Ramblings of an old Doc

 

Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Lamar Smith (R- TX) announced that the provision requiring ISPs to block access to overseas Web sites accused of piracy has been yanked from SOPA.

This is a major victory for the tech sector since this provision required changes to the Domain Name System (DNS) blocking provision which would have destabilized the web.

"After consultation with industry groups across the country," Smith said in a statement released by his office. "I feel we should remove (DNS) blocking from the Stop Online Piracy Act so that the [U.S. House Judiciary] Committee can further examine the issues surrounding this provision… We will continue to look for ways," Smith continued, "to ensure that foreign Web sites cannot sell and distribute illegal content to U.S. consumers."

This happened because the backers of PIPA reversed their position on the DNS provision in the proposed bill. This reversal came from Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) (chief sponsor of PIPA) which is basically a bill heavily supported by the music and film industries, but both left an ‘out’ in which they stated the DNS provision (which turned the ISP’s into ‘enforcers’) might be reinstated in a modified or different form later. PIPA was blocked from going to the Senate for a vote by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) who also held up COICA last year which caused PIPA to come about.

What they aren’t talking about is whether they would also remove the provision that required an ISP to employ other censoring methods. The proposed bill still requires search engines to remove the suspected pirate sites from their searches and credit card companies and on-line ad services from partnering with them by allowing “rights holders” to seek injunctions to enforce that. In DMCA, “rights holders” already have the ability to demand search engines to stop displaying search results linking to infringing sites. Only the government gets the DNS-blocking powers.

The Government has been invoking asset-forfeiture law to seize generic top level domains of infringing sites (and only after warrants are ordered by a court) in “Operation in Our Sites” in which DHS targeted 128 sites.

The tech sector essentially was unified in its opposition to the DNS provision of SOPA… except for GoDaddy which felt the consumer displeasure for its stand.

The fight is far from over.

Sources:

http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/05/blacklisting-law-advances/

http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/01/dns-sopa-provision/

http://www.zdnet.com/news/dns-provision-pulled-from-sopa-victory-for-opponents/6339421


Comments (Page 2)
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on Jan 16, 2012

on Jan 16, 2012

 

Sinperium
It gives you the idea whose side they are on.

The side which will get them the most money and freebies, of course. You thought otherwise?

on Jan 16, 2012

I think it's best to go for the throat here and try to get something solid that won't allow corporate welfare to Hollywood and big media.

 

I'm all for protecting IP rights, but not on the backs of civil liberties and the innocent.

 

on Jan 16, 2012

Alstein
I think it's best to go for the throat here and try to get something solid that won't allow corporate welfare to Hollywood and big media.

 

I'm all for protecting IP rights, but not on the backs of civil liberties and the innocent.

 

Agreed. Even when legislation is well crafted, there will be problems and exceptional circumstances. The proposed legislation is so faulty however, that it should be scrapped and redone correctly.

on Jan 17, 2012

DrJBHL
it should be scrapped and redone correctly

Implies that shit can be made to taste good.  Not buyin' it.

on Jan 17, 2012

I wish we could just have our Navy SEALs shoot internet pirates too.

on Jan 17, 2012

Implies that shit can be made to taste good.  Not buyin' it.

You probably don't want to buy it, but: http://www.tofugu.com/2011/06/16/japanese-scientists-learn-how-to-make-meat-from-poop/

on Jan 17, 2012

The thing is, if this fails, they'll try again and keep trying- folks have to stay vigilant and militant on this.  The megacorps only have to win once, the citizenry has to win every time.

 

 

on Jan 17, 2012

Probably good for your immune system.  Help protect you against politicians.

 

on Jan 17, 2012

The whole thing has to be killed or they will probably take out the "controversial" portions to pass it, and once they have the framework set up, they will slip all the bad stuff back in there later on... most likely on Christmas eve.

on Jan 17, 2012

Forgot about the go dark protests ... had some good articles to read on my feeds and all I got was the STOP SOPA page.

One of the articles was 'SOPA_Not_Shelved_Hearings_To_Continue_in_February'

on Jan 17, 2012

Come on, Anthony...  Gotta pass the damn thing to know what's in it.

on Jan 18, 2012

wow must see Video.  and if it's true they need to be sued...


the truth at who made the P2P software   CBS needs to FALL

on Jan 18, 2012

Site that have struck because of SOPA today

http://www.sopastrike.com/

on Jan 18, 2012
Mozilla has made it easy to send a letter to your relevant congressmen and congresswomen. http://www.mozilla.org/sopa/?WT.mc_id=strike
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