What is SOPA and PIPA?

While the intention behind SOPA and PIPA is good, the power they want to give to the entertainment industry is extremely far-reaching and dangerous!

SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and PIPA (PROTECT-IP Act) are very similar pieces of legislation proposed by the United States Congress that both want to stop illegal file sharing and music downloading.

But it’s widely thought that this power to prosecute ordinary internet users and shut-down entire websites, would be abused. Many people feel very uncomfortable granting such incredible power to movie studios and music companies based on how they’ve tried to tackle piracy in the past, for example; suing children and trying to block the introduction of the video recorder.

Real-World Implications of SOPA and/or PIPA
The real-world implications of SOPA and/or PIPA are frightening. Ordinary people like you and I could actually be sent to prison for uploading something as simple as a party video in which a movie is playing in the background or our friends are singing along to a song on the radio!

Check out this great video on the dangerous implications of SOPA and PIPA:

Power to the press!?
Frightening isn’t it, giving the profit-driven, unscrupulous entertainment industry to power to censor free speech and creativity! It will come as no surprise that the hated media mogul and all-round enemy of freedom, Rupert Murdoch, fully supports the SOPA and PIPA bills as it would allow many of his business interests to censor the internet. Consider for a moment all the unlawful journalistic wrongs perpetrated by his newspapers and the biased, lazy, unsustainable opinions broadcast by his news networks – is this the kind of man you want censoring the internet? Fuck no.

The Great Internet Blackout: Opposition to SOPA and PIPA

Google's blacked out homepage

Google's anti SOPA/PIPA homepage

Yesterday many website in the US and around the world staged protests against SOPA and PIPA; the so-called The Great Internet Blackout on January 18th 2012.

Blacked out sites included: English Wikipedia, Reddit, Boing Boing, Google, twitpic, The Oatmeal, Mozilla (makers of Firefox), WordPress, Wired, Minecraft, 4chan and Tumblr.

Wikipedia's Black Out

Wikipedia's anti SOPA/PIPA blackout page

I myself was fully aware of the Wikipedia blackout before I even got to work, however I still ran straight into it at least 5 or 6 times from force of habit, proving how much I rely on the free and open internet, both at work and at home!

Pretty much every website and corporation involved in The Great Internet Blackout issued a statement on their stance against the SOPA ad PIPA bills, but my favourite is this one from twitpic, the image sharing and micro-blogging service for twitter:

We would not be participating in these protests if we did not think they were for a worthy cause; one that can, and will, harm the innovation and freedom of information upon which the Internet was built.

Facebook did not blackout (preferring shameless greed to a noble loss in advertising revenues), however Facebook founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg did have this to say on the subject of SOPA and PIPA:

We can’t let poorly thought out laws get in the way of the Internet’s development.

US President Barack Obama is against SOPA in its current form, but that thought that SOPA will return in February 2012. PIPA is also still being discussed in the US Congress, and is just as potentially damaging to the free and open internet as SOPA.

What are your thoughts on SOPA and PIPA? Feel free to comment using the form below:

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2 Comments

  1. Posted January 23, 2012 at 9:38 AM | Permalink

    Read a lot about these laws and they are a load of tosh. Senators are apparently queueing up to drop support for them after the amount of abuse they are getting from their constituents – Washington Post Story.

    Basically, it’s ill-thought out, dangerous and fucking daft. Tackling piracy needs to be intelligently and working with the public, not taking away rights.

  2. Leyton Jay
    Posted January 23, 2012 at 10:04 AM | Permalink

    Yes but these are Americans we’re talking about; their first thought in any situation is that those involved have got too much freedom, even as in this case if those people are themselves.

    Constantly increasing and then reducing civil liberties and public freedoms seems to all they’re worried about. That and making sure all the other countries in the world have freedom which America can then trample upon later :D

    The Protect-IP Act or PIPA is especially dangerous because of it’s simplistic view of the internet; PIPA was clearly dreamt up by a Congressman who had the basic’s of networking explained to him by his 12yr old grandson. In reality it would cause chaos.

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  • Sorry about the mess!

    Sorry about the mess and the lack of content, I've started this website afresh for 2012.

    Check back soon for a new-look and some great new content!