Congress prepares to declare war on the internet
Many internet users in the United States have watched with horror as countries like France and Britain have proposed or instituted so-called “three strikes” laws, which cut off internet access to those accused of repeated acts of copyright infringement. Now the U.S. has its own version of this kind of law, and it is arguably much worse: the Stop Online Piracy Act, introduced in the House this week, would give governments and private corporations unprecedented powers to remove websites from the internet on the flimsiest of grounds, and would force internet service providers to play the role of copyright police.
As the Electronic Frontier Foundation notes in a post on the proposed legislation, the law would not only require ISPs to remove websites from the global network at the request of the government or the courts (by blocking any requests to the central domain-name system that directs internet traffic), but would also be forced to monitor their users’ behavior in order to police acts of copyright infringement. Providers who do not comply with these requests and requirements would be subject to sanctions. And in many cases, legal hearings would not be required…
In addition to using what some are calling the “internet death penalty” of removing infringing websites from the DNS system so they can’t be found, the proposed bill would also allow copyright holders to push for websites and services to be removed from search engine results and to have their supply of advertising cut off — and would require that payment companies like PayPal and ad networks comply with these orders. If you liked what PayPal and others did when they shut off donations to WikiLeaks, you’re going to love the new Stop Online Piracy Act…
The bottom line is that if it passes and becomes law, the new act would give the government and copyright holders a giant stick — if not an automatic weapon — with which to pursue websites and services they believe are infringing on their content. With little or no requirement for a court hearing, they could remove websites from the internet and shut down their ability to be found by search engines or to process payments from users. DMCA takedown notices would effectively be replaced by this nuclear option, and innocent websites would have to fight to prove that they deserved to be restored to the internet — a reversal of the traditional American judicial approach of being assumed innocent until proven guilty — at which point any business they had would be destroyed.
Just as our Congress has become the kind of legislative body that would make any corporation happy and content, this bill would make for the kind of internet that would increase smiles and profits for media conglomerates — regardless of the stifling blanket dropped on the whole Web.





The Internet is already dead and it has been dead for quite some time now. It was murdered in its’ infancy by corporations and governments. Alas, poor Internet, I knew you well! Twas far too dangerous a thing to leave alive and under the control of mere peasants.
Perhaps this bill will finally bury it and mercifully do away the stench.
The Lizard King
October 28, 2011 at 2:01 pm
Har! Peasants? You mean Andreesen, Yang, et al? Should we return to BBSs and text-only?
WordPress.com daily supports over 400K active bloggers per day — free. Plenty of comparable access points.
Hardware is cheaper. Mobility and mobile access is lightyears beyond what we all started out with. Software and what can you can bring into that software from graphics to video and music is leagues beyond what we started out with.
But, then, I’ve only been online since 1983. Maybe I missed something.
And Jim Morrison was already dead 12 years.
moss
October 28, 2011 at 2:59 pm
It rather sounds like the Protect IP Act folks are trying to be the TSA of information movement. Oh goody. More arbitrary cavity searches.
Mary Lupin
October 28, 2011 at 2:57 pm
Please, please, not that cyber-cavity in my head!
moss
October 28, 2011 at 3:01 pm