
There is a ton of information about SOPA out there, but I found this particular article to be the most interesting,… The pros and cons, if you will… Chime in:
Thousands of internet sites are taking part in a “blackout” protest against anti-piracy laws being discussed by US lawmakers.
The Wikipedia encyclopedia and blogging service WordPress are among the highest profile pages to remove material.
Google is showing solidarity by placing a black box over its logo when US-based users visit its site.
The Motion Picture Association of America has branded the action as “irresponsible” and a “stunt.”
Visitors to Wikipedia’s English-language site are greeted by a dark page with white text that says: “Imagine a world without free knowledge… The US Congress is considering legislation that could fatally damage the free and open internet. For 24 hours, to raise awareness, we are blacking out Wikipedia.”
PROTECT IP / SOPA Breaks The Internet from Fight for the Future on Vimeo.
It provides a link to more details about the House of Representatives’ Stop Online Piracy Act (Sopa) and the Senate’s Protect Intellectual Property Act (Pipa).
If users try to access its other pages via search sites, the text briefly flashes up before being replaced by the protest page. However, people have been sharing workarounds to disable the redirect.
Global protest
WordPress’s homepage displays a video which claims that Sopa “breaks the internet” and asks users to add their name to a petition asking Congress to stop the bill.
“The authors of the legislation don’t seem to really understand how the internet works,” the site’s co-founder, Matt Mullenweg told the BBC.
Across the globe, several Pirate Party sites have been taken offline. The political parties – which advocate reform of copyright laws – took the action in the UK, Spain, Sweden, Argentina, Canada and elsewhere.
The news recommendation site Reddit, the online magazine Boing Boing, the software download service Tucows and the German hackers’ group the Chaos Computer Congress also removed access to their content.
The tech news site Wired covered its headlines and pictures with black boxes which were only removed when covered with the cursor.
The US news website Politico estimated that 7,000 sites were involved by early Wednesday morning.
‘Gimmick’
The moves were described as an “abuse of power” by one of the highest profile supporters of the anti-piracy bills.
“Some technology business interests are resorting to stunts that punish their users or turn them into their corporate pawns, rather than coming to the table to find solutions to a problem that all now seem to agree is very real and damaging,” said former Senator Chris Dodd, the chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America.
“It is an irresponsible response and a disservice to people who rely on them for information… A so-called ‘blackout’ is yet another gimmick, albeit a dangerous one, designed to punish elected and administration officials who are working diligently to protect American jobs from foreign criminals.”
The US Chamber of Commerce said that the claims against the legislation had been overstated.
“[The sponsors] announced they would roll back the provisions of these bills designed to block foreign criminal websites, striking a major conciliatory note with those who raised legitimate concerns,” said Steve Tepp, chief intellectual property counsel at the chamber’s Global Intellectual Property Center.

Richard Symonds, is one of the UK’s 18 Wikipedia “Arbitrators”: published January 2011
“That was on top of the changes that guarantee the bill applies only to foreign sites. What remains are two pieces of legislation that are narrowly tailored and commercially reasonable for taking an effective swipe at the business models of rogue sites.”
The proposed legislation would allow the Department of Justice and content owners to seek court orders against any site accused of “enabling or facilitating” piracy.
Sopa also calls for search engines to remove infringing sites from their results. Pipa does not include this provision.
‘Threat to innovation’
Google posted a blog on the subject claiming that the bills would not stop piracy.
“Pirate sites would just change their addresses in order to continue their criminal activities,” it said.
“There are better ways to address piracy than to ask US companies to censor the internet. The foreign rogue sites are in it for the money, and we believe the best way to shut them down is to cut off their sources of funding.”
Other net firms that have criticised the legislation decided not to take part in the blackout.
Twitter’s founder, Dick Costolo, tweeted that it would be “foolish” to take the service offline.
Facebook declined to comment on the page blackouts but referred users to a new page posted by its Washington DC division which said: “The bills contain overly broad definitions and create a new private cause of action against companies on the basis of those expansive definitions, which could seriously hamper the innovation, growth, and investment in new companies that have been the hallmarks of the internet.”
Debate
The events coincided with news that the US House of Representatives plans to resume work on Sopa next month.
The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Lamar Smith, said: “I am committed to continuing to work with my colleagues in the House and Senate to send a bipartisan bill to the White House.”
The Senate is expected to start voting on 24 January on how to proceed on Pipa.
Even if Congress approves the bills, President Barack Obama may decide to veto them.
The White House issued a statement at the weekend saying that “we will not support legislation that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global internet”
Help raise awareness about PIPA & SOPA
Two bills are currently being considered in the U.S. Congress: PIPA the “Protect IP Act” and SOPA the “Stop Online Piracy Act.” Both are designed to address a legitimate problem – foreign-based websites that are engaging in digital piracy and trafficking in counterfeit goods. Unfortunately, we and many others believe that these bills miss the mark. These bills have the potential to stifle innovation, require censorship of search results, impose monitoring obligations, and change the way information is distributed on the web. Government regulation of online activities is a slippery slope and these proposed bills fall down that slope without truly addressing the issues that ignited this debate.
Do you support online privacy? Or should it be governed by the government?
January 18th, 2012 is the largest online protest in history, to stop the internet censorship bills, SOPA & PIPA. Join in by blacking out your site and urging everyone you can reach to contact Congress now.
Everyone: Prepare to Strike
If you have a Twitter account, tweet about the #SOPASTRIKE and ask your followers to get ready. You can follow us on twitter for news as the strike gets closer. Go to Blackout SOPA to add ‘STOP SOPA’ to your Twitter image.
Post this SOPA Strike page to your Facebook account by clicking here.
Get ready for January 18th! Email and tweet at your friends, tell them to tell everyone about the strike. When the day comes, call Congress, tweet like crazy (#SOPASTRIKE), and help the strike appear everywhere!
On Jan 24th, Congress will vote to pass internet censorship in the Senate, even though the vast majority of Americans are opposed. We need to kill the bill – PIPA in the Senate and SOPA in the House – to protect our rights to free speech, privacy, and prosperity.
Confirmed Participants:
- Google (I took the Google route!)
- Wikipedia
- Mozilla
- WordPress
- icanhazcheezburger network sites (FailBlog, theDailyWhat,Know Your Meme, etc)
- Tucows
- VanillaForums
- Flickr
- Wired
- Tumblr
- Vimeo
- Michael Moore
- The RawStory
- Open Congress / PPF
- Internet Archive
- Miro
- Computer & Communications Industry Association
- Universal Subtitles
- Center for Technology and Democracy
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Politics1.com
- O’Reilly Media
- Namecheap
- TwitPic
- dotSUB
- MoveOn.org
- Gog.com
- MineCraft
- Tor Project
- webhostingbuzz.com
- RageMaker
- Destructiod
- theCHIVE
- theBERRY
- Red 5 studios
- A Softer World
- PostSecret
- Greenpeace International
- The LeakyWiki
- XDA-Developers
- Indenti.ca
- >Major League Gaming
- The ECA
- Game Politics
- Imgur
- Monticello Capitol
- Crypto Cat
- Colossal Mind
- TweetFail
- Errata Security
- FreakOutNation
- SlashTHREE
- Focus On the Facts
- City News
- Strategy Tune
- Progressive Congress News
- bitBucker
- WPS Security Lock
- openSUSE
- Smirking Chimp
- Bread Without Bullets
- iSchool at Syracuse University
- nomacs Image Lounge
- ComputerHope
- PhantomTS
- News2Map.com
- Safex.tk
- DatelineZero
- Liberty Confidential
- Victor Rix
- WJSimpson
- Spurs of The Moment
- peeje
- Dr. Stephen Right
- DigiBase
- Tomayko Peters
- GTA-NeXT
- Hertz Gaming
- Elegant Solutions Software and Publishing Company
- Short Travel Tips
- SoulFriends
- JammerDirec
- Free Internet Press
- youn00b.com
- Pop Culture Madness
- Celebrity Magnet
- Grand Magazine
- 941 Media Project
- The Linux Geeks
- SDX-Developers
- Occupy Birmingham (UK)
- LiveLocalCard.com
- Turkreno
- The Tao of Pooh
- James Wade Weaver
- lowson.ca
- Go Green Charleston!
- eliteMRP
- Antjepolis.com
- Stonewall Young Democrats
- AppBlitz
- Brown Cafe
- Crush Labs
- Tea Party West
- Antonamor
- RockAndWater.net
- Elder Scrolls Wikia
- Deadlock Site
- team-CTC
- Tommy Wierper
- Ron Bercume Design
- Jazz Sequence
- Plague Studio
- ViperZeroOne
- Motorcycle Street and Strip Magazine
- Blue Dragon Creations
- Briana Dragon
- The Vampire’s Lair
- Elephant Talk Wiki
- TheComeAndGo
- katchabilek
- CPAarmy Central
- The Skate Rack
- whitehouse.gov1.info
- The Memphis Ghost Hunters
- Cerebralboinkfest
- The Geeky Chic
- Clockwork RPG
- Be Open Friends
If you can also tweet at us at @FightForTheFTR from your official Twitter account, it will be easier for us to verify your participation. A blog post about why you are striking is great too!



SOPA anti-piracy bills.. Are you BLACKED OUT?: http://t.co/q4vVB5xw @FightForTheFTR #SOPAStrike