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 3)
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on Jan 19, 2012

They will push this thru in the future. Its more like we need a law to protect internet freedom. They will keep trying and trying.

on Jan 19, 2012

myfist0
They will push this thru in the future. Its more like we need a law to protect internet freedom. They will keep trying and trying.

then we need a law to protect Free Speech oh wait, we have that  it's the constitution .. apparently it isn't stopping them from trying to rewrite it.. so making a law to protect internet freedom wouldn't work...

what needs to happen is people need to wake the Phuck up and stop letting government and Big Corporations trying to rewrite what meany men and women have died for OUR CONSTITUTION.

 

why isn't the owner and/or CEO of CBS in prison, cause the nation is too busy being sheep and the Government is too busy being Bought by Big Corporations.

see Video post 28

 

Wake up sleeping Nation... 

on Jan 19, 2012

DisturbedComputer
then we need a law to protect Free Speech oh wait, we have that it's the constitution .. apparently it isn't stopping them from trying to rewrite it.. so making a law to protect internet freedom wouldn't work...

 

So true and so sad.

on Jan 19, 2012

For anyone who missed the basics of what's at stake with SOPA, here's the official explanation of it by some of its major objectors.  Good video, short and easy to follow.

http://fightforthefuture.org/pipa

on Jan 21, 2012

I just got an email back from the anti-SOPA group I petitioned with Doc and here's the link to the results of the protest. Really interesting stuff.

on Jan 21, 2012

DisturbedComputer
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

No. Illogic shall not prevail: https://forums.wincustomize.com/415322/page/2/#3060156

 

on Jan 21, 2012

Doc, do you believe that the upper management at CBS was oblivious to the fact that they were the sole supplier of Limewire, the number one peer to peer file sharing software in use after the Napster ruling?

Are we to believe that they were asleep at the wheel and unaware that CBS employees were promoting the software as a program to download copyrighted music off the Internet for free? Not only did CBS promote file sharing, they also distributed DRM removal software and promoted the use of it on their website.

While the conspiracy to take over the net may be a bit far fetched, there is no way that CBS management would have allowed this to transpire without a monetary gain or an ulterior motive.

on Jan 21, 2012

I have to agree with CarGuy. There is something very weird there.

on Jan 21, 2012

I notice the logo for CBS is a big, unblinking eye.  Looks like Illuminati to me.

on Jan 21, 2012

... be careful what you type Sinperium ... it might be true!

on Jan 21, 2012

CarGuy1
Doc, do you believe that the upper management at CBS was oblivious to the fact that they were the sole supplier of Limewire, the number one peer to peer file sharing software in use after the Napster ruling?

Are we to believe that they were asleep at the wheel and unaware that CBS employees were promoting the software as a program to download copyrighted music off the Internet for free? Not only did CBS promote file sharing, they also distributed DRM removal software and promoted the use of it on their website.

While the conspiracy to take over the net may be a bit far fetched, there is no way that CBS management would have allowed this to transpire without a monetary gain or an ulterior motive.

Hanlon's Razor... and Doc's Razor - Don't attribute to conspiracy what might be a simple desire to sell tinfoil.

 

on Jan 21, 2012

I try to not be a conspiracy guy but do question a lot of things that may be considered normal so I guess for a lot of people that automatically lumps in the former.


Read More from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2384913,00.asp

Why would CBS do this???
They should also have their advertising dollars and bank accounts frozen and all sights shut down.

 

Found another good older article 

 http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/item_glszDqoJCb8e6qBvDjeHTL;jsessionid=21D0B1C2B62193D12340734104019CC8

on Jan 21, 2012

To sell tinfoil.

on Jan 21, 2012

DrJBHL
To sell tinfoil.

Not good enough Doc. Sorry

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