I was surprised to learn that most people in England are unaware of the Stop Online Piracy Act, a law that the US government intends to pass on December 15. Also know as the E-Parasite, SOPA is internet censorship. The government wants to push this through congress as they're trying to crack down on internet piracy. This doesn't sound like too much of a bad thing, and most of you might think that this would mostly apply to pirated movies uploaded to websites such as MegaVideo. The act states that whoever uploads copyrighted material is now a criminal - it is a federal offence. Oh, and the website that the video got uploaded to, gets taken down. This could mean the deletion of websites such as Facebook, Twitter, and even Youtube. Say an infringed video is uploaded on to a website, the owner/host of that website is legally responsible. This is a massive problem for Youtube, as millions of videos are uploaded to their website every day. Normally, if someone finds a video with copyrighted material, they can flag it and Youtube will investigate it, and if they agree it's copyrighted, the video is taken down. But under this new act, the uploader of the video has broken the law, and the website is deleted completely. After this, search a popular channel on Google, it's been wiped out completely, you can't find it. Shared a video on Facebook? You're a criminal, website taken down.
Now who could possibly support such an act? The majority of support is coming from film studios, who have been losing money since people discovered you could watch and torrent films online. To most people, who would want to spend £10 on a cinema ticket or a DVD when they could watch it or download it for free online?
As you can expect, there has been a huge backlash from the internet who have been protesting on the streets and on social networks in order to get their message across. If this law passes, the government will be so powerful that they can block out the voices against them. They could have the tiniest excuse against a website and take them down anyway. The result could be a virtually broken Internet where some sites exist for half the world and not for the other.
Do we want to have an internet where our favourite websites are taken away from us, and laws so strict that we're afraid to share or view anything?
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That's a bit over-exaggerated isn't it? They're hardly going to shut down youtube because someone posts an infringement! ...are they? :S
ReplyDeleteActually, they are, it's stated in the act that any website where a copyrighted video is uploaded is deleted as it's technically responsible as the host.
ReplyDeleteThey orignally reviewed the 'bill' on the 16th Nov and should be legistated on the 15th Dec, but the "Committee chairman is scheduling the bill for markup on December 15, and that he is still in discussions and is "open for changes" to the bill"
ReplyDeleteSo alot of people don't believe it will be passed or at least a half hearted version to be passed.
Luckily the bill is not passing as is and is up for review. The entertainment industry, which accounts for very little of the overall income of the economy is pushing this forward and they're the ones with the money.
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