Ugh. That is false- as the Tom's Hardware article explained it, SOPA "would deny site owners due process of law, by initiating a DNS blacklisting based solely on a good faith assertion by an individual copyright or intellectual property owner." Websites may be notified and given a chance to explain, but not until after they've been blacklisted. In any case, the government should not have DNS blacklisting capabilities no matter what the target is.Love4Boobies wrote:That's not true at all. In fact, websites are even notified and given the chance to explain whether their content is indeed a violation or not.Rusky wrote:SOPA's problems are not just technical- all it takes is a "good faith" request from ANY party and a website can be cut off with no process whatsoever, including an investigation into the legitimacy of the claim.
SOPA's supporters use these kinds of good ideals the way you accuse its opponents of "throwing [the word 'censorship'] about because they hope others will react to their invalid arguments," forming a straw man that its opponents are "silly and morally wrong." This unconstitutional legislation will do nothing to stop piracy- only give the media industries and the government far more power than they should have.Love4Boobies wrote:My reasoning behind supporting copyright, DRM, and proprietary software is the following: Authors should be free to put whatever restrictions they want on their work given the fact that they don't force anyone to use it. Complaining is like saying "I want SomeWork but I want the authors to distribute it using the terms I want." Well, that's just silly and morally wrong.
More information:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news ... -worse.ars
http://americancensorship.org/#quotes
A very relevant quote from the first article:
SOPA and PIPA don't just have implementation problems. They are massive efforts by dying industries that want the government to protect their outdated business model, and who don't care who else they ruin in the process. There will most definitely be a loss of liberty if they pass.The bill gives government lawyers the power to go to court and obtain an injunction against any foreign website based on a generally single-sided presentation to a judge. Once that happens, Internet providers have 5 days to “prevent access by its subscribers located within the United States to the foreign infringing site.”