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Stop Online Piracy Act Supports Blacklisting, Says EFF

hessian writes with this quote from the Electronic Frontier Foundation about the Stop Online Piracy Act: "Of course the word 'blacklist' does not appear in the bill's text — the folks who wrote it know Americans don't approve of blatant censorship. The early versions of PROTECT-IP, the Senate's counterpart to SOPA, did include an explicit Blacklist Provision, but this transparent attempt at extrajudicial censorship was so offensive that the Senate had to re-write that part of the bill. However, provisions that encourage unofficial blacklisting remained, and they are still alive and well in SOPA. First, the new law would allow the Attorney General to cut off sites from the Internet, essentially 'blacklisting' companies from doing business on the web. Under section 102, the Attorney General can seek a court order that would force search engines, DNS providers, servers, payment processors, and advertisers to stop doing business with allegedly infringing websites. Second, the bill encourages private corporations to create a literal target list—a process that is ripe for abuse."

24 of 73 comments (clear)

  1. I really don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So much time and effort is spent on failing to try to stop the potential loss of hypothetical profit. Even if you're pro-copyright, I still don't understand it. It seems to be treated as some kind of national emergency that must be 'corrected' right now. So many draconian laws being rushed through (and made in secret) just to stop such a small thing.

    1. Re:I really don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the reason being, the government would love to have these powers and is just looking for an excuse to implement this bs.
      the internet is the single biggest threat to the corrupt system on this planet!

    2. Re:I really don't get it. by fightinfilipino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i think it's a lot simpler than anyone's thinking. yes, government would love to have these powers. but the bottom line is that the US is no longer a manufacturing powerhouse. our economy is gasping breaths on service industries and intellectual property creation, two things where the US can still claim a measure of global superiority. of COURSE the government is going to do everything it can to prop up its two biggest cash cows.

    3. Re:I really don't get it. by bky1701 · · Score: 2

      Which makes us a banana republic, since there is a point that the rest of the world just abolishes copyright and ignores us.

    4. Re:I really don't get it. by blarkon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Comes down to 8% of US GDP being earned directly out of the film/TV/music/books and commercial software industries. There is also a lot of "cultural soft power" earned out of those industries. US films/TV/books and music have substantially influenced the world's attitudes about things like government, trade and a whole lot of other things. If you were a government and on one side you had people saying "yes, you can maintain that 8% of GDP by giving it all away for free" and the other side saying "piracy is killing our revenue" - what would your rational course of action be?

    5. Re:I really don't get it. by fightinfilipino · · Score: 2

      why do you think the US is lobbying so hard for ACTA?

    6. Re:I really don't get it. by CanEHdian · · Score: 2

      I'm pro-copyright, but I believe the copyright term should not exceed 15 years (with the possibility for a one-time, 15 year extension provided: 1. the work be registered, 2. a DRM-free copy be provided in the highest quality available, and 3. a hefty fee be paid to avoid frivolous extensions, limiting this to Triple-A "properties"). That being said, non-commercial, private-use copying should be legal as well as a generous fair use/dealings provision.

      The problem is that quite a number of politicians appear to be in the pocket of Big Content, and the masses do what they do but don't really care if it's legal or not. Even if they did, the so-called "democracy" in the US is even more a choose-your-poison than Canada: D or R and it really makes no difference for most issues, including copyright/patents/IP. Perhaps that is why the polarization around those few issues where there is an actual difference.

      --
      When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
    7. Re:I really don't get it. by westlake · · Score: 2

      So much time and effort is spent on failing to try to stop the potential loss of hypothetical profit. Even if you're pro-copyright, I still don't understand it.

      The production budget for "How To Train Your Dragon" $165 million.
      Theatrical gross, domestic $218 million.
      Global, $495 million.

      Clean industry. High tech. Skilled labor. Favorable balance of trade. This is not a tough sell for the politician come November.

    8. Re:I really don't get it. by blahplusplus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "I still don't understand it."

      Read all about the enclosure movement. It's the same drive for profit and power that brought both slavery and capitalism into existence, human beings once they become rich think it's their right to be rich in perpetuity and hide behind vague language and con artistry under the guise of noble ideals or fairness.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclosure

      The drive to enclose is currently happening to games right now with MMO's and DRM. I imagine we'll start to see trojan horse of trusted computing rear it's head sooner or later or it will be slowly phased in. If I remember correctly Nintendo (and other companies I can't remember at the moment) is behind this kind of act and others like it as well.

      We really need a revolt against this kind of bullshit.

    9. Re:I really don't get it. by toriver · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tax contributions due to "Hollywood accounting" that slashes the profit: near zero.

    10. Re:I really don't get it. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But the people have plenty of food, and entertainment via television and games. That's enough to silence any revolt. The romans figured that one out long ago. The most you'll see in the modern US revolt-wise is an increase in people going on forums and complaining that someone else really should start a revolt.

    11. Re:I really don't get it. by Znork · · Score: 2

      Intellectual property doesn't make an economy more competitive. In itself its effects are roughly equivalent to a very high sales tax on specific goods with the only difference being it's privately collected. However, economic waste grows from protected revenue streams so it's easily on par with the worst tax funded agencies in inefficiency.

      It's not a coincidence that 'manufacturing powerhouses' and growing economies have much laxer IP laws. If the west wanted to get competitive on the global arena again, the best thing it could do would be to abolish IP rights.

    12. Re:I really don't get it. by jonwil · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Notice that its not the content creators that are pushing for this, its the content distributors (although many of them are also creators).
      Its not about piracy, its about the fact that the Internet (as it stands now) increasingly has the power to remove the content distributors as gatekeepers of the worlds content. And the big distributors are fearful that they will lose control over how content is distributed, what content is distributed and what content gets promoted (and what content does not)

    13. Re:I really don't get it. by cpghost · · Score: 2

      The problem is that quite a number of politicians appear to be in the pocket of Big Content (...)

      The problem is bigger than mere corruption, it's also one of blackmailing. Politicians who adopt an anti-copyright stance are likely to be character-assassinated by Big Content, and since they depend heavily on their reputation (yeah, I know, it's semi-ironic) for votes, they can't afford to publicly oppose the will of the MAFIAA cartel, even if they're not openly bribed.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  2. Remind anyone of the no fly list? by Mistakill · · Score: 2

    Anyone remember how well the No Fly List thing is working out, or the TSA? sigh

  3. Scary by inhuman_4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It sounds like they wrote this legislation intending for it to be abused. Does anyone seriously think that this will stop piracy? That they won't simply move to another country?

    This is just a pretext for giving the government the authority to censor the internet. The corporations will abuse this like crazy, using the broadest interpretation of "infringement" they can. Probably also be used a revenge tool between entities like the patent trolls we see more and more of.

    Once the mechanism is in place for censorship you can be sure the government itself will start blacklisting things they don't like. Probably with gag orders attached so no one knows what is being blacklisted. Just like warrantless wiretaps.

    The American people oppose blacklists for a very good reason, this is just an attempt to use fancy wording to achieve the same ends.

    1. Re:Scary by sirlark · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Piracy? What about the wikileaks payment embargo? Doing something like that to the next 'threat to national security' will not only be much easier, i.e. won't require voluntary action on the part of payment processors, but will also be legal and not open to challenge.

    2. Re:Scary by lennier1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      At least it's more honest than in Europe countries where politicians/lobbyists in several countries were using the fight against child abuse as a pretense for the implementation of such censorship systems.

      Just look at Australia, where there's already rampant abuse of online filters which were introduced like that:
      http://nocleanfeed.com/learn.html

      The list of material that will be banned under a mandatory filter is much broader than illegal child sexual abuse material. Based on previous decisions of the Classification Board, it includes:

              Information about euthanasia;
              Movies such as Ken Park or Baise-Moi;
              Books such as Join the Caravan and Defence of the Muslim Lands
              Many, many computer games, because Australia lacks an R18+ rating, although the filter will not immediately ban such games.

      Items that have been banned because they 'promote, incite or instruct in matters of crime or violence' include things such as:

              A satirical article title "The Art of Shoplifting" in a student newspaper (see libertus.net's summary of the case).
              A computer game that features "an amateur graffiti artist [...] who uses graffiti and tagging as a way to protest the corrupt Dystopic city of New Radius, in a future world where freedom of expression is suppressed by a tyrannical, Orwellian city government" (wikipedia) because it "provided elements of promotion of the crime of graffiti." (see libertus.net's summary of the decision).

    3. Re:Scary by lennier1 · · Score: 2

      European countries, asian countries, ...
      It's a worldwide problem.

      Actually, I'm surprised it took the country, which brought you the search for Iraqui WMD, Homeland "Security" and our favorite TSA gropers, this long.

    4. Re:Scary by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      It could make piracy substantially harder, or at least that piracy that uses centralised websites like torrents. Those sites take money to run, which typically comes either from advertising or user donations. A financial blacklist means no US company can transfer money to them, which means that unless they have a sponsor willing to foot the entire bill they can't operate. Worked on Wikileaks - currently unable to raise funds because it just isn't possible for supporters to send money.

    5. Re:Scary by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      The American people oppose blacklists for a very good reason, this is just an attempt to use fancy wording to achieve the same ends.

      The American people oppose black lists? What makes you think that? Pretty sure there aren't many Americans who have thought through the advantages and disadvantages of blacklists and whitelists, and I don't mean that as a criticism.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  4. China by RazorSharp · · Score: 2

    At some point, one begins to wonder what's worse -- the Chinese government being upfront about their censorship and their belief that the government is more important than the people whom it governs; or the Americans and Europeans and Australians who pass these laws in the name of liberty? If totalitarianism must be implemented, isn't it worse with the doublespeak?

    At least the Chinese method of honesty fashions a disciplined citizenship whereas this western Orwellianism depends on fools who believe the definition of a word is its antonym. And thus begins the Idiotocracy. China's starting to look not so bad.

    --
    "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  5. Cyberpunk is Now by RazorSharp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Things like this make it seem like the 'cyberpunk' dystopias of William Gibson novels are quickly becoming reality. Laws have some eerie parallels with with alcohol prohibition. The word 'escalation' comes to mind.

    Gordon: What about escalation?

    Batman: Escalation?

    Gordon: We start carrying semi-automatics and they buy automatics. We start wearing kevlar, they buy armor-piercing rounds.

    Batman: Yeah?

    Gordon: And you're wearing a mask. Jumping off rooftops.

    This is why Gibson's newer novels take place in the present rather than the future. Professional scammers, Anonymous, Wikileaks . . . an escalation of black hats, grey hats, and white hats respectively. Pieces of legislation like this won't do much to curb piracy but they will cause further escalation. Create a new class of criminals - ones much worse than current black hats, but ones the black hats will come to depend on. All of a sudden Neuromancer doesn't seem all that unrealistic.

    --
    "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  6. Re:Blacklists by nospam007 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Would the content of the blacklists be public?"

    As public as the no-fly list.