SOPA AND PIPA ARE EVIL - STOP SOPA AND PIPA

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

CREATING BLACKLISTS OF WEBSITES (FROM Venitism.blogspot.com )

http://venitism.blogspot.com/2011/12/creating-blacklists-of-websites.html
"Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) points out the Stop Online Piracy Act
(SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA) are the House and Senate version of a
proposed law that would allow the U.S. Attorney General to create blacklists of
websites to censor, cut off from funding, or remove from search engine indexes.
Although the current bills are reworked versions of legislation proposed in 2010
(the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act, or COICA), 2011 has
been a true milestone in the fight against them.

SOPA and PIPA will bring blood libel to cyberspace. Accusing dissident bloggers
of treason, Graecokleptocrats have manufactured a blood libel in cyberspace,
which in turn incites hatred and violence. The freakish kangaroo justice
government of Greece, is the only government on Earth which steals the computers
of its citizens! Infamous CCU is the brutal arm of the kangaroo government of
Greece, which terrorizes the cyberspace, stealing computers and files at
gunpoint, perjuring, jailing dissident bloggers, and gagging the truth. The
Greek Cyber Crime Unit (CCU) is the most disgusting gang in Fourth Reich."

Court Order Blocks BitTorrent, Megaupload and More

http://torrentfreak.com/court-order-blocks-bittorrent-megaupload-and-more-111227/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Torrentfreak+%28Torrentfreak%29

Act Now: Call Congress right away

http://americancensorship.org/

Why Scribd Joined the SOPA Protest

http://idealab.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/12/why-scribd-joined-the-sopa-protest.php "
 1885 4
Scribd is a four-year-old website that allows users to post, share and download documents in Word, PDF or text form. The site is phenomenally useful for journalism, and TPM has routinely relied on it to post a variety of documents.
But on Wednesday, we, and Scribd’s 75 million other monthly readers, were greeted by mysteriously disappearing text on documents we tried to read and an alarming message: “Congress is pushing through legislation that threatens the future of the Internet. With this legislation in place, entire domains like Scribd could simply vanish from the Web. Call or write your Representative or Senator to STOP SOPA and PIPA.”
Scribd pointed out in a separate release that “over a billion pages and nearly half a trillion words could simply disappear,” due to the legislation."

SOPA bans Tor, the US Navy's censorship-busting technology

http://boingboing.net/2011/12/22/sopa-bans-tor-the-us-navys.html
"Tor, the censorship-busting technology developed by the US Navy and promoted by the State Department as part of the solution to allowing for free communications in repressive regimes, is likely illegal technology under the Stop Online Piracy Act. SOPA makes provision for punishing Americans who contribute expertise to projects that can be used to defeat its censorship regime, and Tor fits the bill.
"I worry that it is vague enough, and the intention to prevent tunneling around court-ordered restrictions clear enough, that courts will bend over backwards to find a violation," says Mark Lemley, a professor at Stanford Law School who specializes in intellectual property law.
Smith's anti-circumvention language appears designed to target software such as MAFIAAFire, the Firefox add-on that bypassed domain seizures, and ThePirateBay Dancing and Tamer Rizk's DeSOPA add-ons, which take a similar approach. (As CNET reported in May, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has tried, unsuccessfully so far, to remove MAFIAAFire from the Web.)
But Smith worded SOPA broadly enough that the anti-circumvention language isn't limited to Firefox add-ons. In an echo of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act's anti-circumvention section, SOPA targets anyone who "knowingly and willfully provides or offers to provide a product or service designed or marketed by such entity...for the circumvention or bypassing" of a Justice Department-erected blockade."

The Myth That SOPA & PIPA Will Stop Infringement By 'Educating' The Public

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111220/04083317141/myth-that-sopa-pipa-will-stop-infringement-educating-public.shtml
"One of the key arguments we've heard about SOPA and PIPA in defending the fact that dedicated infringers will always find their way around the blocks to continue infringing, is that it's really intended as an "educational" mechanism, based on the assumption that people going to certain "rogue sites" don't know they're rogue -- but with a big DOJ banner, perhaps they'll be educated. This has never made much sense, frankly. The entertainment industry has been betting its legacy business model for quite some time on the myth that all it takes is a little "education" to fix things. Multiple studies have shown that nothing is further from the truth. People who infringe know they're infringing. And they still do it. Education won't make a lick of difference. 

DNS expert Paul Vixie is debunking this myth even further, by separating people into two groups: intended infringers (those who know what they're doing breaks the law, but are still going to do it) and "unintented infringers" who don't realize they're breaking the law. As he notes, SOPA/PIPA are completely useless against the intended infringers, since they'll always find easy ways around the blocks. So what about the unintended infringers? Well, he points to a recentstudy of college students, about their views on following internet policies. And the short summary is that they all break the policies anyway, for a variety of reasons -- with a big reason being that, even if it's against "policy" they just don't believe they're really doing anything wrong. 

As Vixie notes, "from a high level policy perspective... we really can put "unintended infringer" into the "myth" category." Kids aren't lacking in education or morals or anything like that. They just don't see what's so wrong about accessing what the technology allows access to. If the industry hadn't wasted so many years and so much money on legal tricks and lobbying for stricter copyright laws, and instead invested that money and effort into providing better legitimate and licensed services, those kids would have gladly jumped to those offerings. But the industry decided to go in the other direction..."

SOPA denounced by newspaper journalists, too

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/sopa-heads-to-a-vote-even-journalists-want-to-stop-it/2011/12/14/gIQAjDAduO_blog.html
"First came the critiques of civil liberties and human rights groups. Then came the slams from Internet engineers and Web giants, including Facebook, Twitter, and Google. Wednesday, the American Society of News Editors (ASNE) piled on by sending Congress a letter to ask that it stop the bill. ASNE represents newspaper editors, editors of wire services and online-only news organizations, and other journalists.
If passed, SOPA would expand the ability of law enforcement and copyright holders to shut down any site that hosts pirated content. But as the American Censorship group voiced on the blog Boing Boing on Wednesday, many believe “SOPA would not only hurt free speech, it will choke off the Internet workforce and its readers by taking down entire Web sites.”
Yesterday, the Post’s Maura Judkis reported that a group of people who work on the Internet launched a visual petition so Congress could see the faces of those who would be hurt by SOPA. Journalists are among their ranks.
Last month, Jennifer Martinez of Politico wrote that SOPA will be a “shootout at the digital corral,” between lobbyists in the entertainment industry and Internet giants. She can now add journalists to that list. From ASNE’s letter to Congress:
Our members use the Internet in ways that could be construed to violate SOPA, and that’s not acceptable. Whether utilizing content contributed by third parties, stepping outside the direct reporter-source interaction to acquire and use information from Web sites around the world, or augmenting our stories through the use of multimedia previously unavailable to print-only publications, ASNE members continue to change the way news is presented. We fear that SOPA will restrict our ability to engage in these activities and stifle our capacity to innovate when we most sorely need the freedom to do so.
ASNE is not specific about what it is worried SOPA would consider copyright infringement on a news site.
But BlogPost can take a guess. Bloggers at the Post every day use content from Facebook, Twitter, and Google+, among other third-party social Web sites. We often aggregate information from other news sites and augment it with our own. And how we report is changing every day. Would all of that work be threatened by SOPA? ASNE seems to think so.
Dan Gillmor, a professor of digital media entre­pre­neur­ship at Arizona State University, shared the ASNE letter on his Google+ page Wednesday, writing: “Finally, journalists see the threat from SOPA and . . . this runaway train.”"

EVEN THE CATO INSTITUTE OPPOSES SOPA

Graphic Artists Guild Changes Mind: Withdraws SOPA Support

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111227/00454417194/graphic-artists-guild-changes-mind-withdraws-sopa-support.shtml
It seems that many of the supporters of SOPA blindly signed on thinking things like "gee, protecting copyrights sound good," but without looking at the details (or recognizing the implications). The latest to change their position is the Graphic Artists Guild (sent in by Ross Pruden), which has put out a statement saying that, after hearing from a number of concerned members, it no longer supports SOPA:
We have been closely following online anti-piracy legislation since we submitted a Comment Letter to the study conducted by Victoria Espinel, the Intellectual Property Enforcement Commissioner, in 2010. We supported the IPEC’s recommendations in her 2010 report. The “Stop Online Piracy Act” has different terms that we can no longer support. 

WHO SUPPORTS SOPA and PIPA

http://www.americablog.com/2011/12/who-supports-sopa-pipa-kill-internet.html
SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and PIPA (Protect Intellectual Property Act) are bills before Congress and unattractive near-cousins. One is in the House (the more brutal of the pair) and the other is in the Senate. Both would end the Internet as we know it, in roughly the same way.

(For a backgrounder on why this is true, click here; there's a handy brief video for your perusal.)

The world of "greedy bastards" — Dylan Ratigan's elegant phrase for the Top 0.1% — loves these bills. The world of "increased state security" also loves them.

Geeks are generally opposed (thoughGoDaddy managed to step in it with their own support). Also on the opposition side are lots of Internet sites that feature user-content, everything from Reddit to Facebook to YouTube to DailyKos.

We'll let you make up your own mind — but don't wait too long; Big Money is racing to get these bills passed.

ACTION OPPORTUNITY — If you do decide to oppose these bills, here are a few things you can do.

1. You can contact companies and organizations that support these bills. The full list is here, along with contact info (h/tGizmodo). There are some obvious entries (ASCAP, Comcast/NBC) you'll never sway — though don't let that stop you if you're so inclined. But there are also some interesting vulnerables. Here are a few that caught my eye:
Estée Lauder Companies: (212) 572-4200
Fraternal Order of Police (FOP)
Go Daddy: (480) 505-8800
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW): (202) 833-7000
International Brotherhood of Teamsters
International Union of Police Associations
L'Oreal: (212) 818-1500
Major League Baseball
Marvel Entertainment: (212) 576-4000
MasterCard Worldwide: (800) 622-7747
Minor League Baseball (MiLB)
National Center for Victims of Crime
National Crime Justice Association
National District Attorneys Association: (703) 549-9222
National Domestic Preparedness Coalition
National Football League
National Governors Association, Economic Development and Commerce Committee
National League of Cities
National Narcotics Offers' Associations' Coalition
National Sheriffs' Association (NSA)
Revlon
The United States Conference of Mayors: info@usmayors.org
Tiffany & Co.
A lot of these folks have IP "content" — the NFL, for example — but also fan vulnerability. 

And what about the unions (IBEW, Fraternal Order of Police)? Also, why do organizations like the Sheriff's Association care about IP law? A little something extra in the retirement-fund Christmas basket? Or maybe groups like these just haven't heard from the rest of us.

Given who's on this list, I'm kind of waiting for the Catholic Bishops to weigh in. 

2. My personal favorite way to complain — call these so-called "progressive" Senators. They're not just supporters; they're co-sponsors:
Sherrod Brown [OH] – (202) 224-2315
Al Franken [D-MN] – (202) 224-5641
Kirsten Gillibrand [D-NY] – (202) 224-4451
Amy Klobuchar [D-MN] – (202) 224-3244
Sheldon Whitehouse [D-RI] – (202) 224-2921
We'll be watching this closely, along with a great many others. This law really matters. 

Rackspace Speaks Out Against SOPA

http://www.crn.com/news/cloud/232301060/rackspace-speaks-out-against-sopa.htm;jsessionid=EodIY6Cm5eLvUz7XoN3SxA**.ecappj03
Rackspace has publicly opposed the Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA), which is working its way through Congress, saying that the bill will do more harm than good in its current form.
In a post on the cloud and hosting provider's cloud blog, Rackspace CEO Lanham Napier spoke out against SOPA in its current form. Rackspace's coming out against the bill is a major move for the 13-year-old tech titan, as the bill was proposed by Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), whose 21st Congressional District includes parts of Rackspace's hometown of San Antonio.
"Part of the professional code of physicians is that, when they're treating a patient's ailment, they should 'first, do no harm.' I wish more members of Congress would follow that rule. Instead, in the name of policing the online theft of intellectual property, key lawmakers are pushing a cure that's worse than the disease," Napier wrote.

SOPA is the end of us, say bloggers

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70878.html

NameCheap offers you a discount to leave SOPA-supporting domain hosting services

http://venturebeat.com/2011/12/27/namecheap-offers-discount-for-domain-transfers/
Following GoDaddy’s recanted support for SOPA, domain hosting site NameCheap is looking to lure in domain owners who no longer want anything to do with GoDaddy or SOPA supporting services.
NameCheap has annoucedMoveYourDomainDay, which aims to get customers from SOPA-supporting domain hosting services to defect. The company isn’t naming names; it’s only saying it is offering a discount to customers who “wish to leave service providers who support SOPA.” On December 29th, for $6.99 customers can move their com, net, org, info or biz domains from any other hosting service to NameCheap. In addition to the discounted transfer rate, NameCheap plans to donate one dollar from each transaction to the Electronic Frontier Foundation to help fight SOPA, the Stop Online Piracy Act. To get the discount, just go to NameCheap’s site on December 29th and enter the code SOPASucks. There is a one hundred domain limit.
On its website, NameCheap displays a post that outlines its opposition to SOPA and includes a statement from CEO Richard Kirkendall:
While we at Namecheap firmly believe in intellectual property rights, SOPA is like detonating a nuclear bomb on the internet when only a surgical strike is necessary. This legislation has the potential to harm the way everyone uses the Internet and to undermine the system itself. At Namecheap, we believe having a free and open Internet is the only option that will continue the legacy of innovation and openess that stands for everything we all value in our modern society.
In recent weeks GoDaddy announced its support of SOPA and then withdrew support following fierce backlashfrom its customers and opponents of SOPA. Following the company announcing its support for the bill,GoDaddy lost thousands of customers in the course of just a few days. GoDaddy has since released a statement saying it no longer supports SOPA, but it looks like the damage may have already been done.

Monday, December 26, 2011

WRITE YOUR REPRESENTATIVES AND SENATORS TODAY

Go to :
http://Congress.org and find your Congress people. Send them an email or letter telling them in no uncertain terms that this is a make or break issue. If they vote for SOPA or PIPA, no matter their stand on other issues, no matter if they are Republican, Independent, Democrat, Tea Partier, whatever, you will work hard to vote them out and that this vote will forever ruin their political career and they will become a persona non grata in this country.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

STOP SOPA and PIPA NOW

Well, they are at it again. Lawmakers and their Corporate Overlords are trying to eliminate freedom in order to bend over and please their Corporate masters with the bastard bills SOPA and PIPA. The voices of the common man are resoundingly on our side, as are Mozilla, Redditt, and many more sites and organizations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation. But, there are many large corporations with lots of money trying to push it forward. What we must understand is that these powerful corporations get their money to push their agenda forward, ultimately FROM US. The politicians pushing this evil agenda forward depend on OUR votes, OUR support.

Boycott every company supporting this crap. Spread the word to your friends. Let every politician know that a vote for this, no matter if they are Dems, Rethugs, or Independents, is the kiss of death for their political career.

SCARE THE SHIT OUT OF THEM... that support for this is equal of the end of their professional career as a politician, the end of their business as a commercial entity. Not only SCARE them..but PROMISE them, make it a reality so clear they can taste and feel it pressing against them so hard they know it for a certainty.