Jump to content


No to SOPA and PIPA! It's about freedom


22 replies to this topic

#21 JohnT

    Administrator

  • 8,885 posts
  • Joined: October 07, 2004
  • 231 topics
  • Age: 63
  • Skin: IP.Board
  • Local time: 10:56 AM
  • Zodiac:Gemini
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Dublin California
  • Interests:movies,music,Photography, home repairs, travel
  • OS:Windows 7
  • Country:
Offline
  • Time Online: 7d 1h 21m 9s

Posted 20 January 2012 - 03:59 AM

I signed the Petition, and noted tonight that our fine GOP candidates are against it as well. Glad to see it. I am so sick of NANNY GOVERNMENT. I do believe in the rights of companies to not have their products stolen and fraudulently used (downloaded) but the companies need to sue the individual Internet company and not grandstanding making the internet change to meet their needs.
"We the People are the rightful masters of both Congress and the Courts--not to overthrow the Constitution, but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution." Abraham Lincoln

#22 Broni Re: No to SOPA and PIPA! It's about freedom

    Malware Annihilator

  • 24,883 posts
  • Joined: October 04, 2004
  • 1,860 topics
  • Age: 57
  • Skin: IPBoard wide
  • Local time: 10:56 AM
  • Zodiac:Virgo
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Daly City, CA
  • OS:Windows Vista
  • Country:
Offline
  • Time Online: 57d 11h 50m 50s

Posted 21 January 2012 - 03:40 AM

SOPA sponsor has another Internet bill that records you 24/7


http://www.slashgear...u-247-20210264/

Senator Lamar Smith, lead sponsor of the currently dead SOPA bill you’ve heard so much about, has another bill in the works that uses Child Pornography as a screen to push through an amendment that’ll have your internet service provider tracking all of your financial dealings online. Each time you use a credit card, each time you read your bank statement, all of your IP information and your search history will be required by your ISP to be stored for 18 months at all times. This bill is H.R. 1981 and will have more dire consequences than SOPA or PIPA ever had the potential to have.
Posted Image

What it does is to amend several rules that have to do with Child Pornography and preventing it, the bill itself called the “Protecting Children From Internet Pornographers Act of 2011.” What it also does is to change the U.S. code Chapter 18 section 2703 Required Disclosure of Customer Communications or Records to include a requirement that your internet service provider do the following:[indent]
A commercial provider of an electronic communication service shall retain for a period of at least one year a log of the temporarily assigned network addresses the provider assigns to a subscriber to or customer of such service that enables the identification of the corresponding customer or subscriber information under subsection ©(2) of this section.[/indent]
While it was legal for the government to issue a subpoena for the viewing of the information they speak about here before, it was not part of the law that internet service providers capture or retain that information at any point. In effect, while before the authorities would need to first find a reason for you to need to be watched to get the ISP to start collecting information from you, that information will already exist on file, effectively meaning you’re being watched and recorded even if you’ve done nothing wrong.
Don’t worry though, there’s an additional set of lines that should placate you because it’s so very kind of them to think of:[indent]
(1) to encourage electronic communication service providers to give prompt notice to their customers in the event of a breach of the data retained pursuant to section 2703(h) of title 18 of the United States Code, in order that those effected can take the necessary steps to protect themselves from potential misuse of private information; and
(2) that records retained pursuant to section 2703(h) of title 18, United States Code, should be stored securely to protect customer privacy and prevent against breaches of the records.[/indent]
So don’t worry, your information will be “stored securely” so noone else can access it! But if they do access it, your ISP will give you “prompt notice” so you can change all your credit card numbers, hide your kids, hide your wife, and hide your husband. This bill has currently cleared its committee, this meaning that the next step is a full vote. This bill needs to be stopped, and if I might go one better, Lamar Smith needs to be stopped, for the good of the internet and YOUR privacy.

#23 Broni Re: No to SOPA and PIPA! It's about freedom

    Malware Annihilator

  • 24,883 posts
  • Joined: October 04, 2004
  • 1,860 topics
  • Age: 57
  • Skin: IPBoard wide
  • Local time: 10:56 AM
  • Zodiac:Virgo
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Daly City, CA
  • OS:Windows Vista
  • Country:
Offline
  • Time Online: 57d 11h 50m 50s

Posted 21 January 2012 - 04:05 PM

http://fightforthefuture.org/

Quote

A big hurrah to you!!!!! We’ve won for now -- SOPA and PIPA were dropped by Congress today -- the votes we’ve been scrambling to mobilize against have been cancelled.

The largest online protest in history has fundamentally changed the game. You were heard.

On January 18th, 13 million of us took the time to tell Congress to protect free speech rights on the internet. Hundreds of millions, maybe a billion, people all around the world saw what we did on Wednesday. See the amazing numbers here and tell everyone what you did.

This was unprecedented. Your activism may have changed the way people fight for the public interest and basic rights forever.


The MPAA (the lobby for big movie studios which created these terrible bills) was shocked and seemingly humbled. “‘This was a whole new different game all of a sudden,’ MPAA Chairman and former Senator Chris Dodd told the New York Times. ‘[PIPA and SOPA were] considered by many to be a slam dunk.’”

“'This is altogether a new effect,' Mr. Dodd said, comparing the online movement to the Arab Spring. He could not remember seeing 'an effort that was moving with this degree of support change this dramatically' in the last four decades, he added."

Tweet with us, shout on the internet with us, let's celebrate: Round of applause to the 13 million people who stood up - #PIPA and #SOPA are tabled 4 now. #13millionapplause


Posted Image Posted Image

We're indebted to everyone who helped in the beginning of this movement -- you, and all the sites that went out on a limb to protest in November -- Boing Boing and Mozilla Foundation (and thank you Tumblr, 4chan)! And the grassroots groups -- Public Knowledge, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Demand Progress, CDT, and many more.

#SOPA and #PIPA will likely return in some form. But when they do, we'll be ready. Can you make a donation to Fight for the Future, to help us keep this fire going?

Posted Image

We changed the game this fall, and we're not gonna stop. $8, $20, every little bit helps.

13 million strong,

Tiffiniy, Holmes, Joshua, Phil, CJ, Donny, Douglas, Nicholas, Dean, David S. and Moore... Fight for the Future!


P.S. China's internet censorship system reminds us why the fight for democratic principles is so important:

In the New Yorker: "Fittingly, perhaps, the discussion has unfolded on Weibo, the Twitter-like micro-blogging site that has a team of censors on staff to trim posts with sensitive political content. That is the arrangement that opponents of the bill have suggested would be required of American sites if they are compelled to police their users’ content for copyright violations. On Weibo, joking about SOPA’s similarities to Chinese censorship was sensitive enough that some posts on the subject were almost certainly deleted (though it can be hard to know).
...
After Chinese Web users got over the strangeness of hearing Americans debate the merits of screening the Web for objectionable content, they marvelled at the American response. Commentator Liu Qingyan wrote:

‘We should learn something from the way these American Internet companies protested against SOPA and PIPA. A free and democratic society depends on every one of us caring about politics and fighting for our rights. We will not achieve it by avoiding talk about politics.’"

#######
(press release is here: https://fightforthef...press-releases/)







1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users


This topic has been visited by 19 user(s)