Thursday, December 15, 2011

SOPA: Washington vs. The Web

Zach Carter, Huffingtonpost, Dec. 14, 2011
From the article: "SOPA would imbue the federal government with broad powers to shut down whole web domains on the basis that it believes them to be associated with piracy -- without a trial or even a traditional hearing. It would provide Hollywood with powerful new legal tools to stifle transactions with websites whose existence worries the movie industry.  The bill's supporters, which also include major record labels, trial lawyers and pharmaceutical giants, call SOPA a robust effort to curb piracy of American goods online. Opponents, however, have castigated it as an unparalleled attack on free speech online. Civil liberties advocates say SOPA would give the U.S. government the same censorship tools used in China. Those in the technology sector warn that the bill creates enormous new barriers to entry for web startups, threatening innovation and job creation.  Farther afield, librarians say that under the letter of the proposed anti-piracy law, they could be jailed for simply doing their jobs." Read more

See Also
Scott Cleland, Forbes