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SOPA Makes Strange Bedfellows

davide marney writes "What do 1-800-Contacts, Adidas, Americans for Tax Reform, Comcast, the Country Music Association, Estee Lauder, Ford, Nike and Xerox all have in common? According to OpenCongress.org, they all have specifically endorsed H.R. 3261, the Stop Online Piracy Act. A total of 158 corporations have signed up in favor of the bill, and only 87 against. $21 Million has been donated to Congressmen who favor the bill, but only $5 Million to those against. Thanks to OpenCongress for these insights. This goes a long way towards explaining why this bill has so much traction, despite all its negative publicity."

439 comments

  1. Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And nothing more.

    1. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Negative publicity.. where? You mean a few pathetic campaigns online?
      Almost nobody that can affect the outcome of this will even see those.

    2. Re:Money. by cjcela · · Score: 2

      It is not only money. There is something else that is remarkable. Our elected officials listen more to their 'friends' that to the people who vote them in power. And we seem to be complacent with this. Somehow we have to find a way in the US to held individuals working for the government accountable for their actions, if we want the land of the free to be so for our children.

    3. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What it needs is everyone to go on-line and download stuff, ALL at the same time. Let them take everyone to gaol.

    4. Re:Money. by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      Money is what votes politicians in power. Sheep that enter votes will obey their media masters. Money buys media masters.

    5. Re:Money. by shentino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's because politicians quit answering to voters once they are elected.

      If congress critters were subject to recall like their local and state counterparts you'd see a LOT more responsiveness.

      In the regular 9 to 5 world us working class folks live in, your boss actually gets to fire you if you screw up.

    6. Re:Money. by Cow+Jones · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Lobbying pays:

      In a recent study, researchers Raquel Alexander and Susan Scholz calculated the total amount the corporations saved from the lower tax rate. They compared the taxes saved to the amount the firms spent lobbying for the law. Their research showed the return on lobbying for those multinational corporations was 22,000 percent. That means for every dollar spent on lobbying, the companies got $220 in tax benefits.

      You know what's funny? In Germany, the president is currently under a lot of pressure, and may have to resign, because he got a private credit for his house at too favorable a rate of interest. In the US (the home of democracy, defender of the free world, etc), corporations can openly bribe their senators to get the laws they want.

      Something's rotten in the state of Merica...

      CJ

      --

      Ah, arrogance and stupidity, all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari
    7. Re:Money. by Spodi · · Score: 1

      The worst thing is, this has pretty much just become an accepted fact of America. The only people who can stop it are those who are making all the money from it.

    8. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep - the USA... The best democracy money can buy....

    9. Re:Money. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Informative

      Indeed. The majority of citizens don't know about SOPA and won't know until it's too late, because there has been a sort of informal media blackout. Mainstream news coverage is nonexistant.

    10. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am convinced that the only solution is for States to assert their rights against the Federal government and secede.

      If you could get half the states to rally around the Constitution, it would be a hard thing to fight. Remember, the States were like countries who came together for common defense, currency, and free trade. Now they're all subordinate to a government who wants to run everything from one location for the benefit of the highest donor, and is saddling the States with insurmountable debt. The people who want to live free will eventually have to do something radical and separate from those who don't.

    11. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      the home of democracy

      You put it like the EU is less democratic than the US. Are you an idiot? Democracy was created thousands of years ago in Europe. And it is still stronger in the EU than in the US. The EU has no Guantanamo, Patriot Act, but it has e.g. much stronger protection of privacy and rights of their citizens (including minorities).

    12. Re:Money. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Interesting

      SOPA is making pirates feel a lot less guilty. I'm waiting for some activists to start burning DVDs full of pirate movies and leaving them scattered around public spaces.

    13. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you an idiot? Democracy was created thousands of years ago in Europe [...]

      Sarcasm, too, was not invented in the US. In contrast to democratic principles, however, sarcasm appears to be doing fine over here, even if it is sometimes not recognized by Slashdot commenters.

    14. Re:Money. by Dekker3D · · Score: 2

      I'll go out on a limb and guess that, like the "defender of the free world" right after it, he was just listing opinions commonly-held by some Americans, that seem like a bit of a joke to the rest of us people. "Whoosh", as they'd say.

    15. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Wouldn't it be appropriate to just replace the Congress with an auction house that sells the law-making rights to the highest bidder? Because that's essentially what the Congress has gradually become. Apparently the general public is well fed and entertained enough not to care, so far.

    16. Re:Money. by jodido · · Score: 0

      States don't have any "rights" against the federal government. Unless there's a state that didn't ratify the constitution. "States rights" was an invention to keep from having to de-segregate schools (and before that to protect slavery). You won't find any mention of it in any other context.

    17. Re:Money. by am+2k · · Score: 1

      You know what's funny? In Germany, the president is currently under a lot of pressure, and may have to resign, because he got a private credit for his house at too favorable a rate of interest.

      That's not the whole story. The bigger part of the outcry is because he wanted to silence the publication (no, I'm not calling "Bild" a newspaper. Compared to it, even Fox News is fair and accurate...) that wanted to publish this piece of information and threatened the "reporter" via phone (the exact wording is still unknown, as far as I know). Freedom of the press is still a big thing in Germany.

      But generally, politicians get booted for receiving money from companies in any shape or form in Europe, exactly to avoid the disaster happening in the US right now.

    18. Re:Money. by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

      Gosh, who are Raquel Alexander and Susan Scholz? Kind of strange when you consider their background...it's highly unlikely they would EVER produce anything seen as unfavorable to leftists. The cart leads the horse, so to speak. It's as if the entire narrative was set up from the beginning to discredit the very same capitalist system that the authors benefit from.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    19. Re:Money. by starfishsystems · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Twenty years ago, while in Germany, I saw a television documentary which described the United States as a "dollar democracy", ie. one dollar = one vote. It's overly simplistic, of course, but has more than a little truth to it.

      --
      Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
    20. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Countrywide... Both Dodd and Conrad have announced the are not seeking reelection. Royce is up for a primary fight.

    21. Re:Money. by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure there are other "benefits" for politicians in Germany. Like the ever popular high paying board member job after retiring from politics. That's why it's so damn hypocritical that they're making big news out of the president while there are so many more important news stories to cover (Euro financial crisis, Hungary's descent into fascism, the whole Iran saber rattling, etc).

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    22. Re:Money. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      In the US (the home of democracy, defender of the free world, etc), corporations can openly bribe their senators to get the laws they want.

      That's actually not the worst part of it. Look who's been funding any number of bad copyright-related laws, such as the Audio Home Recording Act, Sonny Bonehead Copyright Extension Act, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and others in that vein. It's mostly non-U.S. corporations (granted, through local intermediaries such as the MPAA/RIAA), but they follow the orders of their people who fund them. What we have here are foreign-owned entities that are directly influencing American lawmakers and public policy. That ought to be enough to put certain Congresspeople up on treason charges (or something along those lines.)

      In Germany, the president is currently under a lot of pressure, and may have to resign, because he got a private credit for his house at too favorable a rate of interest.

      I can imagine what would happen in Germany if, say, Ford or General Motors attempted to bribe some of their ministers to get favorable laws passed. There would be prison sentences handed out all around.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    23. Re:Money. by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but Greece is "the home of Democracy", as Britain is "the mother of Parliments". The US is generally called (by it's anthem) "the land of the free", but it's well to remember that when that line was written, slavery was legal.

      Of the three examples, only Britain seems to be living up to it's image. (Or, "Don't trust slogans!")

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    24. Re:Money. by iamnobody2 · · Score: 1

      .... the states rights are the right to make laws about all matters not reserved for the federal government by the constitution. its sorta what the tenth amendment is about. 'The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.'

      --
      nobody's perfect
    25. Re:Money. by DaleSwanson · · Score: 2

      If congress critters were subject to recall like their local and state counterparts you'd see a LOT more responsiveness.

      Every member of the House must be reelected every 2 years. The reelection rate never drops below 80%. While I would support recall at the federal level, I don't know how much a difference it would make. Most people are simply too apathetic and ignorant about anything that doesn't obviously and directly affect their day to day lives.

      http://www.opensecrets.org/bigpicture/reelect.php

    26. Re:Money. by shentino · · Score: 1

      2 years is plenty of time for an angry public to either quit caring, or have something even worse dumped on them as a distraction.

      2 years is ALSO plenty of time to do enough favors for your sponsors that you'll have a nice and cushy private sector job waiting for you if you ever DO get run out of town during election season.

    27. Re:Money. by shentino · · Score: 1

      And you can bet that a decent chunk of that "return on investment" just gets plowed right back into congress's corporate feed trough.

    28. Re:Money. by Sosarian+Avatar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bingo... My mother has fairly average media habits for her age (61), which includes the various local/national news shows on ABC, and she hadn't heard about SOPA. Worse, she's one of the Clueless Public in many ways (not for lack of effort on my part) and in order to get her to really grasp why SOPA is a problem, I had to carefully step her through ways it could/would likely be abused along with examples proving that each possibility could really happen here.

      Unless every single anti-SOPA person with communicative skills gets out there and starts carefully educating their Clueless Relatives on it, we're completely fucked, and even then it's probably too late.

      --
      Apathy Sucks, Nobody for President!
    29. Re:Money. by NorQue · · Score: 1

      [...] (no, I'm not calling "Bild" a newspaper. Compared to it, even Fox News is fair and accurate...) [...]

      Have you actually watched Fox News? Compared to their venom spouting gibberish fake news BILD would be a quality newspaper.

      And I hate BILD with a passion...

    30. Re:Money. by am+2k · · Score: 1

      Have you actually watched Fox News? Compared to their venom spouting gibberish fake news BILD would be a quality newspaper.

      Heh, I won't get into that discussion. Have a picture I took in Cologne instead :)

    31. Re:Money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Twenty years ago, while in Germany, I saw a television documentary which described the United States as a "dollar democracy", ie. one dollar = one vote. It's overly simplistic, of course, but has more than a little truth to it.

      It is also a useful practical plan of action. Instead of whining on forums when their will is subverted, people should put their money where their mouth is. Because, you see, corporate profit is a sort of tax upon the general population. The money that goes into politicians' bribes came from our pockets and is only a small part of it. "The 99%" can beat "the 1%" at bribing game any time! Only thing that stands in way is this feeling of entitlement - it is unfair that you need to pay for your rights, but spending money is better then spending blood and lives, IMHO.

    32. Re:Money. by gknoy · · Score: 1

      Where can I find good, concrete (well, hypothetical) examples that I can use for explaining this to friends or family?

    33. Re:Money. by Mephistophocles · · Score: 1

      Most people are simply too apathetic and ignorant about anything that doesn't obviously and directly affect their day to day lives.

      I don't know about that. Most people do have pretty strong opinions, and if you ask around (seriously, just as an experiment, stand on a well-walked street sometime and unobnoxiously, unobtrusively ask - it's fun and very enlightening, and unless you have no social skills and/or look like an axe murderer, the number of people willing to talk to you will surprise you) you'll find that most people's opinions are the same: "congress sucks. The president is an idiot. All I really want to do is live my little life the way i want to and be left alone, and to hell with all of them."

      All that to say, I personally don't think elections mean squat. I don't even think votes are recorded, much less counted. I have no possible way to prove that, just lots of circumstantial evidence. Not that it probably matters anyway, since if I'm right there's not a damn thing any one of us can do about it.

      --
      Deja Moo: The distinct feeling that you've heard this bull before.
    34. Re:Money. by DaleSwanson · · Score: 1

      you'll find that most people's opinions are the same: "congress sucks. The president is an idiot. All I really want to do is live my little life the way i want to and be left alone, and to hell with all of them."

      I'll agree that's a common opinion. Yet, Congress consistently gets reelected. People want to be left alone until someone else is doing something they don't like. People can think congress is doing a horrible job all they want, but they just keep reelecting them, rewarding failure. Many people don't know their representatives, let alone how they've voted on important issues in the past. When it comes time to vote people will just pick which ever person is on their team (D or R), even if that guy voted for things like SOPA or the Patriot Act or the wars.

  2. Stand up, people! by intellitech · · Score: 5, Informative

    Write to your senators, your representatives! Tell them you oppose this bill!

    http://www.opencongress.org/contact_congress_letters/new?bill=112-h3261&position=oppose

    Tell your family, friends, even the guy at the gas station to do the same!

    This bill WILL get passed if we don't make our position clear to elected officials!

    --
    vos nescitis quicquam, nec cogitatis quia expedit nobis ut unus moriatur homo pro populo et non tota gens pereat.
    1. Re:Stand up, people! by ae1294 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Write to your senators, your representatives! Tell them you oppose this bill!

      http://www.opencongress.org/contact_congress_letters/new?bill=112-h3261&position=oppose

      Tell your family, friends, even the guy at the gas station to do the same!

      This bill WILL get passed if we don't make our position clear to elected officials!

      Be sure to include a check for at least $10,000.

    2. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Senators sit in 2nd and 3rd place on the top recipents.

    3. Re:Stand up, people! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This bill WILL get passed regardless of whether we make our position clear to elected officials!

      FTFY. When congressmen will not even listen to expert testimony on these matters, what makes you think they will listen to their constituents?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    4. Re:Stand up, people! by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean 'write a check' instead? Money talks, Anything else is ignored.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol thats cute. You still think congress gives a shit about the common person.

    6. Re:Stand up, people! by Paladeen · · Score: 2

      Their chances of re-election don't hinge on the experts, but if enough of their constituents kick up a fuss, they might think twice.

      Or maybe I'm just being hopelessly optimistic.

    7. Re:Stand up, people! by DougBTX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Their reelection depends on having funds to mount a reelection campaign, hence the $10,000.

    8. Re:Stand up, people! by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      on the one hand they got ``$21 Million has been donated to Congressmen who favor the bill,'' on the other your letter. Hmm... whom would they listen...

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    9. Re:Stand up, people! by Raisey-raison · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What I find interesting is that it's never mentioned much in the mainstream media. It's not mentioned in the presidential debates. And I don't understand why unions, Americans for Tax reform and builders associations support it. Our current extreme IP inhibits economic growth (which is why tax reforms should be against it) and helps to bolster income inequality (which is why unions and builders associations should oppose it).

      I understand that this this is the ONE issue that CNN, MSNBC and FOX all agree on. Because they all are part of media companies that want ever stronger IP to bolster their profits. The whole subject is censored.

      So many of my so called 'informed' friends aren't aware of it and they say IP is boring. My god - what are we to do!

    10. Re:Stand up, people! by Nrrqshrr · · Score: 1

      You could send a million letters. If the guy is recieving a million $$ in "donations", he ain't gonna listen to you any time this year.

    11. Re:Stand up, people! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are being hopelessly optimistic. Not only do most people not care at all about SOPA, even if they did care they would forget about it by the time election season rolled around. Politicians know this, and that is why the DMCA was passed, the Mickey Mouse bill was passed, the PATRIOT act, etc. That is why I have little hope for SOPA or PIPA being defeated; I wrote to my representatives in the House and the Senate, and I have told everyone I know that these bills are bad and why they are bad, but I doubt there will be much of an effect.

      Ten years from now, when the Internet has been conquered by old media interests and there are toll booths and walls everywhere, people will start to get annoyed -- and by then, it will be too late. People are annoyed by the DMCA now, but there is little hope of getting it overturned. SOPA will be no different.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    12. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How well armed and willing to take drastic action are their constituents? Until the answer to both questions is "very", they won't.

    13. Re:Stand up, people! by bzipitidoo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      PBS might also support it. Last month, the News Hour ran a story on piracy. They interviewed two "opposing" parties, the Open Internet Coalition and the MPAA, whose only difference was how much copying should be regulated: a lot, or a lot more. That was the most biased, unbalanced, and stupidly wrong coverage I'd ever seen from PBS. I thought they were a cut above the rest of the mainstream media. They weren't, not that time.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    14. Re:Stand up, people! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't understand why unions...support it

      "It protects American jobs!"

      AFL-CIO is a political organization; sometimes they do things that legitimately help the working class, other times they do things that they can claim help the working class. SOPA is squarely in the second category: labor organizations can point to it and say, "We are helping protect your job by supporting this legislation!"

      Our current extreme [copyright/trademark/patent/trade secrets enforcement regime] inhibits economic growth

      Only over the long term. In the short term, the fat cats get to report big profits and continue to buy yachts and mansions. Over the long term, consumers are forced to wait longer for new products and technologies, pay more for existing products and technologies, and forced to turn over their own profits to the entrenched businesses and trolls. Eventually the rest of the world will start ignoring American demands about trademarks and copyrights, and then the system's hollow core will be exposed and the fat cats will abandon ship and leave the rest of us to our fate.

      When the design of a logo or the composition of a soft drink is considered to be a major economic issue, you know the system is destined to fail. We still have a chance to turn things around...but not with the current set of politicians.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    15. Re:Stand up, people! by todrules · · Score: 5, Informative
      I already did. Here's the response I got back. Looks like Senator Isakson is already bought and paid for. I'll definitely vote for whoever runs against him in the next election, though.

      Thank you for contacting me regarding intellectual property theft. I appreciate hearing from you and I appreciate the opportunity to respond.

      S.968, the Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property (PROTECT IP) Act of 2011, was introduced by Senator Leahy (D-VT) on May 12, 2011, and was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. On May 26, 2011, it was reported out of Committee and is currently pending in the Senate. The bill targets websites, particularly those registered outside of the United States, which are "dedicated to infringing activities." These rogue websites typically offer unauthorized downloading or streaming of copyrighted content or the sale of counterfeit goods including music, movies, and pharmaceutical drugs.

      Websites targeted by this bill are foreign owned and outside the reach of U.S. laws despite the fact U.S. intellectual property is being infringed upon and U.S. consumers are the targets. Rogue websites cost American workers jobs and cost businesses millions of dollars in lost revenue. As online technology and commerce advances, we must see to it that injured parties have the ability to stop infringers from profiting from counterfeit products. For example, a victim of infringement will have the authority to file a civil action against the owner or registrant of a rogue site. If an order is granted by the court, third parties will be required to stop processing payments from the infringing sites, therefore, preventing infringers from collecting payments. I will work to ensure that our laws our modernized to protect intellectual property, and will keep your thoughts on this bill in mind should it come before the Senate for a vote.

    16. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't, and won't. Would that it were otherwise.

      [tangent alert]

      You must have been addressing American citizens with your comment. I'm a Canadian citizen on an H-1B, working through the glacially slow multi-year process of (hopefully, eventually) getting my American citizenship.

      Trying to act like an American citizen is tantamount to misrepresenting myself. Road to hell paved with good deeds, and all that.

      So, good luck with that. I'll be one of the few on the sidelines with a bucket of popcorn, expressing muted shouts of restrained enthusiasm for your efforts.

    17. Re:Stand up, people! by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, imagine that. The top states that are supporting this :
      * New York (2x)
      * Nevada
      * California
      * Massachusetts

      And the top counties :
      * Richmond, Virginia
      * Los Angeles, California (ie. Silicon Valley) (TWICE)
      * Washington environs, Maryland
      * Charleston, South Carolina
      * Boston, Masachusetts

      Hey those are the guys who voted in the major SOPA supporters. Representatives are supposed to represent the will of the people ... well in theory anyway.

      Really sad that the opposition couldn't even take Los Angeles.

    18. Re:Stand up, people! by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So rather, make it known that you will boycott products from SOPA supporters, who can tell congressmen what to vote for. Someone developped a nifty app for that :

      http://www.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/o78co/my_friend_and_i_wrote_an_application_to_boycott/

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    19. Re:Stand up, people! by mdf356 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll definitely vote for whoever runs against him in the next election, though.

      Don't forget to vote in the primary as well. Knocking a candidate out in the primary can mean that you can play party politics as usual in the general. In Washington state now, the general isn't even a two-party election, it's a runoff from the top two vote getters in the primary.

      --
      Terrorist, bomb, al Qaeda, nuclear, yellowcake, kill, assassinate. Carnivore is dead... long live Echelon.
    20. Re:Stand up, people! by arkenian · · Score: 4, Informative

      And the top counties :

      * Los Angeles, California (ie. Silicon Valley) (TWICE)

      Hey those are the guys who voted in the major SOPA supporters. Representatives are supposed to represent the will of the people ... well in theory anyway.

      Really sad that the opposition couldn't even take Los Angeles.

      errr. Silicon valley is not in Los Angeles, Hollywood is. Hollywood's support for this bill makes sense, silicon valley's does not.

    21. Re:Stand up, people! by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      The correct statement is, "I have prepared a campaign platform and a war chest with the intent to run against you and unseat you during the primary if you are stupid enough to vote for this bill."

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    22. Re:Stand up, people! by shentino · · Score: 2

      If the favors they do for their corporate bedfellows line them up a cushy enough job in the private sector they won't give a damn about re-election.

    23. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why overturn the DMCA, do you think it is bad that search engines, caches, and sites that host customer generated content are exempt from liability incurred by their users?

    24. Re:Stand up, people! by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      There's a reason that the blackout option is expected to be highly effective if it happens. Just wait until the flood of angry constituents makes their voice heard in Washington.

    25. Re:Stand up, people! by Nemyst · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The one thing I hate most about these, though, is that the Americans basically think themselves as above everybody else. What can I do, as a Canadian citizen, to stop this bill? Nothing. But if it passes, I will have to live with the consequences.

      If it were just the Americans that would be affected, I'd just let them hang themselves. They seem very capable in doing so. However, when their laws start trespassing borders to affect the entire PLANET, I think something is clearly wrong.

    26. Re:Stand up, people! by Lord_Jeremy · · Score: 1

      Isn't PBS still controlled by the republicans?

    27. Re:Stand up, people! by Stiletto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      MY senators? MY representatives?

      News Flash: I don't have any representative to write to. Time Warner has representatives. ExxonMobil has representatives. Pfizer has representatives. Lockheed Martin has representatives. You and I don't have squat in terms of governmental representation.

    28. Re:Stand up, people! by El_Muerte_TDS · · Score: 1

      SOPA affects me too, but I'm not an USA citizen, live there, work there, etc.
      How can the rest of the world help in fixing this political problem in the US? Should we send our army to overthrow the corrupt government?

    29. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Um, hate to break it to you, but CNN had a SOPA article on their front page all day yesterday and I believe it's still there as the 2nd or 3rd headline. These days a large portion of their content is showcasing or reacting to user generated content, something SOPA will surely curtail.

    30. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you a retard or do you play one on TV? PBS has been a consistent de-fund target of the Republicans for a while now.

    31. Re:Stand up, people! by e**(i+pi)-1 · · Score: 2

      this article gives a reason: journalists would risk a lot.

    32. Re:Stand up, people! by houghi · · Score: 2

      I'll definitely vote for whoever runs against him in the next election, though.

      He will be bought as well. It does not even matter if he has a D or an R after his name.

      With the two-party system you can choose if they shoot you in the left or the right kneecap. Please don't forget and register to vote. That will show how nice of a citizen you are.

      And it will get worse, much worse. Also read http://www.rense.com/general37/char.htm and especially:
      9.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    33. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The United States government isn't behind this ... they are merely a means to an end. The MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS are pulling the strings here. Not that that changes anything. You don't get to vote for/against those assholes either.

    34. Re:Stand up, people! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      Out of interest, have you ever tried writing to the senators or representatives for your constituency? On any matter? I most often hear this 'my elected representatives don't represent me' from people who have never bothered letting the politicians that are supposed to represent them know what they think.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    35. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Write to your senators, your representatives! Tell them you oppose this bill!

      http://www.opencongress.org/contact_congress_letters/new?bill=112-h3261&position=oppose

      Tell your family, friends, even the guy at the gas station to do the same!

      This bill WILL get passed if we don't make our position clear to elected officials!

      There's a reason the guy at the gas station hasn't heard about SOPA yet. I can't help but use quotes when I refer to American "news" agencies. We used to make fun of the USSR for this crap.

    36. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry about it, man. When America collapses because of its own ludicrous bills, Canada can just turn to the next super power that builds an effective internet infrastructure.

    37. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, for the sake of getting at those evil, foreign, "rogue" websites, these legislators are willing to sacrifice the freedoms of the people at home. AND use ineffective methods that inconvenience everybody that will probably do little to stop the actual problem because they have no clue how things actually work.

      Where have I heard all this stuff before?

    38. Re:Stand up, people! by paimin · · Score: 2

      So "not very" then.

      --
      Facebook is the new AOL
    39. Re:Stand up, people! by Slashdot+Assistant · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The DMCA doesn't necessarily need to be overturned, but certainly it needs to be revisited. The DMCA provides a standardized method for handling alleged copyright infringement, allowing the host to avoid being caught in the cross-fire. This has been abused by infringers, and certainly by people wishing to censor. I've had both types of complaints, albeit not under circumstances covered by the DMCA. In the case of some guy trying to remove an embarrassing critique of some private messages in which he libeled me, I was fortunate to have had a hosting company who didn't just buckle for their own safety, and had the DMCA applied, the complainant could have sent a take-down, which I could have countered - leaving the host off the hook. I think it helped that the guy sending the complaint was clearly a whining bitch, demonstrating his fundamental lack of legal knowledge through his references to "Internet laws". The DMCA also poses problems for content owners who find themselves playing whack-a-mole with sites that repeatedly allow copyright infringement. I see that as a legitimate concern. I'm very much in favor of equitable copyright protection, the cornerstone of which should be severally shortened copyright terms. Things have clearly swung too far in favor of rights owners, with the bulk of the money appearing to miss the pockets of the producers themselves.

      My main issues with the DMCA lie in how it interferes with the bypassing of DRM, and reverse engineering. Another problem though is that the DMCA introduced pretty stiff penalties for infringement, yet what happens when a media company, with the presumption that they have legal people who should know better, send pretty obviously frivolous take-down notices. In theory this is perjury, yet how many prosecutions do we see? Out of curiosity, should I receive a malicious take-down notice from an American entity, how would I get a prosecution rolling? Send a letter to the FBI, or would I instead need to engage a solicitor to begin civil proceedings?

    40. Re:Stand up, people! by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      This bill WILL get passed if we don't make our donations to elected officials!

      Fixed that for you.

    41. Re:Stand up, people! by brendank310 · · Score: 1

      I tried when the Patriot Act was up for renewal. The form letter I received in return made it ostensibly clear that my representative did not read, nor care to address any of the points I made in my letter.

    42. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is one of the many reasons I will be voting for Ron Paul. I know what you are thinking (oh boy another one). I am a convert. I didnt vote for him last time as I think his ideas are reckless and destructive (still do). However, the alternative is more of the same. Which is even more reckless and destructive. I had hoped Obama would show the will to stand up to congress. Instead he just pushed whatever the flavor of the month was thru. He could clean up the budget mess real damn quick with 'i will veto every bill put in front of me that is not the budget'. Instead he is just pointing fingers with the rest of them, at each other.

      My voice says enough of this shit. I am going to vote for the party of NO. No more of this damn crap.

      I am encouraging those I know to vote for him (staunch republicans and a couple of staunch democrats). They are listening to me. As I make good arguments about what is going on.

      This is just a part of the symptom of the problem. Too much money buying votes. Hell here in NC you can buy a state legislature for little more than 2k. Sounds like in some states they get better money for the federal level.

      When you guys make Ayn Rand start to sound sane you are doing it wrong...

      I am going to vote in the republican primaries (usually dont bother) I will be casting my vote for Ron Paul.

      http://www.2012presidentialelectionnews.com/2012-republican-primary-schedule/

      If he looses the primary I will write it in.

    43. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...]as a Canadian citizen[..] if it passes, I will have to live with the consequences.

      What consequences are these, except having potential difficulty in doing business with US citizens or US based corporations, and possibly having to find a different DNS server? While I don't like SOPA anymore than the next ./er, I can't see why I should be opposed to the idea of the US passingly laws that seems to only apply US citizens & US based businesses, which I can simply choose not to interact with.

    44. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Representative already opposes this and one of my Senators supports it but is a total tool who is likely to get booted out in November (he only got elected because his opponent was as corrupt as they come and wasn't very good at hiding it), so he has no reason to listen to people over money. My other Senator hasn't been heard from since W whooped his ass in 04. Voting in Massachusetts is depressing.

    45. Re:Stand up, people! by JockTroll · · Score: 0

      Response? That's a standard letter. Your "representative" didn't even read it, a bored staff member simply mailed back that drivel. Try to contact your "representative" directly and security will teach you to respect your masters. Your "representative" doesn't listen to you, he answers only to the Lords of Money. You want a reaction, send a letter bomb and some member of his staff will end up without hands. That will get some attention.

      --
      Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
    46. Re:Stand up, people! by JockTroll · · Score: 0

      Just wait until the flood of angry constituents makes their voice heard in Washington.

      The cops will beat them up. Then they will be labelled as "tawrrr awrrr reests". A new bill (possibly called UBERPATRIOT SIEGHEIL ACT) will be passed making it a felony to gather in groups of more than 2 to talk about anything. You want to be heard, you smash things. Had the "Occupy Wall Street" movement stormed the place killing everybody in sight, we wouldn't be talking about the "99%" and "1%" anymore, because the smaller percentage would have been annihilated.

      --
      Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
    47. Re:Stand up, people! by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      By continuing to pirate after SOPA, and helping those in America to the same, to demonstrate that the law is utterly useless at its stated purpose.

      Then in five years the MPAA can write SOPA2, which will ban all encryption software and VPNs.

    48. Re:Stand up, people! by nazsco · · Score: 1

      Sounds pretty good to me

      Why are you guys opposing it again?

      If it's not like that, can't he be removed from office from lying?

    49. Re:Stand up, people! by Scaba · · Score: 2

      Also, write to any of the corporate sponsors of the bill and tell them you are taking your business to a non-SOPA supporting competitor. This will be more effective if you actually have an account history with a company that they can see, and you actually do take your business elsewhere. And publicly post about it, and send them links to said postings. Enough of these complaints and it's quite likely said company will drop support for the bill. It worked with GoDaddy, it can work with others. This is also the only real way non-Americans who want SOPA stopped can have a voice in opposing it. American senators don't give a shit about the opinions of the other 95% of the world, but many US corporations have foreign subsidiaries and hitting their bottom line will also hit the US parent's bottom line.

    50. Re:Stand up, people! by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      I hear a lot of talk about smashing shit up, killing people, and sending letter bombs, but I don't see a lot of news stories about heroic revolutionary acts committed by someone known only as "JockTroll."

      101st Fighting Keyboarders, pre-sent arms!

    51. Re:Stand up, people! by Imbrondir · · Score: 1

      This certainly attests that a centralized DNS controlled by the US was a bug to begin with. I wonder if there exists any technical solution to this? If there was one, changing might not be that hard if you could get MS, Google, Apple, Mozilla and Opera in on it.

    52. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We'll have to route around the USA. Make the DNS root be in EU or iceland, and start paying for things in bitcoin, rather than Mastercard or Visa. Actually, it's not so big a deal. It can be done!

    53. Re:Stand up, people! by T+Murphy · · Score: 2

      I would love to see other countries speak out against the US on this. I wish we could get economic sanctions from passing a law like this. If you aren't American maybe it's at least something to write to your representatives and ask them to release a statement against the US about this, or even seek to take action (such as push to end the lopsided power we wield over the internet). Sure, some Canadian politician writing a complaint to the US might not mean much, but if said complaint is signed by dozens, and similar occurs in many European countries, at the very least the American public might realize SOPA is a big deal.

    54. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      They don't care. Here's what I got from Sherrod Brown (D-OH). To this date, he still has not given me a single concrete example of a job destroyed by "piracy". Anybody got $285,000 to match his contributions from the media industry?

      Thank you for sharing your thoughts about legislation to combat online infringement and digital theft.

      Last Congress, the Senate considered, but did not pass, legislation entitled the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA). The aim of this legislation was to assist the Department of Justice in tracking and shutting down "rogue websites." These sites provide unauthorized downloads, streaming, or direct sale of copyrighted material. Similar legislation, entitled the Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property (PROTECT IP) Act, was recently introduced in the Senate. The PROTECT IP Act narrows the definition of "rogue website" in an effort to target only the most egregious purveyors of digital theft and counterfeit crime.

      In an age of advancing technology, it is critical we have laws that protect internet users from unfair, deceptive, or fraudulent marketplace practices. Too many consumers today purchase goods over the internet that may pose a significant threat to their health and wellbeing. For example, a consumer may unknowingly purchase counterfeit prescription drugs online that contain incorrect amounts of active ingredients, and thus pose a serious risk to ill individuals.

      Additionally, illegal file sharing and unauthorized copying of digital material prevents musicians, producers, filmmakers, software designers, and many others from reaping the fruits of their labor. Such activity has the potential to stifle artistic creativity and compromise electronic innovation. Ultimately, intellectual property theft costs our economy billions of dollars and can result in hundreds of thousands of lost jobs.

      However, I have also heard from individuals with concerns about the scope of this legislation, as well as its First Amendment implications. I take these concerns seriously.

      Should this legislation come before the full Senate for a vote, I will keep your views in mind.

      Thank you again for getting in touch with me.

      Sincerely,

      Sherrod Brown
      United States Senator

    55. Re:Stand up, people! by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      I've written to "my" representatives. Every time I get "thank you for your concerns but... form letter bullshit explaining why my concerns won't have any impact..."

      --
      Not a sentence!
    56. Re:Stand up, people! by todd_is_not · · Score: 1

      *Los Angeles is Hollywood, not Silicon Valley.

    57. Re:Stand up, people! by Unkyjar · · Score: 1

      Here's a tad bit more info:

      http://youtu.be/l9oeJgrVrq0

    58. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The broad American belief that their media has a heavy left wing slant never ceases to amaze and amuse me. It's a complete Poe; you really couldn't lampoon it. You peeps would probably think Nazi government announcements in the 30s and 40s had a liberal bias.

    59. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DMCA legalized racketeering for the MPAA/RIAA. If 15 minutes is too long to watch, then the gist is this:

      CBS Viacom, Disney, AOL Time Warner and others distributed file sharing software and published reviews of said file sharing software. They detailed which software was most effective for infringing copyright and encouranged users to do so. When users did just that, the distributors turned around and sued them for hundreds/thousands of times the actual values of the content that was infringed.

      Distributing software for the purpose of infringement was declared illegal under the DMCA by SCOTUS in the Grokster case, yet none of these companies have ever been brought to justice. They are still out there, legally extorting the general public in court.

    60. Re:Stand up, people! by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      If it were just the Americans that would be affected, I'd just let them hang themselves. They seem very capable in doing so. However, when their laws start trespassing borders to affect the entire PLANET, I think something is clearly wrong.

      James Cameron really hit the mark with "Avatar", even if it was a retelling of Pocahontas.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    61. Re:Stand up, people! by phorm · · Score: 1

      If you think that, you're deluded. Unless there are some serious changes in Canada, our government is taking the same path as the U.S.

      As they go downhill, our politicians will follow with their lips firmly attached to the arses of the same corps as their US counterparts.

    62. Re:Stand up, people! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We'll have to route around the USA. Make the DNS root be in EU or iceland, and start paying for things in bitcoin, rather than Mastercard or Visa. Actually, it's not so big a deal. It can be done!

      Yes, it is a big deal because DNS only works _if everyone uses it._ One of the big fears about DNS (one that I think Congress is not considering because, well, they're fundamentally stupid) is what will happen to the global network when DNS becomes balkanized, with every nation (or blocs of nations) running their own systems. Granted, the Internet couldn't care less about DNS: all it cares about is IP addresses. But the Domain Name System is a vital part of the World Wide Web, and URLs are everywhere, even within embedded systems.

      Secondly, there is no single "DNS root". There are, last I was aware, thirteen root servers that are geographically distributed around the world, and hundreds of thousands of secondary domain name servers operated by ISPs and large organizations of one kind or another. Historically, the U.S. government pretty much left the things alone, and that worked out very well for all concerned. The fact that we're going to be sacrificing the trust other countries placed in us when they got on-board the Internet, just to satisfy the greed of an industry worth a paltry five or ten billion dollars a year is just astonishing. The rest of us, the ones who run our 2.4 trillion dollar economy, are more than a little pissed off about this.

      To be fair, you can thank several _European_ corporations, the big media conglomerates such as Sony, Vivendi, BMG and others, for spending the millions to buy SOPA, PIPA, and a host of other similar bad laws. So you don't get to dump all of this in our laps, and if our Justice Department hadn't already been subverted by big media (several top spots at the DoJ are currently occupied by ex-RIAA lawyers) several Congresspeople would be under investigation for treason.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    63. Re:Stand up, people! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I would love to see other countries speak out against the US on this. I wish we could get economic sanctions from passing a law like this. If you aren't American maybe it's at least something to write to your representatives and ask them to release a statement against the US about this, or even seek to take action (such as push to end the lopsided power we wield over the internet). Sure, some Canadian politician writing a complaint to the US might not mean much, but if said complaint is signed by dozens, and similar occurs in many European countries, at the very least the American public might realize SOPA is a big deal.

      Well, economic sanctions against superpowers (even ones like us that are on the way out) generally don't work out too well. The problem is that Congress has demonstrated over the past several years an inability to think globally about Internet-related issues. They just seem to be unaware of the fact that, well, hundreds of millions of people in other countries are just as economically and culturally dependent upon the network as we are, and don't appreciate anyone screwing around with it.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    64. Re:Stand up, people! by __aasdno7518 · · Score: 1

      "Americans basically think themselves as above everybody else." We don't,our government and the corporations who control it sure do.

    65. Re:Stand up, people! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I've written to "my" representatives. Every time I get "thank you for your concerns but... form letter bullshit explaining why my concerns won't have any impact..."

      Sure, because they get thousands upon thousands of letters and other communications and no one person could possibly read them all. Are you naive enough to have expected a personal response? The best you can hope for is a form-letter that is usually written to be as inoffensive as possible. However, a well-thought-out letter likely will be read by their staff, and they most certainly do collate that information for decision-making purposes. It's in their best interests to know what their constituents are up in arms about.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    66. Re:Stand up, people! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      By continuing to pirate after SOPA, and helping those in America to the same, to demonstrate that the law is utterly useless at its stated purpose. Then in five years the MPAA can write SOPA2, which will ban all encryption software and VPNs.

      Won't take five years, and I wouldn't be surprised to find they've got a rider ready to be attached to SOPA at the last minute. They have to be careful with that though: there are far too many legitimate, mainstream uses for VPNs and encryption for a general ban to ever be enforced. Banks and large corporations, for example, would go ballistic. Millions of people telecommute using encrypted VPNs: how do you distinguish between legitimate encrypted traffic and that used for (ahem!) nefarious purposes? Do you have the ISP do it? Do you have the government maintain lists of approved VPN destinations? It's not a simple task.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    67. Re:Stand up, people! by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      You can contact Ford here. Especially those of you who own a Ford vehicle should consider writing to them. I doubt enough people would write to them to make a difference, but in the event that Ford did switch I think it would be a huge boost for us, as that would do a lot to kill the argument that the bill protects American workers and productivity.

    68. Re:Stand up, people! by lightknight · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Thank You.

      The long and short of it, is that this bill is, put charitably, penny-wise and pound-foolish. We will lose $300 billion to get back $10 billion. And that's just the monetary aspect. From the freedoms aspect, we stand to lose a fair amount more.

      Two points need to made here:
      1.) Steam figured out how to use DRM and not piss off its customer base. That members of the MPAA and RIAA are seemingly incapable of doing the same is a reason I would not invest in either their constituent's companies, given the choice (leadership failure, lack of vision).
      2.) Using jack-booted thugs (off-duty police offices dressed like members of SWAT) to bust into people's homes, and arrest someone's grandmother for copyright violations is f*cked up. Any sane politician would cut off his own arm to NOT be associated with that kind of imagery.

      The only possible reason I can contemplate that some members of government are getting on board with this is some sort of power-grab. Which is cute. The people you are going after are already US citizens, but for some reason you feel the need to degrade and humiliate your own people. Basically, it's a form of power masturbation: it gives our country something to do, but in the end, we're f*cking themselves.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    69. Re:Stand up, people! by TheRealGrogan · · Score: 2

      Well, for example, when youtube and various sites shut down or become a mere shadow of what they are today, this Canadian will be affected. When America puts economic and political pressure on other countries to adopt their sick laws, non Americans like myself will also be affected.

    70. Re:Stand up, people! by wytcld · · Score: 2

      Bernie Sanders was still short of a full commitment when he responded to me, but seems to be leaning against. Hope other Vermonters will push him on this. Play the anticorporate card - Bernie is strongly suspicious of the power of large corporations.

      Leahy of course belongs to the Devil (aka his old buddy Michael Eisner) on this one.

      --
      "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    71. Re:Stand up, people! by wytcld · · Score: 1

      And because of that, PBS has been leaning over backwards to appease the Republicans for years. That's exactly how the Republicans distort our media. They bully them all into line. Certainly the TV news operations have been cowed. The only exception is the NY Times, which is powerful enough not to care. But it has it's own problem: it always sucks up to whoever holds the presidency and to our military leaders.

      --
      "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    72. Re:Stand up, people! by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Not sure of the difference you are making between overthrown and revisited. If you are arguing that some similar bill (similar how?) is desireable, then I'm willing to listen. But the current bill is so bad in so many different places that the best answer is to just get rid of it. And then get rid of the Sony-Bono copyright extension act, too. That wasn't quite as bad, but it was bad enough.

      WRT the DMCA the worst part of the bill is that you can file false charges against someone without suffering any penalties. It's far from the only bad part, but that part in and of itself is sufficient that the bill should have never have been voted, and should be repealed immediately.

      Note that the specification of how this is to be done is that the person filing the charge must have a "good faith belief" (don't know the exact wording) that the person who asked them to file the charge is acting honestly. There's no requirement that this be tested. There's no requirement that there not be a prior history of misrepresentation. And there's no penalty as long as he told you it was infringing. And he can lie without penalty.

      So essentially you CAN'T get someone prosecuted for filing a false claim against you. Or even for repeatedly filing the same false claim against you. And you can't file civil proceedings on the basis of this law, only on something like "interference with business relations" or something.

      Catuion: I Am Not A Lawyer. But I believe this information to be correct.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    73. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds likes the ole USA has all that to varying degrees. Can I leave now?

    74. Re:Stand up, people! by HiThere · · Score: 1

      My Senators? I've written, but they'll vote for it anyway. (One of them I didn't bother to read the response from, as that entity has lied about how they're going to vote before. But they are both solidly in the pocket of both the MPAA and the RIAA.)
      My Representative? She may vote against it. I've written. But it doesn't have much of her attention, so she might not. I wrote, but....well, I'm uncertain.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    75. Re:Stand up, people! by Arch_Android · · Score: 1

      Heck, American Senators don't listen to 95% of Americans.

    76. Re:Stand up, people! by Scaba · · Score: 1

      You contact the subsidiaries in your country of SOPA-supporting American companies and tell them why you will no longer/never be using their services or purchasing their goods. Also contact their American parent company. Publicly post this information and point them to it. Encourage others to do the same. The only thing that will keep SOPA and PIPA from passing is by making a real dent in the profits of the companies who have rented American senators and congressmen to pass this law for them.

    77. Re:Stand up, people! by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Q: What do 1-800-Contacts, Adidas, Americans for Tax Reform, Comcast, the Country Music Association, Estee Lauder, Ford, Nike and Xerox all have in common?

      A: They all just made my disqualified vendor list.

      To be fair, Ford was already on that list. My Windstar's right turn signal started acting up about a year ago. Now, in addition to having become somewhat worse, the problem has also spread to the driver's side door lock, the driver's side window, and with varying degrees of frequency, both sliding door locks, the passenger's side door lock, and the door open chime/lights. The only door lock that *hasn't* started misbehaving over the last three is the tailgate (and even then, I can't be certain). I'm already on my third check engine light, at least two of which were directly caused by a design flaw in the front valve cover. The transmission has already been rebuilt once, and I've already had to replace both the power steering pump and the steering rack. Oh, and the ABS light regularly comes on. This is at a little over a hundred thousand miles. Like I really need another reason not to buy anything else from them. Ford, where Quality is #1, and Reliability is #2....

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    78. Re:Stand up, people! by mirix · · Score: 1

      Sanders is sort of a rare beast among US politicians. I think he'd be one of the harder ones to buy.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    79. Re:Stand up, people! by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nice site you got there at http://www.rense.com/. David Duke videos? Check. Conspiracy theories about Mars? Check. Chemtrails? Check. Miracle cures? Check. Rampant antisemitism? Check.

      Though for what it's worth, the original source seems to be here: http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=library&page=index_23

      And the author, Laurence Britt*, seems to have no other credentials than his article appearing in a free, irregularly published journal of, let's say uncertain repute. (Don't forget to pick up his novel, June, 2004,, which depicts a future America dominated by right-wing extremists, still available new from 5 sellers for just $49.99.)

      Of course none of that makes what he says any less true by default. Fascist nations probably possess most of those characteristics. It's also true that serial killers all have many characteristics in common: they have noses, mouths, ears, eyes, hair, and always seem to show up in human form (so far). Be on the lookout!

    80. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you want Lexington, VA where Rep. Goodlatte is from. I have not heard anything one way or the other about SOPA here. Senator Warner is also against this bill.

    81. Re:Stand up, people! by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Oh don't get me wrong, I'm well aware the pressure doesn't strictly come from American companies. I'm merely pointing out that even with this in mind, there's nothing I, as a foreigner, can do, short of stopping to buy the concerned companies' products. That's not going to put much of a dent in their resolve, I can assure you.

    82. Re:Stand up, people! by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the way I see it, we're fucked. Get your guns as fast as you can, and realize they're nothing compared to tanks and drones...

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    83. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this should really be more known.

    84. Re:Stand up, people! by shentino · · Score: 2

      I'll do you one better

      DMCA should

      1) Remove the circumvention bullshit in cases where you can (and should) be allowed to use non-infringing usage as an affirmative defense, if not outright. Prevention of anything but actual infringement is anti-competitive and unfair to end users.

      2) Apply the same "under penalty of perjury" to initial notices regarding allegations of infringement as applies to counter-notices. There needs to be more accountability for sending a frivolous notice. It should be treated the same way as any other false report...as a crime.

    85. Re:Stand up, people! by swilver · · Score: 2

      It will only affect America, as we'll just shift to services not based in America. On the internet, nothing lasts forever, and if youtube, imdb, google or whatever else no longer fulfills the needs of its users people will go elsewhere.

    86. Re:Stand up, people! by JockTroll · · Score: 0

      Maybe I'll sign "Anonymous". At least there would be some meaty stuff done in that name instead of laughable, ineffective non-action.

      --
      Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
    87. Re:Stand up, people! by catmistake · · Score: 1

      errr. Silicon valley is not in Los Angeles, Hollywood is. Hollywood's support for this bill makes sense, silicon valley's does not.

      GP probably meant Silicone Valley, which is LA.

    88. Re:Stand up, people! by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Right, of course. Oops. Silicon valley is San Francisco of course.

    89. Re:Stand up, people! by hoboroadie · · Score: 1

      Awful nice of Jeff Rense to promote Lawrence Britt to "Dr."

      I want "Prof.", I'll write something too.

      --
      They feared that it could be used to suppress protest or support unpopular rule.
    90. Re:Stand up, people! by silentcoder · · Score: 2

      They've been doing that for years. When Bush invaded Iraq the price of fuel in South Africa jumped up 40% overnight. Food prices followed within the month.
      The lives of everybody in the country (a poor one for the most part) was made massively worse because a US president wanted to step out of his daddy's shadow.
      And not one of the people in South Africa has a vote or any other ability to have done anything about it, they didn't elect Bush but many of them starved because of his reckless warmongering.
      Since South Africa would last all of 30 seconds in a war against the USA - they couldn't even lobby their own government to protect their interests.
      I am quite sure that every human being in every country on earth now has lived through similiar stories (or the same one) of having their lives adversely affected by the government of an America they cannot vote for (or against).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    91. Re:Stand up, people! by X86Daddy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here's the answer... here's why you don't understand:

      There is an existing game, an existing set of rules for getting what is wanted out of the US government. (A) be an enormous corporation or a confederation of smaller ones, (B) buy legislation, and (C) make sure the populace doesn't riot by managing their "news" etc... about the important work done by the government.

      The Internet is finally showing itself to be a major threat to the status quo. Arab Spring... Ron Paul's increasing popularity, Steissand Effects everywhere, Wikileaks, Anti-Sec... And so, while the rules of the game are still mostly in effect, the Game Players who have enjoyed successful ownership of the largest government on Earth are working to ensure they will maintain that ownership.

      All unions, All PACs, all politicians participating in the election games, and definitely the media empires... all of them currently enjoy winning at the game with the current set of rules. A free Internet only provides benefits to their opponents in this game: us. Humans. People who care about how they're governed and dare disagree with how Sony wants us governed. So, there will be no media coverage. No major PAC, party, union, etc... with an interest in its long-term survival will dare bring SOPA up.

      The actual battle is going to be technological. Legislation is a foregone conclusion.

    92. Re:Stand up, people! by ReinoutS · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, the Dutch GreenLeft MP Arjan El Fassed asked written questions in Parliament about American pressure on EU countries to support internet freedom-threatening laws.

    93. Re:Stand up, people! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and all the replies are form letters. But they do save your address and send campaign/begging for money letters to you afterwards.

  3. Re:Get over it by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 1

    If they got no salary, and no "campaign donations" either, they'd vote exactly the same way.

    Stop it, you're killing me.

  4. Do something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    VPNs are not a viable alternative but there are other technologies that can help. Write one-click installers for darknets, p2p networks, distributed DNS systems. Seriously, technology cannot solve social problems but at least can alleviate them. SOPA will come, so it's time to act now.

    1. Re:Do something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Couldn't agree more!
      The best thing that can come out of this is a corpocracy proof internet!

    2. Re:Do something by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In reality none of those are viable long term options either. Since the ISPs ( which are also content providers ) support this they will just take the next logical step, if these alternatives becomes common place, and ratchet down your "open" bandwidth to the point that you cant afford to do anything.

      Buying content from their servers will of cousre not count against your measly cap.

      The only true solution will be point-to-point community networks. ( mainly neighborhood wifi mesh )Get rid, and get around, the need for a link to the 'public internet' except for perhaps your online banking and buying stuff from amazon.

      Who all here remembers BBSs and FidoNet?

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    3. Re:Do something by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      Heh, when they start jamming our wifi, we'll be back to good old sneakernet... we can increase the bandwidth of that with pony express...

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    4. Re:Do something by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Who all here remembers BBSs and FidoNet?

      You say this as if FidoNet were a thing of the past. FidoNet is still out there, there are lots of Internet/FidoNet gateways, and FidoNet nodes still communicate using dialup modems.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    5. Re:Do something by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      The only true solution will be point-to-point community networks. ( mainly neighborhood wifi mesh )Get rid, and get around, the need for a link to the 'public internet' except for perhaps your online banking and buying stuff from amazon.

      Who all here remembers BBSs and FidoNet?

      I do. Strange, now that you mention FidoNet, I find some kind of fascination and liking to that old, slow network. I have no idea how it would be implemented nowadays, except by a community of private or semi-private LAN networks connected in one of more internets (lowercase "i").

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    6. Re:Do something by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      I was speaking more towards the fact that most people around here are too young to remember it, not that its 'gone'.

      But you will have to admit its a shadow of its former self. As is dial-up, UUCP, etc.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    7. Re:Do something by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      I would suggest something like layering it on top of a 'transparent distributed store' system like freenet.

      That way the underlying 'network' will no longer really be a factor. As long as your packets can get there somehow, it still works.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    8. Re:Do something by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      FidoNet is still around; the implementation today is identical to the implementation of 20 years ago.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    9. Re:Do something by ErikInterlude · · Score: 1

      I don't know about this. Yes, a lot of slashdotters could build a wifi mesh for given area, but they are also the minority in a given area as well. The initial mesh would be primitive. It would get more robust and attractive with growth, but the average Internet user won't want to access it unless it was so easy as to be accidentally done.

      What about content? Quality would be up, but amount would be small. The general public won't come in initially because there's nothing there to consume. The tech crowd might find it a haven since the initial content would be tech-centric, but there still wouldn't be a huge amount of movement initially.

      SOPA would have jurisdiction no matter what. If it doesn't, laws can get passed that would grant it. A strict rule of etiquette would have to be in place with the idea that all content is public domain, and that copyright-infringing content will be removed on discovery.

      If the meshes got big enough, companies would be interested in coming in. A strict rule would have to be in place to reject this. Governments would be interested as well. If a government doesn't get access to something, it can become regulated or outlawed. Given that wifi uses radio signals regulated by the FCC, some regulation is inevitable.

      I supposed you could start by getting colleges involved. Students wouldn't be interested because there wouldn't be much content to study off it. This would have to be pitched as some kind of research project. Maybe local community groups could get involved, if they're upset enough about government interference or unfair laws, or something to that effect. There wouldn't be many nodes to start with, and the meshes would not be able to connect to each other without using the regular Internet, putting them directly under SOPA's jurisdiction.

      Really, it comes down to what you want out of the Internet. If you want to share content, you can (basically) already do that without worrying about SOPA. If you want to connect to others from far away, you can already do that without SOPA (assuming a reasonably non-restrictive country). If you want an Internet without corporate interference, without government inspection (almost impossible), and complete freedom of sharing and communication no matter what, then yes, you could build this mesh.

      Over time, however, it would need to be replaced by something else. Like anything, it would be subject to change and eventually steer away from it's initial vision. It would either get subsumed by the regular Internet or just close down. Maybe it could continue on, but this would take a lot of work over a long period of time. A lot of people have been bringing up this idea for a while, so that may already speak to it's general viability.

      --

      --Erik
    10. Re:Do something by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Actually, that could be quite practical. Those sneakers can carry a huge amount of data now. Eight gig on a USB stick, two terabytes on a portable hard drive... a couple of those could hold the entire collection of even the most obcesssive pirate. I can easily imagine the return of the Knock-Off Nigel, that coworker or fellow student who is happy to supply friends with pirate media. One Nigel with the knowledge to access darknets and contacts with other Nigels could supply many, many people, who would in turn supply more, who would supply more... a p2p network in the offline world. Latency would be no good for grabbing the latest blockbuster movie, but perfect for back-catalog piracy.

    11. Re:Do something by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      You could almost use Freenet - it wouldn't need much modification to run over a non-IP network, or even an ad-hoc network, and it'd remain entirely compatible. You'd need to put a huge amount of storage in the routers to get decent retention, but that's doable these days... a 2TB hard drive should do it.

    12. Re:Do something by Vegemeister · · Score: 1

      From what I recall of Freenet's routing algorithms, nodes would bootstrap a good bit faster if the network had an underlying structure (social, geograpical, etc.).

    13. Re:Do something by Vegemeister · · Score: 1

      SOPA would have jurisdiction no matter what. If it doesn't, laws can get passed that would grant it. A strict rule of etiquette would have to be in place with the idea that all content is public domain, and that copyright-infringing content will be removed on discovery.

      Doesn't that kind of defeat the purpose? The entire point to a technical solution to a social problem is that you can sidestep those persnickety legal issues.

      Students wouldn't be interested because there wouldn't be much content to study off it.

      How long has it been since you were a student, exactly?

    14. Re:Do something by Idbar · · Score: 1

      Since the ISPs ( which are also content providers ) support this

      What else would you expect from the Comcast-NBC merger? Networks are becoming carriers, carriers are becoming networks. And turned out they both own the government.

    15. Re:Do something by ErikInterlude · · Score: 1

      Doesn't that kind of defeat the purpose? The entire point to a technical solution to a social problem is that you can sidestep those persnickety legal issues.

      Well, yes, you're right. My overall point was that it probably wasn't a possible thing to do. Once an alternative becomes viable in a mainstream sense, there will be legislation to put it under control.

      Assuming a working alternate network was able to run under the radar of the powers that be, it would probably be so small and with such little viable content that it would be little more than a niche medium. Kind of like Gopher today.

      How long has it been since you were a student, exactly?

      Over ten years. I grant that students now are different than students then, but I think my point still holds. It's really all about content and convenience. Why do research on this alt-net when you have Wikipedia and Google on the regular Internet? Chat rooms? Message boards? Videos? Games? Porn? The regular Internet already has that and more. The only interest I can see from students is as some kind of academic research project.

      You can't just make a product and say "Use this product!". It doesn't work that way. You have to think of the convenience of the consumers of that product. You've got to be able to offer something that the user base wants within an acceptable threshold of effort. And that acceptable threshold is defined by whatever other product is out there that fulfills the same need. In this case, the Internet. Which is ubiquitous. That's why I don't think students of today would be attracted to it.

      This isn't to say that I don't think it would be an interesting effort. I just don't think the momentum would be sustainable. It would almost have to be made with the idea that it would be dropped for something else.

      --

      --Erik
    16. Re:Do something by omnichad · · Score: 1

      2TB satiating the most obsessive pirate? My legitimate DVD rips (well, legitimate ignoring DMCA not letting me rip my own DVD's) are well over 800GB. And that's compressed at H.264 (2mbps).

  5. Thanks for the list of companies to boycott! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would say that not one of these companies have read this piece of $hit legislation. It is scary how stupid people can be. People who are supposed to be leading the country.

  6. It's O.K, m00ts on the case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently, 4chan oppose SOPA. That'll be sure to stop it in it's legislative tracks.

  7. I guess I don't understand... by TWX · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...what non-information companies have to gain by this bill. Ford is limited to intellectual property related to their physical products, and only could really deal with software piracy for ECM and BCM computers which are limited to use in Ford products anyway. Nike could face a competitor stealing their product designs which would be easier to make than Ford's, but still would fall into industrial espionage rather than casual piracy, and Estee Lauder makes cosmetics and other products that again, aren't exactly end-consumer-piratable...

    I wonder if it's a bigger deal that these companies are supporting Congressmen who are passionate about this bill, and this is just another way of helping to keep these Congressmen in their pockets.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Informative

      Have you ever gone to Chinatown and seen all the "fake" handbags (it is hard to call them "fake" when they are probably produced by the same people who make "genuine" handbags)? Online, there are plenty of websites that will sell you a bag or a shoe that looks just like an expensive brand for a fraction of the cost. SOPA is meant to block access to such websites, which are often hosted offshore where US law enforcement agencies cannot touch them.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I used to work for Ford, they have a ton of other software that they wrote that could be useful for others. During the 1990s they had their own satellite network called FordStar that connected all the dealerships in North America to various facilities in Dearborn, MI and used custom software for diagnostics. I got to play with a very early version of wireless ethernet during that time.

    3. Re:I guess I don't understand... by del_diablo · · Score: 1

      Look at it this way: All creditcard companies and banks have a webpage.
      By effect that means that if you ask them to block something under SOPA, you basically ask for them to do a complete block of all products of that company. And since all transfers is done via the web anyhow, you have just killed all their economical support.
      So basically the reason they want to support SOPA is because that gives them more rights to deal with other companies, at every level but what is being sold in the store if its not imported.

    4. Re:I guess I don't understand... by jo42 · · Score: 1

      Ford doesn't want China to be able to build fake Fords.

      Estee Lauder doesn't want China to make fake stinks (AKA perfumes) and war paints (AKA makeup).

    5. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look beyond what the paper says. Right now "online piracy" is interpreted in a way, but when the law is applied it can be interpreted in a very large number of ways. Just like the patents, they might have sounded good to the lawmakers of their time, but nowadays, they're something completely different.

    6. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a wide swathe of industries. My guess is that the physical products companies are worried about branding - hit products from Nike, and luxury goods from the likes of Rolex and Chanel are routinely knocked off in the Far East, complete with logo and high quality materials and finish. These companies want to ensure they'll have Congressional support when they ask for bills in the future to combat knockoffs.

      I have no idea why auto repair has lined up pro-SOPA, though.

    7. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 2

      Exactly counterfeit goods are a big deal for companies and consumers. There is a need to prevent these counterfeiters from tricking consumers, but SOPA is not the solution. Just do a google search for "cheap uggs" the first result is a warning from UGG Australia about counterfeiters and the second result is a counterfeiter selling "fake" uggs. Unfortunately this does need to be stopped! However, I can't think of a way that would not compromise the Internet and civil liberties, etc.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    8. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Nrrqshrr · · Score: 1

      Look, am a guy who supports SOPA, okay? Problem is, SOPA ain't very popular. I only have a couple of bro congressmen in my pocket. So I need "popular" friends to support it, okay? But hey wait! That guy, Nike, is quite popular, he's like the richest kid in the rich folks, you know? I will ask him to support my SOPA soap, and in exchange, I give him some "donations", so that he will make some "donations". Oh and when later he needs support for some cool idea of his that will probably end up being unpopular (say, cutting chinese hands that make bad not-Nike shoes), me and my bro congressmen will support him all the way.

      Smells like profit, man.

    9. Re:I guess I don't understand... by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      I don't have mod points, but that's a great point. Thanks.

    10. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are counterfeit sneakers a big deal for consumers?

    11. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On the one hand, I can see the point of view of the designers who are annoyed about the counterfeiting of their product.

      On the other hand, what does it say about the actual value of their designs? It says that people are not willing to pay the prices they demand for the somewhat ephemeral value that their design commands.

      It used to be that artisans had makers marks because their product was of superior quality and they wished to differentiate it. People seeing the superior quality of the product and desiring that quality for themselves would see the makers mark and know where they could get an item of similar quality.

      Quality is no longer the differentiation though - price is. The relationship has inverted ; a maker no longer puts their mark on something to identify the maker of the product and generate sales, he puts the mark on to increase the perceived value of the product. As some people are no doubt pointing out - a lot of the so-called "counterfeit" product is made on the same production line, from the same materials, by the same workers using the same amount of labour.

      There is no difference in the intrinsic value of the product - it's the same material object with the same properties - so why can Loius Vuitton sell it for more than Mr Chang? Because Loius Vuitton inflates the perception of value of their products in ways that have nothing to do with their actual utility - they put them in a swanky shop with a flunky on the door, they don't pile them high, and they don't sell them cheap.

      The real counterfeit is therefore the perceived value of the "genuine" product - people are buying fake value. This is not an artisan product made by a skilled craftsman. This is a product designed to be made as piecework in a third world sweatshop - a product that by definition, has to be makable by the lowest common denominator of skill.

    12. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      Quality is no longer the differentiation though - price is

      Bingo. This is the problem with the current legal framework and enforcement regime.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    13. Re:I guess I don't understand... by sadboyzz · · Score: 2

      Have you ever gone to Chinatown and seen all the "fake" handbags (it is hard to call them "fake" when they are probably produced by the same people who make "genuine" handbags)? Online, there are plenty of websites that will sell you a bag or a shoe that looks just like an expensive brand for a fraction of the cost. SOPA is meant to block access to such websites, which are often hosted offshore where US law enforcement agencies cannot touch them.

      Yes, they will be blocked, just like how all the websites who do not paint the Chinese government positively are blocked in China, which are often hosted offshore where Chinese law enforcement agencies cannot touch them.

      And if they don't even bother prosecuting those selling counterfeit goods in Chinatown in broad day light, what sense does it make to give them such broad power to censor the Internet in the name of curbing IP theft?

    14. Re:I guess I don't understand... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Interesting/Informative post, but you miss two key issues:

      1. You ARE aware that the whole fashion industry has NO copyright and yet still continues to profit, right?
      Johanna Blakley: Lessons from fashion's free culture
      http://www.ted.com/talks/johanna_blakley_lessons_from_fashion_s_free_culture.html

      > There is no difference in the intrinsic value of the product.
      2. Correct. You are close to a key Insight to reach the next level of understanding but not quite there yet; so let me help you out --> Value is multi-valued! i.e. Two different people can value the same thing differently; what is it "perceived" value then? The High, the Low, the Average? No, it is BOTH the low AND the high. It is a 1-to-many relationship, NOT a 1-to-1 relationship. THIS is the main factor on why [almost] all economic theories are doomed to fail -- they don't accurately model the relationship of value -- multi-valued, not single-valued.

      > The real counterfeit is ... people are buying fake value
      People literally buy into the pseudo-cool factor all the time. They are called "fads." Suckers have yet to learn that having object X doesn't matter one bit when you the true value in life is relationships. e.g. The rest of us get on with our lives buying the $20 jeans instead of the $100 designer jeans laughing (and/or feeling sad) at the sucker ^H^H^H financial idiot willing to throw away his money at a lame attempt of being a hipster.

      There is a much bigger issue looming on the horizon ( 100 - 400 years) though that you will want to ponder -- what happens to "value" when anyone can simply "print" whatever object they want? =)

      Cheers

    15. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 2

      Quality is no longer the differentiation though - price is.

      You couldn't be more wrong! I've had a family member buy counterfeit UGG boots and the difference in quality, craftsmanship, and materials is laughable. On the one hand you have a boot that is made from lamb skin, its durable, water proof and most of all it has a warranty from the manufacture. But the other was made from cotton, was already falling apart, was not water proof by any stretch of the imagination. Worst of all it had exact copies of the UGG Australia labels, do you think UGG Australia should have to provide warranty services for counterfeit boots?!? This isn't about perceived value. There is real value in brand products and you'd be a fool to think otherwise. Sure you can buy a PC that looks like an Apple, but it isn't an Apple! If someone puts an Apple sticker on a PC and sells it as an Apple, that's FRAUD! The difference isn't a trick by the brand to get you to buy it. The brand is there so you know it's a legit product. That's the difference.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    16. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 0

      I agree that the problem is with the legal framework and enforcement, but quality is still the difference. A fake product is fake! Just because it looks similar doesn't make it the same. That's a crazy notion.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    17. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " lot of the so-called "counterfeit" product is made on the same production line, from the same materials, by the same workers using the same amount of labour."

      Bullshit. A 20$ plastic LV knockoff bag is not made by the same people selling it for 2000$ or not. I can assure you that LV shit is all handmade in europe, while all the knockoffs are mass produced crap from China. Your average dimwit can't tell the difference and only cares about getting that shitting LV 20$ knockoff for 20$. The people who want the legitimate item don't want to be ripped off by some asshole who puts up a picture of the real thing for 2000$ and then mails them the 20$ one. There is absolutely no reason for this shit to go on. SOPA isn't going to stop it either. If the US Government can't do anything about Chinatowns and Canal St selling this shit, what makes them think that SOPA will?

      The same thing applies to just about all counterfeit items except for software.

      Counterfeit software is inexcusable, dumb people might buy the "cheaper" media, but the real pirates just download it for free. SOPA is not going to stop them any more than they've been stopped by Usenet and IRC. IRC is still a haven for pedophiles. There is always the older alternative. Torrents and megaupload abuse are just the lazy way for people to get stuff with little effort.

    18. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that a "fake" handbag was not produced in the same sweatshop as a "real" handbag? It is not as if some people in China came to the United States, purchased a pair of Nike sneakers, went back to China with them and tried to copy the design. There is nothing "fake" about it -- it is made using the same designs, same materials, and in some cases the same labor force as what you might buy in a mall.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    19. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Lord_Jeremy · · Score: 1

      What makes you think consumers are being tricked? The fact that they are googling "cheap uggs" in the first place is an indication that some (or many) people don't want to pay the high price of the "official" footwear. From what I've read, the majority of counterfeit clothing comes from the same assembly line as the brand name stuff. Why should a consumer care if the designer sanctioned a pair of shoes or not? Especially if the designer-sanctioned shoes cost five times as much as the alternatives. This is not a problem for the consumer.

    20. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 1

      You don't know anything about the current state of affairs. The counterfeiters are not selling things made in the same factories, nor from the same materials, nor from the same designs. About the only thing that is the same is the labels and trademarks. The products are "fake" in every sense of the word. They're only made to resemble the product so that a sale can be made. When it's online they use pictures of the actual products but send out something that resembles but is not the product. If they were coming from the same factories that would be theft, not fraudulent counterfeits. I'm fairly sure the factories are not that incompetent, they'd know when inventory went missing. That's not the problem -- the problem is fraud.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    21. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2
      Yet I had dozens of friends in high school who bought "counterfeit" handbags in Chinatown without any problem. The bags performed just as well as the officially sanction bags for a fraction of the cost.

      Sure you can buy a PC that looks like an Apple, but it isn't an Apple

      Right, it will cost hundreds of dollars less than the Apple product for the same hardware. Software is not hardware and SOPA has little to do with software.

      If someone puts an Apple sticker on a PC and sells it as an Apple, that's FRAUD

      Actually it is trademark infringement.

      The difference isn't a trick by the brand to get you to buy it

      No, the value of the brand is propped up by the law, which allows people to sue for trademark infringement and thus create value where there would otherwise be none.

      The brand is there so you know it's a legit product

      In theory, yes, that is what trademarks are supposed to do. In practice, however, consumer products are of such low quality (regardless of the price range) that the trademark is irrelevant for any purpose other than marketing. You know that Coca Cola is a soft drink you like, but most people would have trouble distinguishing Coca Cola from competing brands. While there are still a few brands that really are distinguished by quality, they tend to be in niche markets. For the most part, most of the brands you buy have artificially inflated prices that have little to do with the quality of the goods.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    22. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1
      Actually, my experience has been that knock-offs are roughly the same quality as most brand name consumer goods. I think you just had one bad experience.

      I'm fairly sure the factories are not that incompetent, they'd know when inventory went missing

      What makes you think anything went missing? What stops a factory from ordering more supplies than would be needed for the official order size?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    23. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 1

      From what I've read, the majority of counterfeit clothing comes from the same assembly line as the brand name stuff.

      [citation needed]

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    24. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those Chinatown purses are crap and fall apart in a month. But I can see that hurting the exclusivity of owning a $1000 bag, because a girl can walk around with one for $10.

    25. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Yetihehe · · Score: 0

      It is not as if some people in China came to the United States, purchased a pair of Nike sneakers, went back to China with them and tried to copy the design.

      Yeah, they didn't need to take the sneakers with them, they payed $100 a random person for buying them in store (because store owners kicked them out after they tried to make detailed photos in store), made detailed photos and sent them to China. I didn't see it myself, but know it from reputable source.

      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    26. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 1

      my experience has been that knock-offs are roughly the same quality as most brand name consumer goods

      Tell that to the companies that get warranty request from people who have bought the knock-offs. Then tell that to the poor consumers who thought they bought a legitimate product that should be under warranty.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    27. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 0

      I have yet to see a warranty on sneakers, handbags, cosmetics, toys, etc. That is a complete red herring -- it may be applicable to certain high-tech components or machines, but the vast majority of consumer goods come with no warranty.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    28. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 1

      Now you're just splitting hairs and your argument has slipped to nitpicking.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    29. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, ok. But this problem is one of TRADEMARK, which currently works (mostly) as intended. Yes, the framework for trademark law currently encourages too much litigation, but it is reasonably effective.

      Companies with grievances should sue these people for trademark infringement.

      You don't need more laws passed to do that already.

    30. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but the real handbags and boots have warranties. You don't know what you're talking about.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    31. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Ford is worried about the "fake" Ford replacement parts from China, and other countries. These ARE being sold on the internet right now.

      I will admit that I (AC) am part of Ford's problem here, as I just purchased about $450 worth of "Ford" parts from a "Gray market" distributor to restore my 1995 30th Anniversary edition Opal Frost Mustang GT. Those same parts, if purchased from a legitimate Ford dealer in the US, would have cost me over $2500.

      That's just too much markup, I don't give a $#1T what the UAW says about it.

    32. Re:I guess I don't understand... by DanielRavenNest · · Score: 1

      There is a much bigger issue looming on the horizon ( 100 - 400 years) though that you will want to ponder -- what happens to "value" when anyone can simply "print" whatever object they want? =)

      You might want to drop a couple of zeroes from the time estimate. There's are projects to open-source the core hardware manufacturing equipment like a plasma torch: http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/CNC_Torch_Table Once you are able to automate general production tools (lathe, milling machine, drill press, etc), you can then make more specialized tools, which in turn make the end products. It becomes a matter of software (CAD files) to produce all the parts. Some stuff, like computer chips, are too specialized to make locally, but it is quite feasible to do 80% today in a community fabrication shop. At the present state of technology, a generalized fab will not fit in your garage, but it should fit in a medium warehouse. That will improve over time just like computers once required large rooms for a single primitive version.

      Besides the parts making machines, you also need materials handling (overhead cranes, robotic carts), and assembly robots, and lots of software. For now, it won't be hit "print" and an inkjet printer sized device spits out another printer, but a warehouse sized shop will be able to make all the parts for another shop. That upends the economics of the physical world the same way file sharing upends the economics of digital content. Making paper books or prints of movies on film reels is a linear process, it takes the same amount of work to make each copy. File sharing and self-copying fabrication shops are exponential.

      Getting back to the discussion topic, that is also why SOPA will fail even if passed. Takedowns are a linear process. It is limited by how many people are working to detect the websites, get to a judge to order the removal, etc. File sharing distributes an exponential number of copies of whatever people want, so will always win that race. If necessary, the sharing will go on offline, by portable hard drives and pirate wifi hotspots (share with anyone in range, but not on the internet), but it will still be exponential growth as long as one person can share with at least two others.

    33. Re:I guess I don't understand... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 0

      You must be thinking of a single, specific brand of shoes; as I said, you probably had one bad experience. I have not been offered a warranty on the shoes that I am wearing right now, and have not heard of warranties on any other articles of clothing.

      This is still a red herring. If someone thinks that they will get a warranty on goods they bought from a street vendor, then they are simply naive.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    34. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When people hack their ECU's to improve the car, they'll put them in jail.

    35. Re:I guess I don't understand... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Because it devalues the brand. The purpose of brand-name clothing is a conspiculous display of wealth: You wear it to show everyone else that you have money to burn on fashion. If everyone starts wearing cheap knocks-offs that are indistinguishable from the real thing, how can you show everyone else how rich you are?

      It's a more serious issue with counterfeit drugs and unsafe toys, but in the case of sneakers the only consumers to suffer are the smugly wealthy.

    36. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no no. I guess /. nerds are not car nerds.

      It's not Chinese ripping off Ford, it's Americans and Australians ripping off Ford. Guess what they're stealing? The dealership's service manuals. That's right. This stuff clutters eBay like there is no tomorrow, and the people inside eBay are exceptionally clueless to what is going on. Part of the crackdown on virtual items was because car repair manuals were all photocopies of printed dealership manuals, dealership software, etc.

      Because the repair manuals are easy to get, the Chinese might make counterfeit parts that end up in cars, but Ford's target are the sites that let anyone be their own mechanic (after all they make most of their money not on selling cars, but servicing them.)

      What really makes me sad is that I know all too well what is going on, having worked for both eBay and a third-party business that tracked data for car dealerships. I don't care so much for the people who pirate the manuals for cars older than 10 years old, most of those cars are already well past their warranty and mileage, so any gum and ducttape solution is better than nothing, chinese parts or not. But cars built since 1987 have fuel injection systems that can't be tuned without the propietary hardware at a dealership.

      There are Chinese knockoff devices that use pirated dealership software to deal with the fuel injection computers, and there is one company in particular that throws a huge fit when they see the counterfeit devices up on eBay. There's also some other dealership vendors that scream lawsuit whenever screenshots of their software appear on the internet, no matter what context it's in.

      Ford and Toyota tend to go after the sellers of the manuals more aggressively than GM does. Not sure why that is.

    37. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Goat+of+Death · · Score: 1

      Interesting/Informative post, but you miss two key issues:

      1. You ARE aware that the whole fashion industry has NO copyright and yet still continues to profit, right?
      Johanna Blakley: Lessons from fashion's free culture
      http://www.ted.com/talks/johanna_blakley_lessons_from_fashion_s_free_culture.html

      >

      I watched this awhile ago, and while correct that fashion has no copyright, it does have trademark protection. By making trademark an essential part of the designs fashion has in many ways achieved very similar protections to if they had copyright. My wife's Coach purse has their C as a very intrinsic part of the design. You could not create the same purse without that trademark as part of the design. And if you created a purse using a similar C they could go after you for the trademark violation as your C is too close to the Coach C and could be seen as diluting their trademark which is a legal no-no. Integrating your trademwark into a design has sort of become a design constraint of the fashion industry by which they achieve IP protection. It's not quite as good as full copyright protection, but it does cover a lot.

      There is no difference in the intrinsic value of the product.
      2. Correct. You are close to a key Insight to reach the next level of understanding but not quite there yet; so let me help you out --> Value is multi-valued! i.e. Two different people can value the same thing differently; what is it "perceived" value then? The High, the Low, the Average? No, it is BOTH the low AND the high. It is a 1-to-many relationship, NOT a 1-to-1 relationship. THIS is the main factor on why [almost] all economic theories are doomed to fail -- they don't accurately model the relationship of value -- multi-valued, not single-valued.

      This I have thought about a lot in the past and wholeheartedly agree with. I have items, like Neverwinter Nights, that looking back, given the hours and fun I had with that game that probably has closer to a value of $250-$300. I have expensive recumbent panniers that cost me $390. However, they have lasted me years thus far, have a lifetime warranty and I expect them to last years to come. These I would be willing to pay $1000 for given their actual utility and value. The problem of course is I don't know that before I purchase something. I can only guess if my $50 for a game will really pan out. As I've bought plenty of games for which it's a bad investment. So it's really difficult to parse out what the correct perceived value should be, even for myself at purchase time. I won't really know the value until several months down the road. At best I'm making an educated guess at purchase time, which I would say for a lot of items ends up being incorrect in some way.

    38. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why shouldn't you get warranty? And why should someone be allowed to sell stuff without giving a warranty? I don't know about the US, but where I live, this is regulated by law, whether you are a retailer or private person. If the merchandise doesn't hold up to the expected standards you should be able to go back to the vendor. Also, it is in the vendors best interest. Disgruntled buyers are bad business. Even if the things you sell are cheap knock-offs, you don't want to piss them off by selling them something that breaks before even being used. Cheap does not have to equal abysmally poor quality.

      As for street vendors: Years ago I was with some friends in Prague, Czech republic. On one street corner we came across a street vendor selling russian pocket watches. He just had a blanket on the cobble stones with the watches lined up. We all agreed to buy one each as a memento of our trip. When one wanted to get a watch with one clock-face and the watch-case from anoter, the vendor simply pulled up swiss army knife from the pocket, disassembled the two watches and put together the one he wanted. One of the guys noticed one or two days later that it was running a bit fast and despite him trying to correct for it using the small lever inside the clock works. He told me he wanted to go back and talk to the vendor. I didn't think the guy would still be around. But no, I was wrong. He was still standing on the same corner as the day before.

      The vendor asked what had happened and asked my friend to wind the clock. Then he said, "No no! That is too much, you have tensioned the springs so much that they are damaged." Then he switched the watch for my friend, without any complaints. When I came home my father opened my watch and said that this was a good russian make with rubies for pivot points. This event changed my view of serious street vendors. Prior to this I dismissed all of them as charlatans, now I know that there are good ones that do serious business, and bad ones, essentially criminals ripping people off. And now I don't try to put them all into the same category.

    39. Re:I guess I don't understand... by SuperTechnoNerd · · Score: 1

      I remember a few years ago Ford was claiming any photo or video with a ford vehicle in it is their property. So that's probably why they want it. After all it's not really your vehicle.

    40. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 1

      I can not believe this has to be said but here it goes:

      [authoritative citation needed]

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    41. Re:I guess I don't understand... by edalytical · · Score: 0

      I think it's finally time to delete my Slashdot account. It's crazy that a post with falsehoods, unsubstantiated claims, and simplistic emotionally potent anti-materialistic views gets modded up like this. Whatever happened to intelligent rational discussions based in facts? Not this counterfeiter apologist bullshit. Fraud is wrong and that's the bottom line.

      --
      Win a signed Stephen Carpenter ESP Guitar from the Deftones: http://def-tag.com/?r=0008781
    42. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing you get from brand names is brand names. The actual clothing was considered too utilitarian for copyright to be applicable. Which is why all brands splatter their logos all over their products and hype it up since the brand itself is a trademark which is protected.

      So yeah, quality has nothing to do with it.

    43. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Maritz · · Score: 1

      True. Still, I find it hard to believe that anyone buying fake stuff doesn't realise it's fake. They just don't care. I'd be surprised if crushing the market for fakes led to sales for the real stuff. If people aren't going to buy it because it's too expensive and instead opt for a fake, I don't see how they're going to save up a thou for the real thing just because you can't get the fake for a tenner any more.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    44. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Product placement and media exposure. It's not always money, but rather convenient access to the biggest propaganda machine.

      You want your car to be prominent in the next movie? Or maybe those clothes or designer bag? Be prepared to kiss some ass.
      You want friendly media coverage when running your next political campaign? Ditto.

      Who makes the movies? And who owns the media companies? Are they one and the same?

      It's not that hard to figure out people! C'mon!

    45. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Vegemeister · · Score: 1

      There is absolutely no reason for this shit to go on.

      And why not? Allocating $2000 of resources per unit to hand bags is monstrously inefficient.

    46. Re:I guess I don't understand... by TheRealGrogan · · Score: 1

      It's only counterfeit if it's being misrepresented as the original brand. It is perfectly legal to copy clothing design... it happens to the fashion industry all the time. In most cases you are just paying big bucks for the name, not superior quality or design. Unless you are infringing on some patent for a particular type of cushioned sole or something (which may or may not be recognized in your foreign country), you are perfectly within your rights to design a pair of "Smith and Jones" brand sneakers that look like Nike.

    47. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so full of shit, you need windshield wipers on the inside of your eyes.

    48. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Rennt · · Score: 1

      Online, there are plenty of websites that will sell you a bag or a shoe that looks just like an expensive brand for a fraction of the cost. SOPA is meant to block access to such websites, which are often hosted offshore where US law enforcement agencies cannot touch them.

      I thought that was why we had Customs at the border and all those lovely intellectual property treaties with other nations. Guess not.

    49. Re:I guess I don't understand... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Right, it will cost hundreds of dollars less than the Apple product for the same hardware.

      Uh, dude, Apple products are free. Apple gives their computers to students everywhere absolutely free, and has been doing so for over a decade. Wow, isn't it easy to make up shit? Apparently, the trick to accuracy, however, is telling the truth, and not just making shit up to make your point.

    50. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go back to your job with Ralph Lauren, Gucci, or whatever overpriced fashion bullshit company you are shilling for. You won't be missed here.

    51. Re:I guess I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you want to pay an extra $3000 for the warranty, buy the Vuitton. If you don't, don't. It doesn't change that there might not be any actual difference.sure.

  8. Go after the companies by krelvin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Go after the companies that are supporting the bill as well. Look what happened to GoDaddy when it was found out they were supporting it. Imagine what happens when companies like 1800contacts, Ford, Adidas and others start getting consumers telling them to drop support as well or lose business.

    Business funds Congress... if they start saying no, Congress will say no too.

    1. Re:Go after the companies by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 4, Funny

      So you're saying we have to lobby companies who would in turn lobby congress? Democracy at its best!

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    2. Re:Go after the companies by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 2

      I can indeed imagine: nothing. GoDaddy got shafted because it was a business that dealt largely with IT professionals; companies like Ford and Adidas don't have customer bases that are anywhere near similar in overall composition. We need to face the facts and deal with the core problem: the Internet's interests will continue getting shafted as long as it lacks the financial backing of those who seek to destroy it. Hopefully, the blackout protest will turn a couple of eyes... but you kinda have to wonder if maybe it's time to break net neutrality and start a war.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    3. Re:Go after the companies by mcavic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Absolutely. With Corporate America supporting SOPA by a vote of 158 to 87, I wouldn't blame Congress for passing it. Who's right, Corporate America, or you and I? I don't know, but I know who has more lobbying power, and it ain't me.

    4. Re:Go after the companies by DocHoncho · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world, you and I. Unfortunately, that world only exists in textbooks and dreams. Monied interests have always trumped the public and always will

      --
      Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
    5. Re:Go after the companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Ford, at least, is "too big to fail". So any revenue they lost to a boycott, would just come out of your social security, or wherever they choose to take it.

    6. Re:Go after the companies by Mitreya · · Score: 2
      Look what happened to GoDaddy when it was found out they were supporting it.

      Nothing happened to GoDaddy. They lost some customers, but half of that was due to them being a crappy company. Also, many people are under the mistaken impression that GoDaddy withdrew support (or opposed) SOPA. Neither of those things happened - they just toned down their support to control PR. They are still for SOPA.

      Imagine what happens when companies like 1800contacts, Ford, Adidas

      There is less of a direct channel there. I haven't bought anything from 1800contacts or Ford or Adidas in a while. Also, for Ford and Adidas at least, you buy from a retail intermediary. I am sure if I stopped by a Ford dealership to tell them that I boycott Ford purchases, they would call the headquarters immediately!

    7. Re:Go after the companies by mcavic · · Score: 1

      Yes, but putting greed aside, a company should be smarter than you and me because they have more resources. I don't blame the government for listening to companies. But with so many companies lobbying on our behalf, we may need to report to the companies if we want to change the vote.

    8. Re:Go after the companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's kinda hard to drop Comcast when they basically have a COMPLETE MONOPOLY on Internet around here.

    9. Re:Go after the companies by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Look what happened to GoDaddy when it was found out they were supporting it.

      Nothing happened to GoDaddy. They lost some customers, but half of that was due to them being a crappy company. Also, many people are under the mistaken impression that GoDaddy withdrew support (or opposed) SOPA. Neither of those things happened - they just toned down their support to control PR. They are still for SOPA.

      Imagine what happens when companies like 1800contacts, Ford, Adidas

      There is less of a direct channel there. I haven't bought anything from 1800contacts or Ford or Adidas in a while. Also, for Ford and Adidas at least, you buy from a retail intermediary. I am sure if I stopped by a Ford dealership to tell them that I boycott Ford purchases, they would call the headquarters immediately!

      I think GoDaddy plans to make money from resale of seized domains. Those are likely to be worth some serious scratch.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    10. Re:Go after the companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. We do know that companies are market-aware. They've made a judgement that the risk is low in supporting SOPA. They would have to be clearly identified to the wider public and vulnerable but juicy target selected for treatment. Looks like a job for Social Media!

    11. Re:Go after the companies by DocHoncho · · Score: 1

      But with so many companies lobbying on our behalf, we may need to report to the companies if we want to change the vote.

      Oh yes, nothing like another layer of indirection to make everything much simpler!

      Pointers to pointers. Fantastic.

      --
      Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
  9. Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

    Another tech company? Where's the boycott against them like the one against GoDaddy?

    Don't tell me, "Comcast is the only provider" wherever you are. Dialup and satellite are available most everywhere, even if Comcast has their government-granted cable monopoly in your area.

    1. Re:Comcast? by MBCook · · Score: 1

      They own NBC now, don't they?

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    2. Re:Comcast? by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      And millions of geeks observe their heads explode as they realize the companies opposing this bill include:

      * AOL
      * Facebook
      * Microsoft
      * Zynga

    3. Re:Comcast? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      I thought we were already boycotting Comcast for the way they interfered with BitTorrent traffic?

      Really though, with the coming of 700MHz unlicensed networks and the widespread availability of 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz equipment, people could create WISP coops if they really wanted to. Unless you live somewhere really isolated, you could probably find enough people in your area willing to split the cost of a T3 line and some directional antennas and routers.

      Of course, that means talking to your neighbors, getting organized, and dealing with the inevitable lawsuits from companies like Comcast.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    4. Re:Comcast? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      When you are a virtual monopoly in a particular area, its sort of hard to boycott them even if you think there are other non-viable alternatives.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:Comcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comcast is the only provider in my area. I don't have a phone line at all so no dial-up or DSL, and satellite is far too slow. I plan to switch eventually when another provider with respectable speeds enters the market.

      It's no surprise they are supporting it given their relationship to Universal and NBC.

    6. Re:Comcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If it makes you feel better, I think I almost made the Comcast salesmen cry when they showed up the other day trying to get me to switch away from RCN... Their cockiness visibly went up in smoke as I started listing grievances against Comcast (bandwidth caps, net neutrality issues, speed, etc). They seemed almost annoyed that it REALLY didn't make sense for them to become RCN subscribers only because their Comcast service is free.

      Anyway, you wanna really hit Comcast, sure, you CAN point out satellite and dialup to folks in the middle of nowhere, but its hard to take that kind of thing all that seriously given the difference in service levels (it's just a sacrifice people aren't willing to make without a bigger reason and an achievable end in sight...the latter more important generally than the former). Best of making the push in the cities, where there are often 3 main competitors for broadband: Verizon (lol), Comcast, and RCN. Verizon engages in union busting lobbying for anti-net-neutrality measures, etc etc etc...no brainer to point out. Comcast...yea. The issue is, most people don't seem to realize that there IS a company like RCN which has 0 bandwidth caps, no history of filtering or other net neutrality issues, and offers great speeds at often cheaper prices than competition. Oh, and I left out AT&T...but hopefully, so does everyone else when shopping for Internet.

    7. Re:Comcast? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Agreed.

      It'd be like saying you're going to boycott the federal government. The only way you can do it is to move to a different country.

    8. Re:Comcast? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If you use any of those, you're not a true geek anyway. :-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    9. Re:Comcast? by Surt · · Score: 1

      Dialup and satellite are not suitable substitutes for most people. Dropping an order of magnitude, or two, of bandwidth is going to be a tough sell to geeks. GoDaddy was comparatively painless to give up, in most cases people who made the switch had only the pain of the switch, and then get to live with a better provider forever after.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    10. Re:Comcast? by quickgold192 · · Score: 1

      I'd take you more seriously if you ditched your cable for dialup on principle.

    11. Re:Comcast? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Ya, we can. Until we get sued by comcast/at&T/whowever, then they buy laws to prohibit it.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    12. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't; boycotting simply means not giving them any more money.

      I've been doing that for years.

    13. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      I thought we were already boycotting Comcast for the way they interfered with BitTorrent traffic?

      I have been, at least. But an awful lot of people around here seem to treat Comcast like they do the big media corporations: Oh, we hate them for their "IP" lobbying but we'll still slurp up all the content they produce! Wasn't that new movie great!?

    14. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      So there is another provider in your area---but it's "too slow."

      Remember every dollar you give to these bastards is helping them make your already limited Internet experience worse.

    15. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      Verizon engages in union busting lobbying for anti-net-neutrality measures, etc etc etc...

      Verizon is on my boycott list for other reasons, but not this. I don't support "net neutrality" any more than I support any other attempt to regulate the Internet.

    16. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 2

      When I moved to a my first apartment where I was paying for Internet service myself, in a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts, I ensured that SpeakEasy.net DSL was available before I signed the lease on the place. At the time, Comcast didn't even exist. I had previously had AT&T cable (*.attbi.net) in an apartment shared with a roommate; when AT&T started implementing inbound filtering of port 80 in response to the Code Red worm, they landed on my boycott list.

      When I moved to Manchester, New Hampshire in 2007, I ensured that I moved somewhere where there was not a cable TV monopoly infesting the ISP market. There were multiple DSL providers at the time. SpeakEasy.net wasn't available in New Hampshire unfortunately, but I found a local DSL provider (MV Communications, out of business now) and ensured they were available before I signed any leases. I think I called them 5-6 times asking them to check a phone number or address on an apartment.

      When I moved to a small town in New Hampshire a little while later, I moved somewhere where we split a T-1 line (1.5Mb/s), so the balance I paid was about $50/mo. DSL has become available via a regional company called FairPoint since, and we've switched to that. Cable TV is not even available in the town, but if any of the cable providers in N.H. try to move in and have the town establish a monopoly for them, which I believe they have to do via warrant article on the town ballot, I would do whatever I could to oppose such a measure.

      So yes, I am absolutely serious about not giving my money to corporate bastards like Comcast. If you piss me off, you will not get my money no matter how much I "need" your services.

    17. Re:Comcast? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      Net neutrality is not about regulating the Internet, it is about ensuring that ISPs do not try to fracture the Internet for their own benefit. Net neutrality protects the Internet from the sort of thing that SOPA is meant to establish.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    18. Re:Comcast? by beefncheese · · Score: 1

      Please don't tell me that Oracle is opposing it too. I'll have a nerdvous breakdown.

    19. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      Very Orwellian of you.

      It's about regulating the entities that provide Internet access so they can't filter, limit, or shape traffic. Just because it's government interference that would benefit you, doesn't mean it's not government interference.

      After years of attempts to regulate the Internet (CDA, COPA, DMCA, SOPA, PIPA, &c., &c.), and being opposed by IT people at every turn, they've finally figured out how to regulate the Internet in a way that geeks will not only not oppose but actually support and promote.

      And like all government interference, it will come back to bite us all in the ass. Today it's about regulating behemoths like Comcast, Verizon, or whatnot. A decade from now, we'll need to fill out a four-page form, file it with the FCC, pay a fee, and wait six months, just so we can type `iptables -j DROP` on that router we IT geeks maintain for a college or office LAN or small local netcafe.

    20. Re:Comcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm... I hate to say it, but where I live Comcast is my only choice. I can't get Fios, because my community was built before fiber was rolled out and we can't guarantee to Verizon enough customers to be worth cutting up the streets. I'm too far from the telco to get good DSL speeds (limited to 1/2 Mbs, and dialup at 56K is not an option as it is well really slow.

      Now if I was able to say switch from Comcast to another cable company I would love it. Anybody know if it is possible to petition your town/county council to switch cable vendors? Is that possible?

    21. Re:Comcast? by tepples · · Score: 1

      and dialup at 56K is not an option as it is well really slow.

      I will grant you that an 0.05 Mbps connection is "well really slow", but how does being "well really slow" make an 0.05 Mbps connection completely unusable when the alternative is supporting a company that wants to reduce your connection to 0.00 Mbps?

    22. Re:Comcast? by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      Refusing to use an alternative because you've decided it's too slow does not mean Comcast is your "only choice." It means you choose to use Comcast.

    23. Re:Comcast? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      In order to get dial-up you have to pay for a landline, thereby supporting a DSL company that you may or may not like. Not sure how dial-up gets you away from this.

  10. Re:Get over it by nurb432 · · Score: 2

    Except that taking payments for endorsements is illegal. "Capitalism" in this manner does not apply to congressional votes. ( or at least shouldn't, in a perfect world ).

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  11. The money totals are BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It looks like dozens of entire industries support SOPA, while opponents include Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, stag tech CEOs like Zuckerburg and Newmark, and a whole bunch of bloggers.

    This list seems to total the contributions that anyone in either list made to Congresspeople during the period in question. Since there are many more supporters who have lobbying budgets (for many and diverse legislation), naturally pro-SOPA will come out ahead in the numbers. Doesn't mean that all or even most of the lobbying $$$ were about SOPA. On the opposing side, they probably aren't counting contributions made by employees of Facebook, eBay, craigslist, Twitter, Linkedin, HuffPo, etc, except for the chiefs named on the list, so that seems a bit biased too.

  12. Sample letter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    You need to put it into terms they'll understand:

    The Honorable [congresscritter]:

    I see you are supporting SOPA. If I may, let me clarify some issues that will change your mind about your support.

    For one, online piracy is all done by the Somalis. They have not gone online and don't plan to: there are no ships online and they can't put them online. There hasn't been any ship hijackings online and as you know, pirating a ship with ones computer is ludicrous.Ships don't travel on the internet! They can't get into the tubes!

    Secondly, I really don't like making accusations, but the folks who are behind this bill have been lying to you. They have ulterior motives and will make a fool of you.

    Yours,

    A tech savvy constituent.

    1. Re:Sample letter by Alain+Williams · · Score: 1

      The Honorable [congresscritter]:

      There was a time when that greeting might have been true. However it now seems that the majority of politicians are there for what they can get out of it for their own personal benefit rather than the benefit of those who they claim to serve. This is, in part, why little has been done to prosecute those who caused huge financial destruction to the world in recent times -- they just keep the donations (== bribes) flowing to ensure that the politicos remember on which side their bread is buttered.

    2. Re:Sample letter by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      In the first meeting of the Welsh Assembly (devolved government), one of the newly elected assembly members referred to another as 'the Honourable Member from...' The speaker interrupted saying 'there are not honourable members here boyo'.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  13. Government is for SOPA by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Government is automatically for SOPA, there is nothing more pleasing to the ears of the little power and money hungry dictators that you have 'elected' to be your government officials.

    Here is a test for you, "progressive" liberals out there, will Obama VETO SOPA and PIPA?

    Dream on. He signed the NDAA a week ago, with military style indefinite detention against US citizens, which you really should understand as martial law and concentration camp powers in the hand of the POTUS, this or future.

    1. Re:Government is for SOPA by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      What does the Democrat party have to do with progressive liberalism? When last I checked, they were just as pro-business as the Republican party, only they favor a different set of businesses (but not entirely disjoint).

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:Government is for SOPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      You may be correct, but like most Fox News watchers, you're missing the point. Specifically:

      1. Obama is a corporate friendly statist with the very occasional progressive idea or two. Portraying him as a liberal or a progressive is very much a "please don't throw me in he briar patch" trick conservatives like to use.

      2. There's always this implication that somehow having a true believer whackjob conservative in there will make things better, despite extreme amounts of recent history that say otherwise.

      So, if you want to say that liberals and progressives should be disappointed with Obama, go right ahead. His problem is that he's not what we want him to be, and he's not what you fear either.

      A true liberal would never go for this crap. Post-Reagan conservatives with their unquestioning military and cop worshipping seem to want to give law enforcement anything and everything they want, so they're no help either. A true conservative would never go for this crap either, what few are left, so what does this say about our alleged "leadership" these days?

    3. Re:Government is for SOPA by Surt · · Score: 1

      No, Obama won't. But Romney won't either, so this one isn't a reason to switch.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:Government is for SOPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From everything we've seen he won't, but the power of election year means it could be jusT the power play he needs.

    5. Re:Government is for SOPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the majority of "progressive liberals" are in favor of totalitarianism these days, it shouldn't really matter. I'm actually surprised they're not lining up in the streets in favor of this.

    6. Re:Government is for SOPA by Erikderzweite · · Score: 1

      Which leaves Ron Paul. Although his ideas are somewhat extreme and by all means, unorthodox, he is the only one with the balls to veto SOPA. I don't know whether he'll really make it in case he gets elected, but all the others are not even pretending to oppose SOPA and NDAA.

  14. Comcast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do we have enough Comcast subscribers here to all call them up at once one day and complain? Maybe threaten to cancel our accounts and switch to another provider?

  15. $26M, politicians will learn from this by The+Creator · · Score: 2

    They will learn to propose ridiculous bills more often.

    --

    FRA: STFU GTFO
  16. I dont get... by IronHalik · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...the american system.

    How is it possible, that you can publicly 'donate' money to a representative supporting your cause. IMHO political offices should be state funded.

    1. Re:I dont get... by nurb432 · · Score: 0

      This is not how it is supposed to work, but anytime you involve politicians they will abuse/bend/break the rules for their own gain.

      This is not exclusive to America, as politicians everywhere are like this.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    2. Re:I dont get... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's commie talk.

      Yanks would rather be corrupt then commie.

    3. Re:I dont get... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Yep, fundamental human nature. Humans seek self-advantage. Politics has a tendency to create opportunities for advantage, and advantage seekers will find those opportunities.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:I dont get... by Kiraxa · · Score: 0

      Our wonderful Supreme Court ruled that corporations are people. And people are allowed to monetarily support the candidates they like. Welcome to America, we are not a democracy, we are not a republic, we are a corporatocracy.

      --
      http://phelannguyen.blogspot.com/
    5. Re:I dont get... by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 0

      Your opinions on how America should be run couldn't possibly be humble enough.

    6. Re:I dont get... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      IIRC this garbage got started around the time of the civil war (1865) though I can't remember whether before or afterwards. The term lobbying was invented because these people would meed the legislators in the lobby, and talk them into coming out for a meeting. I don't recall whether this was due to a change in the laws, or whether it was just the lax environment created by the war, but I seem to recall (as in don't really believe this) that it was a legal change.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:I dont get... by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Our wonderful Supreme Court ruled that corporations are people.

      This right here is the one thing I believe makes the whole American Capitalist system go down. I can imagine such a ruling was done in order to provide some rights to corporations. However, although I am not against handling such rights, I think Corporations should fall in a completely different legal framework than people.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    8. Re:I dont get... by stewbee · · Score: 1

      While not entirely true, I believe that the Ctizens United case (ie. "people are corporations") says that corporations are allowed to give unlimited funds to political organizations (like Super PACs) and not have to disclose how much and to whom they are giving the money. Contributions to Individual campaign however do not follow under this rule, IIRC. This is in part why you only hear about the super PACs for the individual candidates making any commercials than the candidates themselves.

      I think most recently, Gingrich was trying to take down Romney about his Super PAC. The rules for Super PACs are that they cannot coordinate with the candidate that they are supporting. However if you look at Romney's main Super PAC, it is filled with people that were heavily involved with his campaigns just prior to its formation. Gingrich is suspect that he is in violation of the 'no coordination' aspect of the requirements for Super PACs.

      As a side note, you should check out The Colbert Report episodes which feature his Super PAC. In particular, look for the episodes featuring Trevor Potter (this is his lawyer for his Super PAC, and has the episodes tagged with his name). They have been the most informative in showing what the true power and absurdity of the idea of Super PACs. I laugh, but deep down part of me dies when I see what power these Super PACs have.

  17. Business Software Alliance.... by rrossman2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know when *they* are anti-SOPA, there's something wrong with it...

    1. Re:Business Software Alliance.... by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 1

      Well, I already know that there is a lot wrong with both SOPA and BSA. Does that change anything?

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
  18. 158? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The number is inflated; the Big 3 Record Labels have put many of their smaller labels on the list as well.

    Let's ignore the various publishers and the Big Brands on the list.
    Let's also ignore all the law enforcement organizations on the list for now.

    National Center for Victims of Crime
    That should be an easy target... we're all victims of crime perpetrated by quite a lot of organizations on that list: murder of the Public Domain. So why are they there?

    Americans for Tax Reform
    Sure... the Big Content and friends pay sooooo much tax, Hollywood Accounting is just to rip off the "percentage of profits" people, not the IRS.

    Let Freedom Ring
    Eh? What definition of "Freedom" do these guys use?

    Center for Individual Freedom
    Same as those guys?

    Associated Builders and Contractors
    Oh no... is that little shed out there a genuine Joe Fart Contractors, Inc. or is it some Chinese rip-off?!

    United States Conference of Mayors
    Call the Mayor's office if you live in a city/town of pop. 30,000 or more and ask if the Mayor supports SOPA

    1. Re:158? by drainbramage · · Score: 1

      Any chance most of those you listed are Soros funded?

      --
      No brain, no pain.
  19. Come on... by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    All those people that were berating others for supporting (or even just not caring about) the GoDaddy debacle, come out in force and NOW follow your own advice.

    You should now throw away anything you wear that has Adidas or Nike on it, cut your Comcast connections, stop listening to country music (okay, no great loss there), take all the Estee Lauder gear back that you bought your girlfriend for Christmas, sell any Ford you might have, start returning your photocopiers, etc.

    No? Or is it actually not that important compared to moving a couple of domains around? Boycotts like that were stupid for one reason - you didn't know WHO supported it because many companies have kept absolutely silent about their stance and almost every company would have an opinion on it. Surprise, surprise a profit-making business supports the option that makes the most profit for them.

    As I said back then: You have zero idea what political agenda any company is secretly supporting or not.

    If you want to boycott, then you can't selectively boycott. And then you will realise that virtually all profit-making companies would support something that you would want to boycott (unless you were a shareholder).

    1. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      You should now throw away anything you wear that has Adidas or Nike on it, cut your Comcast connections, stop listening to country music (okay, no great loss there), take all the Estee Lauder gear back that you bought your girlfriend for Christmas, sell any Ford you might have, start returning your photocopiers, etc.

      Actually, I am not terribly far from that:

      1. Shoes are a bit tough, it is not very easy to find off-brand shoes. I can make the pledge now, however: when my current pair of boots needs replacing, I will find a pair made by a small, local business.
      2. My landlord provided service through Comcast until recently...because Comcast cut off our service. I have been working on setting up a wireless connection to the nearby university campus (I work there, so that helps), at which point my landlord agree to cut the rent in exchange for my use of that connection (as it turns out, this is a hard thing to do -- I am working on an agreement with some neighbors to put a repeater on their roof).
      3. I have not listened to mainstream music in many years, and I never listen to music recorded by an RIAA company.
      4. I would not spend the money on brand name cosmetics and my girlfriends both knows and supports that position.
      5. I do not drive a car (I know this is not going to work for most people and I would not expect them to follow suit).
      6. I only use photocopiers/printers on rare occasions and only those provided by my employer. Who spends time and money printing things on paper, except as required by their employer?

      If you want to boycott, then you can't selectively boycott. And then you will realise that virtually all profit-making companies would support something that you would want to boycott

      Which is why, when possible, I try not to buy things made by megacorp. Living one's life in the modern world makes it pretty hard to avoid megacorp entirely, but one can reduce their dependence on megacorp to some degree without too much pain.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:Come on... by impaledsunset · · Score: 2

      What you say is true in theory. Each and every thing that you buy is produced by someone who has done something worth boycotting.

      That's not the point, though. One of the reasons that this happens too much is that they are never penalized for it. Not by the government, not by their customers. They simply get away with it with no losses. And while you can't change that by simply not buying from those that are guilty of something, you should by all means take the chance to use the bad publicity surrounding the GoDaddy's move to support SOPA to send them a message that their customers this. And these customers happened to be exactly the people who SOPA will hurt.

      It was a small thing and a drop in the ocean, but at least to some point they were aware that their SOPA support hurt them their bottom line, even by a bit. That's something. And other registrars know that supporting such legislation would also hurt them.

      And if people reacted like this more often, you'd even force corporations to do less questionable things. It's not a boycott of a bad company, it's a boycott against a single bad policy to discourage it. If people boycotted companies "selectively" more often, some would use this as an advantage to gain customers over one of their policies, next over the other, and eventually push their competition to do the same.

    3. Re:Come on... by biodata · · Score: 1

      Yes I think you're right. It really is best to avoid buying things as much as possible, unless you now the person who made them, and wish to support that person's enterprise.

      --
      Korma: Good
    4. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does it hurt Adidas or Nike if I throw away my sports gear? (I don't have any anyway..) Or if I stop listening to country music? (I don't anyway) or sell my Ford? They won't care. They will only care if I do that publicly and the media reports abut it (which I doubt) or if enough people stop buying their stuff that it matters.

    5. Re:Come on... by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to boycott, then you can't selectively boycott.

      Says who? Your lazy, uninterested, pro-SOPA ass? Fuck you, we'll boycott whomever we can, and if one company happens to be the lowest hanging fruit, we will damn well kick that one in the nuts, and proceed from there.

      It's really simple: those who didn't even bother to boycott GoDaddy, have really no say in the issue. Some of us did at least a little bit to knock down the first domino (GoDaddy) and a few other dominos followed.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    6. Re:Come on... by tepples · · Score: 1

      Who spends time and money printing things on paper, except as required by their employer?

      Members of families whose other members have not yet all bought tablet computers. Or people who have switched to dial-up because they boycott Comcast, and sending big photos over dial-up is painful.

    7. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roared the mouse.

    8. Re:Come on... by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      And if people reacted like this more often, you'd even force corporations to do less questionable things. It's not a boycott of a bad company, it's a boycott against a single bad policy to discourage it. If people boycotted companies "selectively" more often, some would use this as an advantage to gain customers over one of their policies, next over the other, and eventually push their competition to do the same

      In my view, if a company has a history of supporting polices that are bad for its customers, then by definition it is a bad company. They maybe able to mend there ways in the future and then opinion can change. But until they can show me they are in line with basic human rights there is no quarter to the amount of bad press I will bring to their door step by speaking to my friends and family, writing bad reviews and the like. activism like this done on a small scale does make a difference, its just harder to quantify in the near future and the long term.

    9. Re:Come on... by JockTroll · · Score: 0

      Blow up their factories and they will care.

      --
      Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
    10. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > those who didn't even bother to boycott GoDaddy, have really no say in the issue.

      How about those who weren't gullible and greedy enough to have placed their business with Godaddy in the first place?

    11. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      I have been working on setting up a wireless connection to the nearby university campus (I work there, so that helps)

      Probably not for long if you believe its a good idea to leverage your employer's non-free technical resources, and your job, just so you can have non-comcast internet in your apartment.

    12. Re:Come on... by xtracto · · Score: 1

      This, a thousand times!

      People should boycott companies in reaction to specific actions. If Sony puts a spying rootkit in CDs. People should join and massively stop buying Sony stuff (including discs) in response to that. If PayPal screws their customers, people should remove their money and stop using it to pay until PayPal recants.

      Companies only look for their bottom line profit. They are "evil" because consumers let them be evil. Companies do not kill (well, some argue that those like Monsanto may actually have done so) because society would not allow it. As you correctly say, the more companies are held accountable for their actions (in a way that it hurts them, i.e., in the money) the better they will behave.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    13. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      It helps in the sense that I have the permission of the IT staff.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    14. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to admit it is kind of impractical to boycott Ford. I don't own one and I can't really go out and specifically buy a non-Ford just to say I don't like their position on this. I haven't purchased music since the RIAA started suing customers, so I count boycott them for SOPA when I'm already not buying their products. Still, we can do our best to boycott everything that we can.

    15. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Ah... the IT staff... which sits above the board of directors and is usually the major revenue source of any organization! Seriously, man. A bad idea is a bad idea. You gonna get fired. They not gonna tell you why. But know why. When you work, leave home at home. When you're home, leave work at work. What you're planning is way beyond taking pens and pads. You are bartering with resources that don't belong to you nor to those that have given you the permission you believe you have, which they have no right to do in the first place. IT resources at a university do not belong to the IT staff. Beyond the obvious, that it is illegal... it is also immoral. Try to see why.

    16. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1
      Revenue source? Board of directors? How does any of that have anything to do with how people use the university network? I do not know what sort of a fascist institutions you have experience with, but around here the rules are straightforward:
      1. Disrupting any other person's use of the network is prohibited
      2. Illegal activity (including copyright infringement) is prohibited; since this is a state school and I am therefore a state employee, certain laws regarding the use of state computers also apply to me, but these are not hard to follow.
      3. Attaching any device other than a personal computer/computing device (e.g. video game systems, phones, etc.) is only allowed if the network administrator approves it -- and that is the approval I received, since this setup will involve the use of a WiFi repeater.

      You are bartering

      Bartering? I am installing a repeater on someone's roof, with their permission. There is no bartering occurring; they are friendly neighbors who do not mind a small pole being attached to their house and who are willing to lend me a few watts of power. If they demanded it, I would even compensate them for that power, but they made no such demand.

      Now, it is understandable how you might have been confused, since elsewhere I encouraged someone else to set up a wireless coop. That is separate from what I am doing here; my operation is small scale and only covers my apartment. I would like to create a wireless coop some day, especially when 700MHz gear becomes more available, but for the time being I am just concerned with getting access for myself.

      that it is illegal

      No, it is not illegal, and to be honest I have been more concerned with complying with FCC regulations on radio than anything else -- that is actually something that I could violate if I am not careful about power levels (though I generally keep my transmitter power as low as possible).

      it is also immoral

      Immoral? It is immoral to connect to a wireless network that I have legal access to because I happen to be a particular distance from the network? Please, there is no moral argument here -- people make use of university networks in a variety on non-professional contexts. There are thousands of people who live on this university's campus. There is a strip of bars right across the street, where people use the university's connection to log on to Facebook and post messages about how drunk they are. There are a number of student residences near enough to the university that a typical laptop can connect to the network. The only thing that makes my situation different is that I have to traverse a half mile, and there are trees and buildings in the way -- thus I am forced to use less common equipment.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    17. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Bartering?

      Allow me to refresh your memory:

      at which point my landlord agree to cut the rent in exchange for my use of that connection

      You are clearly intending to take something of value, something that is not free, something that costs actual money, that doesn't belong to you for your own personal gain. Am I correct in assuming you have no intention of compensating your employer for this? And if your employer asked for compensation, you'd just not do it?

      Theft (that is, taking something that isn't yours and not paying for it) is illegal, and, yes, immoral.

      Let me make it chrystal clear to you. IF you believe you have this right, then what makes you different from every other IT staffer? So take it to the universal, if it is right for you, then it is right for EVERYONE. Now... consider that every IT staffer is doing the same thing as you. Doesn't work. It only works FOR YOU. This is called psychological egoism and its really not all that far from sociopathic behavior.

      I'd have fired you for even asking. Do your damn job, and stop trying to leverage your employer's resources for your own personal gain.

    18. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Revenue source? Board of directors? How does any of that have anything to do with how people use the university network?

      Allow me to enlighten you a bit... as that would be sarcasm you are responding to thar... Everyone who knows anything about IT knows that IT doesn't generate revenue... ever. IT is a necessary evil, and it only COSTS money, it never generates it. If IT came up with something to generate income, whatever that was, would be moved to another department. What does this have to do with anything? You are intending to put extra finacial burden on a department that already bleeds money like a sieve. Also, anyone who's worked at a university knows who's in charge... the board of directors. But its a common error... lots of people in IT seem to believe IT is in charge of everything, but of course this is not so. IT has no more authority than any other kind of maintenance department... which will all sit below every academic department, which will sit below administrators, office of the president, etc., which sits below the board of directors. Appears you asked the wrong department for permission, and the permission given is invalid. If you go forward with your plan, its quite possible you may be fired and prosecuted.

    19. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      perhaps you're a little harsh on the guy... why not allow him to learn his own lessons, make his own mistakes?
      But I see your point... he's robbing Ringo to pay Paul.

    20. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      You are clearly intending to take something of value, something that is not free, something that costs actual money, that doesn't belong to you for your own personal gain

      Something I already have access to and for which my access is not restricted by location or time. There is nothing in any agreement or law that says I have to be physically on university property to use their wireless connection.

      Theft

      Theft of what? I already have access to the university wireless network and I am allowed to use it whenever I want. How is using it from my house theft?

      Now... consider that every IT staffer is doing the same thing as you. Doesn't work.

      1. What gave you the idea that I am an IT staffer?
      2. Why would it be a problem if other people did this? I really want to know -- what would be wrong with people connecting to a network they are free to connect to at any time, if they happen to do so from their house? I really want to hear your logic begin this statement -- why would it be a problem if the IT staff were connecting from their own homes?

      I'd have fired you for even asking.

      If I had a fascist boss who fired people for asking if they are allowed to do something I would quit -- if I had made the mistake of even accepting a job at such an establishment.

      Do your damn job

      Is there some reason you think I am not doing my job?

      stop trying to leverage your employer's resources for your own personal gain.

      Right, I should not use resources that I am entitled to use. Maybe you do not understand this, but I am under the same network usage agreement as the thousands of people who live on this campus and use the network as their primary Internet connection. Employees of this university routinely log on to banks' websites, social network sites, youtube, and a variety of other not-work-related systems using the school's connection -- nobody is breaking any rules by doing so.

      Moreover, there are plenty of university employees who use university resources for their hobbies. Most of the members of the HAM radio club are university employees, and they use equipment and electricity that is all owned and paid for by the university -- and they are doing so with the university's blessing. University employees are entitled to take courses without paying tuition. The university does not limit access to its resources to the undergraduates, and the mission here is not to squeeze every penny of profit out of every resource.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    21. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      You are clearly intending to take something of value, something that is not free, something that costs actual money, that doesn't belong to you for your own personal gain

      Something I already have access to and for which my access is not restricted by location or time. ÂThere is nothing in any agreement or law that says I have to be physically on university property to use their wireless connection.

      I guarantee that your granted access does not extend to your landlord and his other tenants.

      Theft

      Theft of what? ÂI already have access to the university wireless network and I am allowed to use it whenever I want. How is using it from my house theft?

      Are you being intentionally daft? We're not discussing you legally using the access you have a right to, we're discussing your leveraging that access for financial gain by bartering that access with your landlord against breaks on rent. Your landlord has no right to access the network, nor do the other tenants. And you have no right to trade access to the network for a break on rent. This is clearly theft. Moreso, there are laws against providing access to any network to those that have no legitimate access. In essance, its the same thing as the cable pirates: one person pays for cable access, and hooks up all his neighbors to his cable for free. Its stealing, whether you live in a fascist state or a communist one or any idealogy in between. But the difference is, the extra bandwidth you will allow your neighbors to use will actually cost the university money. Bandwidth isn't free.

      Now... consider that every IT staffer is doing the same thing as you. Doesn't work.

      1. What gave you the idea that I am an IT staffer?
      2. Why would it be a problem if other people did this? I really want to know -- what would be wrong with people connecting to a network they are free to connect to at any time, if they happen to do so from their house? I really want to hear your logic begin this statement -- why would it be a problem if the IT staff were connecting from their own homes?

      Ah, you are being intentionally daft. This is not the argument. The argument is not "people that are allowed access are allowed access." The argument is that you intend to take your access, and share your access with untold, unaccounted others that may or may not have legitimate access to the network. Your landlord certainly has no claim to the network.

      stop trying to leverage your employer's resources for your own personal gain.

      Right, I should not use resources that I am entitled to use.

      Are you thick? YOU are entitled to use the resource. You are entitled to the resource... you are NOT entitled to lease, sell or trade the resource however twisted your fallicious rationalizations are.

      ÂÂMaybe you do not understand this, but I am under the same network usage agreement as the thousands of people who live on this campus and use the network as their primary Internet connection. ÂEmployees of this university routinely log on to banks' websites, social network sites, youtube, and a variety of other not-work-related systems using the school's connection -- nobody is breaking any rules by doing so.
      Â

      Ah, so you wish to continue with this newly introduced strawman fallacy. First you say you want to share the access you have with others that clearly have no right to access, and you support this argument by saying lots of people have access, so why shouldn't you give access to those that have no right to access the network? Your logic is nonexistent.

      Moreover, there are plenty of university employees who use university resources for their hobbies. ÂMost of t

    22. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The uni I work at has a network operations center (NOC), as I would expect most universities that run networks would have to have to maintain the network. The operators at the NOC will nearly immediately see the new unauthorized hardware, and will see the spike in bandwidth, and will promptly shut it down, and take legal action if necessary. Sounds to me like legal action would be compulsory... IANAL but this appears to be conspiracy to commit wire fraud to me (conspirators being the OP, his landlord, and any tenants that intend on unauthorized access, whether they are aware the access is unauthorized or not), which would make it an automatic felony, as well as what you stated, providing unauthorized access to a private network, which is usually a felony, and a separate and descrete charge altogether.

    23. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      I guarantee that your granted access does not extend to your landlord and his other tenants.

      1. Where did I say anything about other tenants?
      2. Everyone who is on the lease is affiliated with the university and has access to the same network.
      3. Even if they were not affiliated, I am setting up a repeater, which means that if someone who was not supposed to have access did somehow gain access using my system, they would be able to do exactly the same thing if they simply went to the university campus a few blocks away.

      we're discussing your leveraging that access for financial gain by bartering that access with your landlord against breaks on rent

      So if I were to tell my landlord that I no longer intend to use the Internet service he is providing, and walk over to the university to use their service when I wanted to go online, then what? Would you call that "bartering" too? What difference does it make if I walk a few blocks, or set up a repeater and save myself the walk?

      First you say you want to share the access you have with others

      Really? Where did I say that? I seem to remember specifically saying that I am not planning to do that:

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2609766&threshold=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=38641192#38643828

      Hey, you do not have to read the posts you are replying to, but if you want to actually discuss something then it would help if you actually did so. Everything else in your post is based on some kind of assumption that I am doing something that I am not actually doing and that I never had any intention of doing. All I am doing and all I ever intended on is to access to campus network from my house; I never planned to share that access with someone who is not authorized. I will still have to register all my devices and go through the same authentication process as I would have to go through if I were on campus.

      As far as I can tell, whatever college you went to had strict policies forbidding anyone who is not a student from making use of any school resources, under any circumstances. That must have been a rough experience. Around here, and at my alma mater, there are procedures for allowing non-students and even people who are not affiliated with the university to use school resources. As I said, as you apparently failed to read, employees are even allowed to take courses for credit without paying tuition.

      I really do not see much point in continuing this discussion with you, since you are not even bothering to read what I am writing.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    24. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Really? Where did I say that?

      right here:

      My landlord provided service through Comcast until recently...because Comcast cut off our service. I have been working on setting up a wireless connection to the nearby university campus (I work there, so that helps), at which point my landlord agree to cut the rent in exchange for my use of that connection (as it turns out, this is a hard thing to do -- I am working on an agreement with some neighbors to put a repeater on their roof).

      First of all, your narrative is attrocious. You must work at Yale or something. But the salient details here are that you no longer have access to comcast at home... but if you can stretch your employeers network, for some unknown reason, your landlord will cut you a break on rent. Why? What would it matter to your landlord if you provided yourself access to the internet, and it had nothing to do with him? Obviously, your landlord isn't just handing out breaks on rent. You intend to give him something for the break on rent. Hmm... I wonder what it could be? Perhaps... unauthorized access to the university network? For him and all his tenants? Also, it matters not if all the other tenants are students and employees of the university. Check your terms of use carefully and you will see you alone have your access, and you can not share that access... period, regardless of anothers right to the network, they do not have a right to the network through your access.

      I really do not see much point...

      Nice backpeddling. I believe the trouble is not that I didn't bother to read your posts... but that you did not bother to think about whether you should do what you are planning. You see free cookies and you want to eats them and share them with anyone that wants them... you do not care who cookies belong to or what cookies cost is to those that produced them... you just see what you want, and rationalize your criminal, psychological egoist behavior. But you will be rudely welcomed to this world, because here there are no free cookies, and there is no free lunch. Its pay to play.

    25. Re:Come on... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      What would it matter to your landlord if you provided yourself access to the internet, and it had nothing to do with him?

      Right now, he is providing Internet service, and the cost is rolled into the rent. This is not an uncommon arrangement.

      You intend to give him something for the break on rent. Hmm... I wonder what it could be? Perhaps... unauthorized access to the university network? For him and all his tenants?

      So you are just going to assume that I have a particular arrangement, then criticize me for it even when I specifically say that I am not making that arrangement? The ironic thing here is that you accused me of pushing a straw man argument. Nobody is getting unauthorized access to anything.

      Also, it matters not if all the other tenants are students and employees of the university. Check your terms of use carefully and you will see you alone have your access, and you can not share that access... period, regardless of anothers right to the network, they do not have a right to the network through your access.

      Had you read what you were replying to, you would have seen the part where I said that I am setting up a repeater; perhaps it would have been easier for you to understand if I used the marketing term "range extender." Anyone who uses this system will still have to go through the university registration process on their own; the university itself uses similar repeaters on various parts of the campus. This is not some consumer wifi router/ap/NAT gateway system.

      I believe the trouble is not that I didn't bother to read your posts... but that you did not bother to think about whether you should do what you are planning.

      So not reading my posts is not a problem, because you simply assume that I did not bother to think about the plan? Like I said, I took the time to go through the proper procedure for attaching a repeater to the wireless network -- how is that an example of not thinking things through?

      you do not care who cookies belong to or what cookies cost is to those that produced them...

      Right, I am recklessly using this network, which is why I took the time to contact the people who run it and go through the established procedure for connecting a repeater.

      your criminal, psychological egoist behavior

      What criminal behavior would you be referring to? I can legally use the network any time I want, and nobody would be able to use my repeater to illegally access the system. You are continuing to operate under an assumption that I have repeatedly addressed, and it is making this conversation pointless.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    26. Re:Come on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After thoroughly enjoying this thread I can say I'm with the GP. Its obvious what you intend to do, and GP appears to be spot on. Clearly, you didn't realize what you intended to do was illegal and immoral, and you've spent your last three posts desperately attempting to conceal and obfuscate what you originally intimated, namely, at least what I also interpreted as meaning, extending a network that doesn't belong to you to your landlord and his tenents in exchange for a break on rent. IIRC, you said Comcast had disabled the connection, which is your landlord's motivation for being interested in what you have to offer. The obvious lie in your last post is that you're now claiming if you provide your own internet, your landlord would give you a break on rent. Trouble is... there is nothing in the universe that will compell a landlord to do something like this once a lease is signed. Use the property's connection, don't use the property's connection, you signed a lease, you are compelled to pay even if you also paid for your own T1 line and never touched the property's internet connection.

    27. Re:Come on... by catmistake · · Score: 1

      To be absolutely, brutally honest, I feel silly believing anything these days. But I appreciate our time together. You know I've been trolling, and you've left me hooks and inspired me and let me take the alleged high road of moral superiority... sometimes an entertaining vantage... and someday maybe I can return the favor. My appetite for this is also satisfied, so I genuinely thank you and wish you luck, and now return to my native lurking layer. Long live /.

  20. Sony Music also by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 0

    Sony systems were deeply hacked several times last year, through obvious methods (eg SQL injection) that show how seriously the company takes computer matters. Not surprised they endorse SOPA.

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  21. Can comcast use the SOPA on dish / directv? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    And tell them if you don't remove the line saying better then Comcast we will use this law to shut down your web site?

    If Comcast was will to pull the VS BS when they pulled it from directv also later on they sued DirecTV over NFL Sunday ticket ads while at the same time running ad's saying most live sports on comcast (not true) and running ad's say no long term contracts (not fully true) . How far will they go?

  22. Why? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    The reason its not being discussed is that they want this to pass without the general public hearing about it.

    Why is that? Aside from the supposed 'IP protection' it helps squelch our right of free speech, which most of those entities are in support of, as THEY want the free speech, but not us.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Why? by shentino · · Score: 2

      Kinda like ACTA isn't it?

  23. Data is from MapLight and OpenSecrets.org by stoub · · Score: 1

    At the bottom of this and all other "Money Trail" pages on OpenCongress, there's a note explaining that OpenCongress aggregates this data from other sources:

                Data on bill support and opposition provided by MapLight.
                Campaign contribution data provided by OpenSecrets.org, the nonpartisan guide to money in politics. Contribution data is constantly being updated and this data may not be entirely up to date.

  24. Why doesn't Congress sell laws ? by BlueTak · · Score: 1

    At least that would be honest, because, seen from France, that's the way things look : auction for a law. (I dont't say this would never happen here, but corporations rather buy presidents... who launch dirty "3 strikes" crap)

    1. Re:Why doesn't Congress sell laws ? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Its not 'the way things look', its really how things work now.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    2. Re:Why doesn't Congress sell laws ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have "Truth In Advertising" here ... I think you're right. Since Congress is basically selling themselves, they really ought to be held to higher standards and forced to say what they are really doing, which is corrupting our legal system for their own immediate gains, and the future gains of the powerful organizations that "donate" to them.

  25. Weird money by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just look at these amounts :

    Sen. Harry Reid [D, NV] $3,502,624
    Sen. Charles Schumer [D, NY] $2,648,770
    Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand [D, NY] $2,080,651

    I wonder how much Obama got ... in the beginning of an election year no less. What do you think Obama > Harry Reid or the reverse ?

    Weird, weird names on the list though :

    * United States Tennis Association
    * Council of state governments
    * National Confectioners Association
    * Major City Chiefs
    * Let Freedom Ring
    * Outdoor Industry Association
    * Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council
    * Eli Lilly and Company
    * Center for Individual Freedom
    * Concerned Women for America
    * Americans for Tax Reform
    * Society of Plastics Industry
    * Beam Global Spirits &Wine

    Half of these sound extremely fake. Most of these look like it's VERY unlikely they would get themselves on this list if it didn't gain them money ...

    Not that I tell myself these guys collectively contributed even 1% of those amounts ... very strange names here. Were the pressured into signing this ? There's another collection of names that clearly were pressured to get in there (National Electrical Manufacturers Association
    , Electronic Components Industry Association) ... are these names just an attempt to point "broad support" or ? Weird weird weird.

    Interesting though : all but one electronics manufacturers are in the opposing category ... /me suspects threats from customers. All think tanks, democrat or republican, are on the opposing side. So clearly both parties are aware of the publicity loss. Lots of the organisations supporting this bill are subsidiaries of other supporters (so the supporter list shoulds be a LOT shorter). WTF is visa doing supporting these guys ?

    Some organisations could have contributed more by staying out of it, me thinks :
    * 4chan
    * Torrentfreak
    * Tumblr
    (let's just say people might think they know why these guys are opposed, and it's not for the right reasons)

    And, surprisingly in the "opposing" category (although I must admit this legislation doesn't strike me as conservative, and it doesn't seem like it's supported by the software industry either, it's almost purely privilege grab by the entertainment industry) :
    * Business Software Alliance (also known as Microsoft)
    * Brookings Institute
    * Competitive Enterprise Institute

    1. Re:Weird money by geniice · · Score: 1

      When you consider the importance of sports TV rights and how badly they risk getting mangled online the appearance of the United States Tennis Association is understandable.

    2. Re:Weird money by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sen. Harry Reid [D, NV] $3,502,624
      Sen. Charles Schumer [D, NY] $2,648,770
      Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand [D, NY] $2,080,651

      I wonder how much Obama got ...

      Hmmm... you don't mention of the republicans on the list (John Beohner, Eric Cantor, Scott Brown, Robert Portman, Patrick Toomey, Mark Kirk) and you bring up Obama, who is not on the list. Thank you for clearly identifying your ideological slant.

    3. Re:Weird money by blackraven14250 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Benefit of the doubt; he pulled the Senators list, and was curious about Obama. The first 3 on the senator list happen to be Democrats, and TBH, I'd be curious as to what Obama received as well.

    4. Re:Weird money by Nemyst · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The BSA is unsurprising actually. Many of their members (including Microsoft) have online services with user-generated content which could be targeted by the bill.

    5. Re:Weird money by poetmatt · · Score: 2

      importance of sports tv rights?

      you do realize that they don't even own the broadcast, say if someone were to record from an apartment next to the field?

      sports tv rights are the definition of part of the problem.

    6. Re:Weird money by ironjaw33 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In the case of the Wrigley Rooftops, the Chicago Cubs argued that baseball games are "a work of art" and even viewing a game without paying royalties is copyright infringement. The case was settled out of court, however, but all major league teams have a history of being just as bad as the RIAA or ASCAP when it comes to recording or viewing games.

    7. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if the Slashdot community developed an anti-SOPA fund, then we could donate this money to the politicians who currently support SOPA so that they will stop supporting SOPA. The idea being that the anti-SOPA people donate more than the pro-SOPA people, so that we have more votes on our side.

    8. Re:Weird money by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

      ...but all major league teams have a history of being just as bad as the RIAA or ASCAP when it comes to situations in which they can get more money for the thing they already do

      There, fixed that for you.

      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    9. Re:Weird money by dokc · · Score: 1

      Maybe if the Slashdot community developed an anti-SOPA fund, then we could donate this money to the politicians who currently support SOPA so that they will stop supporting SOPA. The idea being that the anti-SOPA people donate more than the pro-SOPA people, so that we have more votes on our side.

      So, democracy today functions as follows:
      1, "elect" bunch of people (doesn’t meters who they are because they all come from the same pool)
      2. some group/company/organization needs some law to make more money, so they pay for it
      3. "our representatives" push the law where it needs to be pushed
      4. interested groups/companies/organizations organize auction and who gives more wins
      5. "we" are screwed in any case

      I really wonder why is that still called democracy (for those who doesn't know the term comes from the Greek word – (demokratía) "rule of the people",which was coined from (demos) "people" and (Kratos) "power")

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    10. Re:Weird money by jdpars · · Score: 1

      The Greeks also considered "demokratos" to be equivalent to anarchy.

    11. Re:Weird money by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Obama is a singular individual who can kill this bill directly. He has more power over it becoming law than anyone else.

      Damn right we need to know what his position on this bill is and why.

      The next most important influences on this bill becoming law are Reid (already betrayed us by bringing it up for a vote) and Boehner (very likely to betray us by bringing SOPA to a vote in the house).

      I just can't shake the feeling that when SOPA/PIPA passes, that the Internet will catch fire and rain down torment on 'our' elected officials and the content industry.

      Perhaps all the shooting in the next revolution will happen online.

    12. Re:Weird money by dokc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The Greeks also considered "demokratos" to be equivalent to anarchy.

      The meaning of anarchy is different, as Kant explains:
      Immanuel Kant's societal categories

      The German philosopher Immanuel Kant defined "Anarchy" in his article about anthropology in the chapter "Freiheit und Gesetz" (http://korpora.zim.uni-duisburg-essen.de/kant/aa07/330.html) as follows:

      A Law And Freedom without Violence (Anarchy)
      B Law And Violence without Freedom (Despotism)
      C Violence without Freedom And Law (Barbarism)
      D Violence with Freedom And Law (Republic)

      --
      In love, war and slashdot discussions, everything is allowed.
    13. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think most of the people who know about Torrentfreak know more than just the name. And why Tumblr?

    14. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Even if Obama vetoed it, it looks like there are enough backers to override it.

    15. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      A lot of those on the list aren't interested in copyright so much as they are in branding, like the National Confectioners Association and Nike. They couldn't care less about internet piracy - they just want a way to shut down overseas-run websites selling counterfeit products with their logo on.

    16. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If Obama were to oppose SOPA, expect to see a huge amount of negative news coverage of him come the election, and plenty of glowing stories about his opponent. The electorate may choose the president, but it is the media that really tells them who to vote for, and the media wants SOPA badly.

    17. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that. While the support for the bill is bipartisan, the opposition to the bill in congress is almost completely from Democrats. Time to get your ass out of your heads, conservatives.

    18. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Just need to raise a few tens of millions of dollars then! Easy.

      A lot of slashdot types would dislike the idea on princible too, as it outright admits that the US is now an outright plutocracy where laws may be purchased.

    19. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A lot of slashdot types would dislike the idea on princible too, as it outright admits that the US is now an outright plutocracy where laws may be purchased.

      Do you think politicians are swayed by rational argument, or by money?

      I remember reading about a (historic; early 20th century) Democrat who was losing votes because the Republican candidate would always publish slanderous lies about him. Since he didn't want to lose the next election the Democrat decided to tell lies about his Republican counterpart. (I wish I could remember his name, but Google didn't help me this time).

      Sometimes its unethical to play the game, but as in business, the cheaters usually win. It's a structural thing, because the people who really do want to help the country (instead of themselves) are less likely to cheat and therefore less likely to win. Choose your evil.

    20. Re:Weird money by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      That long list doesn't surprise me. It's not weird at all, when you focus on who could be in the organization, as opposed to what it does.

      Tennis isn't an inner sport of the poor. Tennis tends to be popular among the middle and upper classes.

    21. Re:Weird money by Unoriginal_Nickname · · Score: 2

      Half of these sound extremely fake. Most of these look like it's VERY unlikely they would get themselves on this list if it didn't gain them money ...

      Not that I tell myself these guys collectively contributed even 1% of those amounts ... very strange names here. Were the pressured into signing this ?

      Yes, basically.

      The teamsters would have signed up because they get work from the motion picture industry. Union solidarity pulls in AFL-CIO, electrical workers, fire fighters, construction workers, and law enforcement.

      The rest sound fake because they are. Mostly large businesses and rich people who fund private associations to commit their sins, so they don't get literally executed when the revolution comes.

    22. Re:Weird money by TheLink · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Don't forget it's politics. He can't do everything he wants. He might want to do "X" and he might want to stop "SOPA". BUT the other politicians may say to him, we'll kill "X" if you kill "SOPA". So it's a matter of which battles he can fight and how many he can get on his side.

      The voters are a big part of problem. Think about it, a politician getting lots of campaign money does not force you to vote for that politician. You can vote for someone else, or even be a candidate.

      But maybe many actually do like voting for politicians who get the most campaign money. That's democracy for you.

      --
    23. Re:Weird money by kwark · · Score: 0

      "Thank you for clearly identifying your ideological slant."

      Maybe the GP is just pointing out that republicans are easier to buy?

    24. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If microsoft could be targeted by the bill, then why is microsoft supporting the bill? Seems to me they don't give a rats ass to user-generated content and care more about shooting down competitors. Or other similar objective.

    25. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      D'oh! NVM what i said, i wrote this shortly after waking up, didn't notice they were in the opposite list. stupid moment brought to you by drowzyness.

    26. Re:Weird money by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2

      "Thank you for clearly identifying your ideological slant."

      Maybe the GP is just pointing out that republicans are easier to buy?

      That may be, but if you look at the history of this, the Democrats have long been the ones who are the most "rightsholder friendly." Consequently, they already had the Democrats in their pocket ... acquiring a few Republicans is just icing on the cake.

      People complain constantly about the Republicans being under corporate control, but the reality is that the other side of the aisle is just as corporatist: traditionally it was just a different set of industries.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    27. Re:Weird money by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2

      Sometimes its unethical to play the game, but as in business, the cheaters usually win. It's a structural thing, because the people who really do want to help the country (instead of themselves) are less likely to cheat and therefore less likely to win. Choose your evil.

      It's like I've always said, the system selects for people who are good at getting elected, which has little to do with how they will perform in office. There seems to be an inverse relationship, when you get right down to it.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    28. Re:Weird money by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A lot of those on the list aren't interested in copyright so much as they are in branding, like the National Confectioners Association and Nike. They couldn't care less about internet piracy - they just want a way to shut down overseas-run websites selling counterfeit products with their logo on.

      Perhaps ... but an enlightened capitalist realizes that he won't always get what he wants, and shouldn't get everything he wants if the cost to society is too great. Fact is, anyone supporting SOPA for financial gain has demonstrated that they think like the big media companies: do whatever it takes no matter who gets hurt.

      That's more than enough to make me look elsewhere for my needs.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    29. Re:Weird money by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      The rest sound fake because they are. Mostly large businesses and rich people who fund private associations to commit their sins, so they don't get literally executed when the revolution comes.

      Yah ... plausible deniability. Like the big studios and record labels and their "industry trade groups" like the RIAA, MPAA, CRIA, etc.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    30. Re:Weird money by kwark · · Score: 1

      Get over it, all politicians get bought eventually. It doesn't matter what side/party they are on.

    31. Re:Weird money by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Obama hasn't done much of anything worthwhile in the last year. And that's the best I can say for him.

      So if he want's something done, it's probably better that it not be done. You can't be certain without more info, but that's the way the odds lie.

      My wife thinks he's a Republican pretending to be a Democrat, but I think he's evidence that both parties want the same thing...and it's *not* the good of the citizenry. (Generally I say that the Democrats want to be liked more, but Obama has called that into severe question.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    32. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      That's the idea of free markets. The basic princible on which they are supposed to operate: Set things up so that each person, by acting in their own selfish interests, nontheless acts for the good of society as a whole. It doesn't always work.

    33. Re:Weird money by helix2301 · · Score: 1

      President Obama is probably against the bill he is a massive supporter of social media and the digital age. He has been called the Facebook President and is the only President to use Twitter for regular Q &A sessions. This is the same guy who refused to give up his Blackberry. He started the StartUp America Campaign and meet with Apple, Google, Facebook and a lot of other Silicon Valley based businesses. If he does not veto the bill he will loose A LOT of support from those big contributers and supports of his campaign.

    34. Re:Weird money by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wrong. Ron Paul is obviously not corrupt, and he's been a Representative for decades. He's not going to get bought off either; the guy is old. Yes, most politicians do get corrupt these days, but it's not an absolute rule.

      Of course RP also has a lot of very controversial and extreme ideas. If you want someone that's really middle-of-the-road but incorruptible, you're probably out of luck.

    35. Re:Weird money by msobkow · · Score: 1

      Half of these sound extremely fake. Most of these look like it's VERY unlikely they would get themselves on this list if it didn't gain them money

      Not ALL lobbyists are trying to game the system for personal or corporate benefit like the media companies are.

      Some of them are just run by people who have an opinion and want to support what they think is a good idea, no matter how much I might disagree with them. Everyone has an opinion, but very few have reached a logical conclusion based on facts.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    36. Re:Weird money by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      (let's just say people might think they know why these guys are opposed, and it's not for the right reasons)

      Yeah, the average person would probably ignore all of their arguments and just attack their characters. I think they're pretty good at that.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    37. Re:Weird money by a_nonamiss · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that his personal feelings on the matter would in anyway affect his political support for it?

      --
      -Arthur
      Cave ne ante ullas catapultas ambules
    38. Re:Weird money by Almost-Retired · · Score: 2

      Obama is a singular individual who can kill this bill directly. He has more power over it becoming law than anyone else.

      I've got this horrible feeling it will pass with a veto proof majority. These folks simply, and only, understand one thing and that is how much who paid for a vote one way or the other.

      Damn right we need to know what his position on this bill is and why.

      I agree wholeheartedly.

      The next most important influences on this bill becoming law are Reid (already betrayed us by bringing it up for a vote) and Boehner (very likely to betray us by bringing SOPA to a vote in the house).

      Well, if its on the agenda, they eventually need to do something with it. If they bring it up and it fails then they have done their job. If they bring it up and it passes it must be the will of the people (who wrote all those checks of course, nothing to do with constituent email blasting it)

      I just can't shake the feeling that when SOPA/PIPA passes, that the Internet will catch fire and rain down torment on 'our' elected officials and the content industry.

      Which they will have coming, so I have -zero or less sympathy, and they'll be so busy gloating over it they won't pay attention to anything but the box being down 50% because people are pissed, so they clamor for even more draconian measures until you can't legally take a picture of your grand children and email them to their Aunt Tillie.

      The only way I see that is good for our so-called "government" is to copy out and print that list of who got how much from the link at the head of this thread, and if you live where you can vote in their district, vote for anyone else BUT them. Fortunately for them, none of the 3 reps nor the 2 senators that I get to vote for, are listed as having been enriched by this scheme.

      Perhaps all the shooting in the next revolution will happen online.

      Don't you wish it would be that quiet? I recommend the purchase of some decent shooting muffs, and as always, keep the faith and your powder dry. You will likely need both...

      Cheers, Gene
      --
      "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
        soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
      -Ed Howdershelt (Author)

    39. Re:Weird money by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      It's like I've always said, the system selects for people who are good at getting elected, which has little to do with how they will perform in office.

      Agreed. It's like the old Groucho Marx quote; "I wouldn't want to join a club that would have me as a member!".

      There seems to be an inverse relationship, when you get right down to it.

      Of course. It makes perfect sense if one uses the actual names for who is being discussed, pitchmen and statesmen. One is an expert at sales & marketing, the other helps guide the fates of peoples and nations.

      The qualities that make superior pitchmen versus statesmen are nearly polar opposites, if one accepts the premise that such things as being honest, truthful, competent, consistent, forthright, bold, visionary, and charitable are desirable qualities in a statesman.

      I'm hoping that the internet helps people find the statesmen, elect them while helping keep them in check, and out the pitchmen. Which, of course, is precisely the reason pitchmen and those in power wish to control the internet, who is allowed to do what on it, and what can be published on it.

      In the constant struggle of people against forever-encroaching government power, abuse, and corruption, the internet has seriously escalated the arms race between them in the people's favor. Of course government will have to respond. The threat to their corruption and lust for more power is too great to ignore.

      Currently they respond with attempts at control because they believe they can control and use it to their advantage. Once it becomes clear that they cannot control it, they will attempt to destroy it, likely by carving it up into regional/national or even strictly local, heavily-monitored nets.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    40. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see that you don't know much about Ron Paul. He is corrupt as hell. His SOP is to insert money for his friends into must-pass legislation, and then he votes against the final legislation in order to look good to the libertarian sheep that support him. Wake the eff up.

    41. Re:Weird money by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      That form of anarchy doesn't exist. Any realistic view would consider your definitions for "anarchy" and "barbarism" as identical.

    42. Re:Weird money by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Tennis isn't an inner sport of the poor.

      So ? Basketball is, and it's on there too.

    43. Re:Weird money by Serpents · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm not surprised by the strange names on the list considering that some companies didn't even know they were listed as SOPA supporters

    44. Re:Weird money by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world, it shouldn't matter. His job is to serve the interest of the population, not secure his own re-election. He should throw himself on his sword if need be to stop this insanity. But of course he won't; because that would be a change you could believe in.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    45. Re:Weird money by silentcoder · · Score: 3, Informative

      >The Greeks also considered "demokratos" to be equivalent to anarchy.

      That's a very ignorant statement. Mostly because there really wasn't such a society as "The greeks". The various greek cities were effectively independent city-states (known as Polis, plural Pollii) with very different cultures and political systems. Some were absolute monarchies, some were democracies (several variations on the theme though none had universal suffrage). About the only thing they had in common was language and religion - their political systems were as different as England and America - in fact, much more so in many cases. Oh and they regularly went to war on each other. Do not imagine for one second that the politics of Sparta and the politics of Athens had anything in common.

      The monarchic Greeks indeed considered the democratic cities to be anarchies (and Plato wrote that monarchy is the ideal form of government while democracy is doomed to fall into chaos- but since he lived under one we must consider the possibility that he just wrote what the king would like to hear in a classic case of CYA - especially since his own mentor Socrates had gotten the death penalty for saying things that weren't popular).

      So your statement is rather meaningless - much more interesting is how the people living in the democracies described their cities and how they ran them. Tellingly the democracies came with a set of basic behaviours deemed appropriate for a citizen in such a Polis - about how to respectfully getting along with your fellow citizens. The proper behavior for living in the Polis is "to be polite" - which is where the word came from. Those whose daily lives revolved around maintaining law and order in the democracies were the "men of the Polis" - from which we get the origins of modern "policemen" and those elected to govern a polis were Politicians.

      Your history lesson is now concluded and you are slightly less ignorant.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    46. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on - why do you feel the need to get into a Republican / Democrat pissing contest when you both agree with each other! Leave that at home and focus on the issue. You can get all shirty with each other when there is an election on.

    47. Re:Weird money by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      My bad. I only looked at your list. :^/ Thanks for your correction.

      That being said, the NBA isn't an inner city organization.

      And that being said, I'm surprised at how big the tennis association is. I thought that it was just a club for rich people. :^D I should think more before I make responses.

    48. Re:Weird money by Jammer6502 · · Score: 1

      Everybody is for sale. The size of the bribe has to do with how much they already agree with what you are asking for. In this case the dems are at the top of the list because it is taking more to convince them to betray the people that voted them in. The reps would probably go along with it anyway to "support small business" and only require a token donation.

    49. Re:Weird money by dj245 · · Score: 1

      It may be a kind of "lobbyist ring".

      In some cases, customers of a lobbyist may be asked to support pieces of legislation that have little or nothing to do with them. In return, the other businesses will support their pet legislation when it comes due.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    50. Re:Weird money by Bearded+Frog · · Score: 1

      Asuming his opponent supports it? I know Ron Paul is against it, not sure about romney. Although considering his contributors I wouldnt be suprised if he was for it.

    51. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming this is all about money, shouldn't Microsoft and Google just by themselves be able to easily pitch in a couple of hundred million? I mean if they really don't want to see SOPA implemented, just lobby, lobby and lobby some more with a dash of cash for good measure.

    52. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul, his miraculous primary showing aside, is a joke - and everyone except his followers knows it.

    53. Re:Weird money by Mephistophocles · · Score: 1

      Very Rand-sian of you, but actually that has never worked (to my knowledge anyway), not once in all of history. It's a great idea in theory but just doesn't work in the real world. This is why revolutions are necessary.

      --
      Deja Moo: The distinct feeling that you've heard this bull before.
    54. Re:Weird money by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      A randian would have left out my sarcastic 'it doesn't always work' at the end. They believe the princible actually works all the time. I just believe it works most of the time, and when it goes wrong can go very wrong indeed.

    55. Re:Weird money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The only joke is people like you who keep voting in lying warmongers instead of those who really want to fix the broken system that exists.

    56. Re:Weird money by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Obama is a singular individual who can kill this bill directly.

      You need to go watch "I'm Just a Bill" again(*). His veto can be overridden.

      (*) OK, that's mostly a joke, because it doesn't really describe the veto override process. It just says "If the President vetoes me, I have to go back to Congress and they vote on me again..."

    57. Re:Weird money by Burning1 · · Score: 1

      Apparently, they are also the only ones with Mod points today. :)

    58. Re:Weird money by Dasher42 · · Score: 1

      To those weird appearances on the list, I would ask how many of them are under umbrella organizations or holding companies or even majority shareholders with large stake in the movie industry. The actual money behind the scenes is highly concentrated and shareholders, especially big ones, keep diverse portfolios.

  26. Google don't support it. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Therefore, let it pass, and then let them wonder why "Estee Lauder" no longer features prominently in Google search results.

  27. The ones not asked. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting, how the only ones not asked and not being icluded anyway in this count, are the actual people of the country.

    Many people of the USA: Awesome nice people that I like.
    Most people of the USA: Retarded passive rotten vegetables consuming and excreting mindlessly until the land beneath them is dead and scorched.
    The USA: Infected by a virus, turned into a zombie, controlled by industrial feudalisms with so hearts, long-term thinking, or common sense, raping and pillaging everything it can get its claws on. (I'm really truly sorry, but the name "USA" is now tainted forever. :/)

    Guys, just fuckin' get out of there while you still can!
    We'll send our versions of this over there, and you come here (with all nukes! ^^), and we nuke their place from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.

  28. Donation or corruption? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So let me get this straight...people and companies OPENLY give money to those FOR the policies they are for, and it's called a donation?
    I think you'll find that's the textbook definition of a bribe.

  29. Looks like . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2012 will be the end of the internet as we know it. Money triumphs over freedom every time.

  30. I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "5 million donated against" - but Facebook Google etc in talks to black out their front page? Surely $5m is like less than a couple of days gross revenue, why wouldn't they have already donated much more against?

  31. Damn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No I have to stop shopping at Walmart.

  32. 1-800 Contacts? Really? by mmalove · · Score: 1

    Well, I literally just wrote them to tell them to remove me from their mailing list, and will be purchasing contacts elsewhere. I'm sure I confused the crap outta whoever gets that web case, as they probably have no frickin clue what a SOPA is, but I'm pissed about SOPA and our bought Congress waltzing it right through, and I'm happy to boycott everyone I can that made it possible.

    (Can't drop Time Warner, as they're the ONLY cable internet provider here, but I did send them an email expressing my dissent.)

    I hope my fellow slashdotters are as diligent about getting off their duff and contacting some of these people. But either way, at least I won't be further financially supporting the demise of my rights, so long as I can help it.

    --
    You can get 15 minutes of fame, but you can go down in history for infamy.
  33. It's Opposite Day! by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

    You'll always be right if you automatically believe and do the exact opposite of Sony.

    Seriously, I'd be convinced even if the Dalai Lama, Jesus Christ, and the entire cast of Firefly were all on the sponsor list. Sony likes that shit? Vote No!

    1. Re:It's Opposite Day! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of COURSE Sony Music and Sony Pictures are going to vote in favor.....are there ANY music / movie companies that are actually against it? I highly doubt it.

  34. Re:Get over it by oztiks · · Score: 3

    You're an idiot. Sheep. Fool. Moron ... Damn there are plenty of words out there that describe people like you ... The best word would be naive.

  35. Re:1-800 Contacts? Really? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    Can't drop Time Warner, as they're the ONLY cable internet provider here

    This might be a good time to talk to your neighbors about starting a WISP coop. I have been working on establishing a wireless connection from my house to a nearby university, and the equipment costs are not too high. The biggest issue so far has been establishing a decent line of sight, which has led me to talk to my neighbors about placing repeaters on their property -- and they have not rejected the idea outright.

    Depending on where you live, you might be able to do something even grander: you might be able to set up a coop with a couple dozen people and share a T3 connection. The up-front costs will be a little high, in the hundreds or low thousands of dollars depending on your specific needs, and the monthly cost will probably be in the low to mid thousands -- split up among enough households, this may be less than Time Warner.

    This assumes that your neighbors are friendly like mine.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  36. Re:1-800 Contacts? Really? by alphatel · · Score: 1

    (Can't drop Time Warner, as they're the ONLY cable internet provider here, but I did send them an email expressing my dissent.)

    We're currently working on cancelling our TWC in full, not only replacing the wired internet with wireless, but switching to internet-only powered TV instead of braodcast cable. It's all an incredible sham for customers but it will take years for the mess to get sorted out.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  37. WTF is SOPA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF is SOPA and why should I care?

    Seriously, I really don't understand... is there someone who can explain it in a straight forward way, and how it hurts those who are NOT infringing on copyrights? I have a hard team feeling bad for torrent sites, knock off sellers, etc... I don't care that they are taken down.

    So explain to me how, as a typical user--or as a typical business--I might be negatively affected by this?

    Is the fear just that it can be abused by large and powerful organizations to crush smaller ones? If so, then would stronger requirements for proof of infringement make the bill more palletable? Or maybe introducing financial and legal pain to those who would abuse it?

    1. Re:WTF is SOPA? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      your cousin bob uploads a video to youtube featuring the first dance at his wedding reception, in the background plays a copyrighted song, your cousin bob is now criminal, and probably be sued for thousands of dollars and face jail time

    2. Re:WTF is SOPA? by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Also, the blog that cousin Bob embedded the youtube video on is shutdown and the domain confiscated.

    3. Re:WTF is SOPA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't care if Youtube goes dark because somebody posted copyrighted content? You wouldn't care if Etsy disappeared because one person out of thousands misrepresented products? You don't care if Slashdot vanishes because somebody here posted an excerpt of a copyrighted work and the owner complained?

    4. Re:WTF is SOPA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > in the background plays a copyrighted song, your cousin bob is now criminal

      Yes, ignorance of the law is no defence against the law.

      STOP CONSUMING THEIR MEDIA. That's how you render them powerless.

  38. Re:Do something - When? by jginspace · · Score: 1

    The only true solution will be point-to-point community networks. ( mainly neighborhood wifi mesh )Get rid, and get around, the need for a link to the 'public internet' except for perhaps your online banking and buying stuff from amazon.

    Oh great. And here we are in 2012 and only half the Linux distros I try can connect to a Windows XP ad-hoc network. I've never seen a demonstration of hetrogenous Linux distros connecting in a 'wifi mesh'.

  39. the government corporation by 7311587 · · Score: 1

    It was interesting that the politicians got 21 million for the act and 5 million against. That is a great money making model for the politicians in the government. They just have to come up with proposals that are zero sum and hurt some company's business and help others. Then the companies will be motivated to bid for or against the law. The more damaging the law to some companies the more money they can make.

  40. Not surprising by jessiej · · Score: 1

    158 Corporations and $21 Million shouldn't be a surprise. It's the status quo for US politics.

    SOPA is just one of the many pieces of legislation being bought and paid for by corporations. So after you write your senators and representatives, go to http://movetoamend.org/ and sign the petition to end corporate personhood!

  41. Re:Do something - When? by nurb432 · · Score: 2

    I think the key will be to use ones router for this for 'stable coverage'. Not actual computers. But, i suppose i could see it being handy on phones, to extend the range ...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  42. This is Country Music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With apologies to Brad Paisley (or should he apologize to us?):

    You're not supposed to break the Internet
    For a song,
    And tellin' folks that SOPA is the answer
    Can rub 'em wrong,
    It ain't hip to to fight for laws
    to shut down sites for no good cause
    'Cause someone says it's theft (might not be true),
    But this is country music
    And we do.

    ...

    So turn it off,
    Shut it down,
    And go along
    This is real
    We'll take your rights
    For our songs

    This is country music

  43. Who says money cant buy votes? by dontgetshocked · · Score: 1

    I got more money than you,pick me!

  44. Congress has a 9% approval rating... by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the bill will be passed regardless of what you think/want. A Majority of Americans wanted single payer healthcare; Congress shot it down. A Majority of Americans were against the bank bail out. Congress passed it through.

    I don't really have a solution. The problem is we're too balkanized. It's easy to divide and conquer. Blacks & Whites. Gays and Straights. Union & non-Union. Hell, a good friend of mine is vehemently anti-Union. He just described to me how the non-Union guys at his work got a pay cut so the Union guys could get a pay raise. He didn't even notice the company was pitting the non-Union against the Union, let alone ask why BOTH groups didn't get a raise...

    The only way to win is not to play. Don't have children. If you do; only have one. If there's fewer rats in the race you've got to keep the ones you got alive. Aside from that I'll keep plugin away with my liberal/progressive agenda on /. and hope for the best...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Congress has a 9% approval rating... by stdarg · · Score: 2

      He just described to me how the non-Union guys at his work got a pay cut so the Union guys could get a pay raise. He didn't even notice the company was pitting the non-Union against the Union, let alone ask why BOTH groups didn't get a raise...

      Do you really think it was the company's idea to do that, and not the union's? That seems unlikely.

      The only way to win is not to play. Don't have children. If you do; only have one.

      It's the total opposite. The only way to win is to have more children and make them good citizens who care about each other.

  45. Fascist States of America by Artemis3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Calling them fake is ignorant at best. First, China makes the "genuine" ones; then they make "non genuine" of varying qualities, starting from identical, all down to rip-off. Also, you can make them stamp anything on them, starting from an identical logo, subtle variations to avoid "counterfeit" claims in different countries, down to generic or whatever you want written on them. These variations have different prices and levels of legality (within China). They will officially deny to stamp "Sony" in some random electronic equipment, but if you are willing to pay, it can be done. Kinda defeats the saving of buying a cheap alternative in the first place? You decide, but people is stupid enough to buy for brands.

    Many times I'd rather buy a Chinese labelled device because at least the price is fair, some people do try to sell you bad quality but brand stamped stuff; when instead you could buy good quality but generic Chinese brand instead. Indeed, you can buy in Hong Kong super expensive brands, or cross the street and obtain very high quality same brand stamped "non genuine" product. Knowing to recognise which is which can be very hard, sometimes they copy packaging, stickers and such very well; and normally that doesn't matter there because it has the fair (much lower price) while keeping the same quality very often.

    What I hate is when they try to sell you a counterfeit with almost the same price of the genuine, or sometimes just a little cheaper. Software is silly, "counterfeit" price is 0$ in the net, but fakes are sold online for 25$ or such, sometimes with good enough packaging, aluminium (plant pressed) CDs etc for software meant to cost 100$, 500$ etc.

    Does these justify blocking of sites? the Bill is a blacklist, how do you fall on it or how do you get out of it is shady at best. Further, the State is not even enforcing it directly (like China or Iran), it passes the responsibility to the ISPs. This means they will rather block in excess rather than infringe the law; and many will be falsely accused and promptly disconnected in fear.

    Iran is requiring full ID before using the net, and America is not far from that. China forbids cryptographic connections, America will get there as well, because this gets in the way of proper deep packet inspection; and only criminals have something to hide... Soon enough dissent will get banned, it is too easy to make a site go down by having agents post links to blacklisted sites; and this way the establishment cannot be accused. See? Americans are much more refined than China and Iran, while achieving the same.

    Of course, the countries who do not implement these laws become "source of terrorism", blah, blah lets invade (war helps the economy, stupid).

    --
    Artix
    Your Linux, your init.
    1. Re:Fascist States of America by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Wellllll now, often the "non genuine" ones are a batch that failed to get through quality control and should have been destroyed, but are sold out the back. Or if there is a group that has an extra run that they're selling on the side, they simply bypass quality control, because it's not their name on the line. So it's not quite as simple as paying extra for a brand. Where quality isn't vital, I go for cheap too.

  46. philip morris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why is philip morris on this list. Thye are owned by parent company that own kraft and miller/coors. None of these are affected by downloading harry potter.

    1. Re:philip morris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bootleg cigs are big business.

  47. What's in your wallet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lowly MasterCard debit card I carry sees an ATM far more often than it does a cash register. I don't even carry a Visa card anymore. Discover and American Express are notably missing from the SOPA supports list, which is good enough for me.

    Large issuers such as Citi and Bank of America do offer AmEx cards, call them and ask about switching over your Visa/MasterCard line.

    We can do the same with Visa and MasterCard that was done to GoDaddy. Vote the SOPA cards out of your wallet!

  48. And this is beyond the United States by lsolano · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that we've overlooked the fact that SOPA will affect laws in many countries with Free Trade Agreements with the US.

    So, there could not be easy solutions to this stupid thing like moving datacenters out of the US. This SOPA thing is indeed an abomination.

    Anyway, technology will always have a way. I know that. I still remember when the music industry, in its world of fantasy, thought that blocking the transfers of MP3s was a solution for music piracy.

  49. This says it all (MUST READ) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJIuYgIvKsc -15 minutes but worth it.
    http://onecandleinthedark.blogspot.com/

  50. A 5-year Mission? by Turbine2k5 · · Score: 2

    Maybe this'll just end up like "A Taste of Armageddon" and we'll kill ourselves.

    --
    I can't think of a good sig, so I'll pirate yours.
  51. Please explain to me.,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Soo if i am a congressmen who gets money from a company so i change my opinion on something after i received the money thats corruption.

    But if i am a congressmen who has a Opinion on something BEFORE i receive the money its legal?

    If so, america might have a teeny tiny bit of high level ultra corruption going on...sooo...little adivse to americans. Move to a less corrupt country Europe seems nice this time of year. Got loads of countries to choose from.

  52. Re:Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jesus-Fucking-Christ. What the fuck is wrong with you?

    You need to get out of your basement and actually live in the world and learn how it actually works.

    American needs an enema, you seem to be just another turd thats in dire need of flushing.

  53. Require elected officials to wear endorsements by Slashdot+Assistant · · Score: 1

    Much of this donation information is available, but not very visible to the average voter.

    Require all elected officials to wear a cloak, on to which the total amount of money received in the last six months is printed, and have logos pasted on to represent donations received over x amount of dollars. It'd be cool, like NASCAR, but serving a purpose. Some of these guys are going to need cloaks longer than a royal wedding dress train.

  54. Acceptance by symbolset · · Score: 1

    I believe it's time to accept that these stupid laws will be passed no matter how offensive they are, no matter how destructive to freedom of speech. Workarounds should be in progress now.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Acceptance by Turnerj · · Score: 1

      With things like politicians accepting money to support legislation, my general rule is don't trust people.

      Time to rebuild the internet.

  55. Seconds by tepples · · Score: 1

    Even products coming from the same assembly line might be "slightly irregular" and thus not worthy of the maker's mark.

  56. Boycott... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I would live to see a company like Google post some basic information about SOPA on their core search page, with a link to companies that are supporting it.
    Get that out in the public, and let them start boycotting products from them, and then you'll have their attention...

    Probably too late at this point, but I would still love to see it.

  57. This isn't considered bribery? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Hey mister senator pal... Here's some money if you lean the way I want you to."

    Am I the only one that sees a problem with that? We need average joe's running this country. Not people who get million dollars "donations" to vote one way or another. Eliminate lobbying!

    1. Re:This isn't considered bribery? by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is bribery. But in the USA, this is the norm. Especially with media companies. And that has a history. Back in the days when publishing cost a lot of money, it may have actually made sense to let the industry regulate itself. Today, it regulates Joe Average, though.

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
  58. Boycotting a monopolist by tepples · · Score: 1

    When a service has become an alleged necessity analogous to electric power or running water, and only one provider provides this service, how does one either A. not pay the provider or B. survive without the necessity?

    1. Re:Boycotting a monopolist by J'raxis · · Score: 1

      They're not a monopoly providing Internet service. They're a monopoly providing cable TV, and they've also, as of late, gotten into the Internet business. Satellite and dialup are available almost anywhere.

    2. Re:Boycotting a monopolist by tepples · · Score: 1

      [Cable ISPs are] not a monopoly providing Internet service.

      They are for people who can't get DSL and whose job requires high-speed Internet access.

  59. Move by tepples · · Score: 1

    The issue is, most people don't seem to realize that there IS a company like RCN which has 0 bandwidth caps, no history of filtering or other net neutrality issues, and offers great speeds at often cheaper prices than competition.

    Either that or they don't want to move their entire family to a city where a company like RCN offers service.

  60. Single digit GB per month cap by tepples · · Score: 1

    We're currently working on cancelling our TWC in full, not only replacing the wired internet with wireless, but switching to internet-only powered TV

    How are you going to use IPTV with the single digit GB per month caps that satellite and cellular Internet providers typically impose?

  61. Re:Get over it by tepples · · Score: 1

    Except that taking payments for endorsements is illegal.

    Or at least it was until Citizens United.

    or at least shouldn't, in a perfect world

    The perfect system of things is coming, but it won't be ruled by men.

  62. Re:Get over it by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    If they got no salary, and no "campaign donations" either, they'd vote exactly the same way.

    Question for you: who do you think wrote the SOPA legislation, and where do you think it was done?

  63. For certain definitions of democracy by F69631 · · Score: 1

    Democracy was created thousands of years ago in Europe

    I guess you're referring to ancient Athens, where a subset of adult male citizens were allowed to vote on certain matters. Not only was the people allowed to vote a very exclusive group but the population didn't have many rights that we currently associate with democratic societies. Whether you count Athens as a democracy or not, it's certainly not the first one. Many primitive tribes operated through consensus, which makes it essentially certain that at least Africa invented actual democracy well before Europe.

    1. Re:For certain definitions of democracy by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >which makes it essentially certain that at least Africa invented actual democracy well before Europe.

      Just to pick a minor nit. Consensus government is not democracy but a form of anarchism or libertarianism. Nearly all socialist-libertarians and certainly all anarchists believe that government by consensus is the only form that can be held as valid.

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      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  64. Re:Get over it by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

    Yeah, you just got trolled. Good job replying, fool. Sheep. Moron.

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    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  65. Vote with your wallet by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

    I have a Ford Focus I am very happy with, but I'm writing to Ford to let them know if SOPA passes I won't be buying Ford again (of course my Focus is only a year old though, so I can't say I'm going out an purchasing a Toyota next week). GoDaddy was an easy company to boycott, but make it clear you intend to vote with your wallet when it comes to any of these companies. Plus, as we've seen with GoDaddy, companies really do consider the opinions of their consumers, at least more-so than congressmen (who seem to ignore us entirely). Yes, those who care about SOPA are quite a minority of Ford customers compared to GoDaddy, but it doesn't take much time to make your voice heard.

  66. Americans for Tax reform... pro regulation? by xmorg · · Score: 2

    "ATR works to increase transparency in the regulatory process and opposes any attempt to restrict free market options absent deliberate and comprehensive debate. "

    -lol, hypocrites.

  67. No Corporations by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a goddamn crime that the list of those supporting this heinous, un-American tyranny is topped with giant corporations. Multinational corporations. Foreign corporations.

    These foreign non-people should have absolutely no influence over the laws set by the government of the United States. The legitimate government is by, of and for the people, not the people's property like corporations.

    The Constitution does not give the government any power to represent corporations. But even from the beginning the Constitution has needed amendments that spelled out for corrupt government officials the limits to its power that were not already spelled out: the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights shouldn't have been necessary, because the powers it prohibits aren't granted in the original document. But obviously it was necessary; obvious when it was written and passed, and obvious ever since as it must be constantly invoked when government reaches across its bounds. It's clear by now that we need to amend the Constitution to spell out that corporations aren't people. That they don't have rights, that the government can restrict their actions with the existing powers government has.

    There is already such an amendment in the works. Closing in on 200,000 people have already signed on supporting it. You should too. If you're a person, anyway. Why suffer being a second class citizen behind corporations that aren't even people?

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    make install -not war

    1. Re:No Corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly! this is really the root of the problem. SOPA and PIPA are just the consequence. You can let the steam out all you want folks, but these two are passing.
      I signed this, and so should you..

  68. Convenient... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now that corporations have been declared "people" -- the term "WTF!?!?" still comes to mind when I think of that -- and our economy is doing so poorly that every normal person (i.e. people who aren't elected officials who can vote to give themselves raises) has to work that much harder to make ends meet such that we don't even have time to protest SOPA properly or add money to our cause. So, these companies (who by far don't represent the average citizens) are basically taking advantage of our own economic hardship by trying to impose things on us which we don't approve of.

    Firstly, it's underhanded. Yes, I know: "no, duh?" -- they're corporations, right? This is what they DO... But as for those companies against SOPA, I hope they make some more of a stir because if something isn't done soon, it's easy to see how this will turn out. I'm actually somewhat curious if this will end up like prohibition if it passes though. If people really see the effect of it and start railing against these companies, they'll have no choice but to reverse it. I mean, it does border on bringing us closer to nations like China which don't seem to care at all about individual freedoms or privacy rights on the internet. In addition, we will certainly have the problem of having too many people in prisons for almost no reason -- especially seeing as I've actually NEVER MET another human being who hasn't pirated something in their lives. As if our legal system isn't overrun with enough b.s., now we're going to overwhelm it with more. Great job!

    I'm curious, will the water go clockwise or counterclockwise when the U.S. finally flushes itself down the tubes...

  69. The People's Lobby by jmactacular · · Score: 1

    Since it is about money, I had an idea. Why do we have to limit our votes to a person? Why can't they be for specific issues?

    I thought about creating a website, even registered a domain, peoplelobby.org, where you could create an issue, and allow people to vote. They could donate $1 per vote. Then the site would donate all of those funds for that issue to the most relevant legislator's campaign if and when they vote accordingly. With all the rules and "super-pacs" out there, is this idea legal?

    What do you guys think?

  70. United Corporations of America by ks*nut · · Score: 1

    They should just go ahead and change the name. The days of individual rights are numbered.

  71. Dreamhost by phorm · · Score: 1

    I have a dreamhost account for some basic web-stuff. I recently got a letter from them basically stating that SOPA is a big floating turd and that they're fully against it.

  72. Time for the nuclear option by jonwil · · Score: 1

    Web sites have been talking about blacking out their front pages for 24 hours to get the point across. The time for talk is passed. With votes on SOPA due soon, now is the time for these sites to act.

    Take Facebook for example. They have millions of users in the US (I cant find an exact figure). If Facebook replaced their front page (including the front page as seen through the various mobile devices and apps) so that it basically said "The US government is currently debating a new law that will force web sites like Facebook to shut down. Please write your congressmen and senators and tell them to vote NO on SOPA" and said it in a way that even normal people can understand (and included a link to a site to make it simple to find out how to contact their representatives), it might actually get enough of the population to sit up and take notice. An awful lot of people are going to care if they cant update their Facebook status anymore and cant send tweets and cant watch funny videos on YouTube.

    1. Re:Time for the nuclear option by Turnerj · · Score: 1

      I agree. Have large warnings on sites that will be affected by SOPA could do it. I would really like to see it happen though, not just be talk.

  73. Dear Ford, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a Michigan resident, I really appreciate you not taking bail-out money like your Detroit counterparts. I intended to make a commitment to purchase on of your vehicles in the near future, however, your support of SOPA has changed my mind. Once again, I will be buying a foreign car.

    Sincerely,

    A Former Customer

  74. Why? What do they get out of it? by Altheron · · Score: 2

    I can understand the motivation for a content producer to "protect" their "property"... (This is their logic, not mine.)

    I'm just having a hard time figuring out what a cosmetics company, or a shoe company, give two shits about this.

    Is it really just to force negative press / reviews offline? Does SOPA even give that power?

    If not that, then... why throw money at it?

    (Nike and Ford both make software.. so.. MAYBE.... BUT.. Estee Lauder? I'm pretty sure they don't...)

  75. VOTE THEM ALL OUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Folks, there is already an "American's Elect" organisation. Let's rally around the idea that NOBODY vote for any Republican or Democrat in 2012. Let's do a votethemallout.org.

    One of two things is likely to happen:

    #1 Both parties get nailed hard in the next election. Politicians learn their place.

    #2 Both parties hang on to power by altering the vote (see Hacking Democracy). Evidence is collected, and corrupt politicians are charged with crimes and incarcerated.

    1. Re:VOTE THEM ALL OUT! by morgauxo · · Score: 1

      Yeah right. Get the American people to stop voting for the lizards? I'll do my part and vote third party (if I can find a third party that isn't running on a platform of 'the same as the other two but even more extreme'). Or maybe I'll just try to write somebody in. How do you do that anyway?

      But expect enough people to actually do this that it matters? Yeah right! Most Americans feel that it is an unchangeable fact of life that either a Republican or a Democrat will be get elected to every office. They all have their ideas that one is somehow better or at least less evil than the other and that if they vote for anyone else they are 'wasting' their vote since they are voting for someone who has no chance anyway.

  76. What to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I think half the reason for the NDAA and the other "terrorize American" bills is the fact that less popular than Ebola Congress is well aware of the fact that a great many people are sooner than later no longer going to accept them as legitimate with predicable results. SOPA is part of it but its all about 1% shafting everyone else.

    They figure with a sufficient security state they can save their lousy skins and those of the bribery artists from the usual consequences allocated to groups who are considered traitors by the next group.

    Other parts of this bill are about getting more money from a broke populace. Big content figures that people will be forced to buy there swill if they can't pirate it. I doubt this will help, 100% of a broke persons money is still zero.

      Of course SOPA and its ilk do have an upside, making young people angry, very angry . When they happen (probably small chance they might not) and the Feds cutoff the free distraction and the pr0n and all and people are liable to need new distractions, Between that and the drug shortages maybe people will come out of their stupor and maybe they can be induced to join some political cause and get active. That might not help but if it fails, well there are always options.

    As for the topic at hand, we need to write letters, vote in every primary, write letters to corporations and avoid buying from supporters, This may mean dead tree letters as the Congress-Things are rather old too so be aware and get with that rusty handwriting ....

    Beyond defeating these bills we need to lock the revolving door and find mean to shut off the money spigot. This will not be easy as doing so will require removal of the authority of the lower courts from the bill (perfectly Constitutional BTW) and stacking the Supreme Court Roosevelt style which hold considerable risks.

    There are tons of ideas good and bad along those lines but that not germane now.

  77. Planned blackout of facebook, twitter etc.. by w0mprat · · Score: 1
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    After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
  78. BBS Anyone? by CayceeDee · · Score: 2

    Is anybody else missing the old days of the BBS. Maybe its time to take a small step backward to ensure our freedom.

  79. Voices are worthless. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So it has officially come to this: a bill will be passed solely based on donations made for support by corporations, in full view of the nation. Are there no laws against buying votes? If not, why not?

    I am all for making money, I strongly support a capitalist system, but when the freedoms of citizens are quite literally being sold to the highest bider... well... I have a problem with that. A big problem.

  80. Re:1-800 Contacts? Really? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

    Sent to comcast:

    Hello,

    This is addressed to Rick Germano, Senior Vice President of Customer Operations, and anyone else responsible for decision making at the corporate level.

    It has come to my attention that Comcast is supporting H.R. 3261, also known as SOPA.

    I'm sure that I am not the only customer who would be appalled by this support, should it be brought to their attention and the repercussions SOPA's passing would have. SOPA would be ineffective at it's stated purpose (reduction/elimination of media and/or software piracy), while at the same time opening the door to a wide range of abuse - similar to the recent DMCA abuses committed by Universal (via Youtube takedowns). This would make the inappropriate seizure of DNS domain names by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) look minor in comparison.

    If you are not familiar with this piece of proposed legislature, I strongly advice you educate yourself and your colleagues as this will have vast repercussions from the perspective of an ISP and content provider.

    I have been happy as a Comcast customer since I opened my account - and I hope Comcast's support of SOPA (H.R. 3261) will not cause this to change.

    Thank you,
    <snip>
    Comcast Account: <snip>

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    For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
  81. To which company do you refer? by tepples · · Score: 1

    I looked at the SOPA supporters list in the article and didn't see any DSL company that I immediately recognized. To which company do you refer?

    1. Re:To which company do you refer? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      I never said it would be a DSL company that supports SOPA. But you may have other reasons for not supporting the DSL provider.

    2. Re:To which company do you refer? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Once you give up land-line, cable, satellite, and cell phones, you might as well join the Amish. And as I understand it, the Amish lifestyle is not exactly on-topic on an IT news discussion site like this one.

  82. Boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All companies that I will cease buying merchandise from. I'd strongly urge others who oppose SOPA to do the same.