The question is,
"Was the strike worth while. Did it accomplish a great
good?" There are two bills being floated in congress. They are
known as SOPA and PIPA. They are being sponsored under the banner of
protecting authors and song writers. Fine. But each opens the doorway
to abuse by the government. Upon receiving a complaint
concerning a particular website, the feds can simply flip a switch and
shut the website down, all without a hearing or any way to challenge the
complaint. We already know that Obama believes that speech should be
regulated for accuracy. Of course, any criticism of his agenda
would be considered "inaccurate." Can you see where we are
going, with this?
Understand that this
bill, these bills, have brought conservative and liberal bloggers, alike,
together. A surprise to me, but a pleasant one. What is
distressing, is that these bills have been sponsored by so many Republicans including the likes of Jim DeMent, Marsha
Blackburn and Marco Rubio on the conservative side, Lisa Murkowski and
Olympia Snow, on the more liberal side (all five are Republican
Senators).
After the media strike,
today, here is a list of co-sponsors who have backed away from
their sponsorship (18 so far):
Updated list
Kelly Ayotte
(R-NH)
Marsha blackburn (R-TN)
Marsha blackburn (R-TN)
Roy
Blunt (R-MO)
John
Boozman (R-AR)
Scott
Brown (R-MA)
Ben
Cardin (D-MD)
Tom
Coburn (R-OK)
John
Cornyn (R-TX)
Jim
DeMint (R-SC)
Orrin
Hatch (R-UT)
James
Inhofe (R-OK)
Mike Johanns (R-NE).
Mark
Kirk (R-IL)
Jeff
Merkley (D-OR)
Lisa
Murkowski (R-AK)
Marco
Rubio (R-FL)
Olympia
Snowe (R-ME)
Pat Toomey (R-PA)
"The
partisan slant of the defections is surprising because copyright has not
traditionally been considered a partisan issue. Before Wednesday's protests,
PIPA had 16 Republican co-sponsors and 23 Democratic ones. The bill lost a
quarter of its Republican sponsors on Wednesday, while we know of only one
Democrat, Ben Cardin (D-MD), who dropped his support." (see notes below)
Turns out, the strike has caused the
congress to delay its decision with the promise of working on the bill.
I am proud to have taken part in this matter, as small time as my site is. But the big boys were the movers and shakers: Google, Wikipedia, Facebook and nearly 9,000 big name sites.
This is not just about us bloggers. It is about freedom of speech and the publics right to know. When you give a central government the ability to act poorly, sooner or later, it will.
Please do a little research and write your congress representatives.
Notes:
1. This
source site will get you started with PIPA:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2012/01/pipa-support-collapses-with-13-new-opponents-in-senate.ars
Factual information
came from this source.
2. Use this site for info on SOPA: http://gizmodo.com/5877000/what-is-sopa
From the
source site, above, we have this summary of the problematic issue embedded in
this new [proposed] law: Here's the
other thing: Payment processors or content providers like Visa or YouTube don't
even need a letter shut off a site's resources. The bill's
"vigilante" provision gives broad immunity to any provider
who proactively shutters sites it considers to be infringers. Which means the
MPAA just needs to publicize one list of infringing sites to get those sites
blacklisted from the internet.
Potential
for abuse is rampant. As Public
Knowledge points out, Google could easily take it upon itself to delist
every viral video site on the internet with a "good faith belief"
that they're hosting copyrighted material.
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