several high-profile websites that are planning a “blackout” on Wednesday, January 18, in protest of Congress’ proposed anti-piracy legislation. During the blackout period, many web pages will become unavailable and will likely be replaced with information about the protest.

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales took to Twitter on Monday to announce that the English-language version of Wikipedia will go dark on Wednesday for 24 hours — from midnight EST on January 18 until midnight EST January 19. He noted in a later tweet that “Final details [are] under consideration but consensus seems to be for ‘full’ rather than ‘soft’ blackout!”

Wednesday’s so-called SOPA Strike was initially proposed by Reddit, which will go dark for 12 hours to protest H.R. 3261, the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), and S. 968, the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA). These bills are designed to punish primarily foreign-based websites found to violate or facilitate violations of U.S. copyrights. Backlash against the bills has been strong, particularly among the online community. Google, eBay, Mozilla, Twitter, Facebook, Huffington Post parent company Aol and other web giants have formally opposed the bills. The popular Cheezburger Network has joined Reddit in committing to a blackout-protest on January 18, as has news blog Boing Boing and several other prominent sites. Community classified ads site Craigslist has also come out recently against the bills but has not officially stated that it will participate in the blackout.

According a tweet posted by @Jimmy_Wales, Jimmy Wales’ official Twitter handle, Wikipedia is planning for its January 18 blackout to affect only en.Wikipedia.org, though, the tweet continued, “the Germans will run a banner, and other languages will make their own decisions.”

A representative for Wikipedia was not immediately available for comment.

On January 14, the White House published a letter voicing concerns about SOPA and PIPA. The letter also stated and that, moving forward, the Obama Administration will work with both opponents and proponents of stopping copyright violations online to pass effective legislation in 2012.

On January 13, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Virginia) said SOPA will not reach the House floor until its perceived flaws are addressed. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) told MSNBC on Sunday that the Senate will move forward with PIPA in the coming weeks.

Wales has been considering a Wikipedia protest of SOPA since December, when he asked users via his Wiki “talk page” whether the Wikipedia community would support a global blank-out of English-language Wiki pages.

In October, the Italian Wikipedia staged a protest of the Parliament’s so-called “Wiretapping Bill” by taking down all Italian-language encyclopedia entries and replacing them with message about the controversial law. It.Wikipedia.org is Wikipedia’s fifth-largest network, with more than 881,000 articles.

The English Wikipedia, with its nearly 3,850,000 articles, is Wikipedia’s largest Encyclopedia. Jimmy Wales tweeted a comScore estimate that each day 25 million visitors from around the world access English-language Wikipedia pages.

UPDATE 1: Wikipedia users can view proposed designs for “blackout pages,” which may appear in place of normal Wikipedia entries during  the protest on January 18. Take a look at the screen shots (below) to view two of the designs.

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UPDATE 2: The English-language version of Wikipedia will go dark at midnight on January 18, in accordance with the opinions of the majority of community members who took place in a debate about protesting Congress’ SOPA and PIPA bills.

From a press release issued by Wikipedia on Monday night:

Over the course of the past 72 hours, over 1800 Wikipedians have joined together to discuss proposed actions that the community might wish to take against SOPA and PIPA. This is by far the largest level of participation in a community discussion ever seen on Wikipedia, which illustrates the level of concern that Wikipedians feel about this proposed legislation. The overwhelming majority of participants support community action to encourage greater public action in response to these two bills. Of the proposals considered by Wikipedians, those that would result in a “blackout” of the English Wikipedia, in concert with similar blackouts on other websites opposed to SOPA and PIPA, received the strongest support.

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