Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • Auto engineers too few or just harder to find?
  • Noted for May 19, 2013
  • These Cloud Stocks Can Fly: Pros
  • Here's How A Successful Lawyer Knew For Sure She Was...
  • Will Ferrell Wants You To Stay Classy In A New '...
  • U.S. pointing a gun at democracy
  • Kidnap victim told cops 'don't let me go'
  • Carlsbad California is Very Nice
  • JPMorgan: Short-Term And Long-Term Considerations
  • Suicide bombings spark violent protest

    The End of the Blog?

    Wed, 01/18/2012 - 11:10 EDT - Baseline Scenario - The Blog
    • commentary
    • Comments
    • Intellectual Property
    • politics
    • Technology

    By James Kwak
    As you may have noticed by now, Wikipedia’s English-language site is (mostly) down for the day to protest SOPA and PIPA, two draconian anti-copyright infringement laws moving through Congress, and Google’s home page looks like this:

    Under existing law (the DMCA), if someone posts copyrighted material in a comment on this blog, the copyright holder is supposed to send me a takedown notice, after which point I am supposed to take the material down (if it is in fact copyrighted).
    SOPA and PIPA are bills in the House and Senate, respectively, that make it much easier for “copyright holders” (like the big media companies that back the bill—or, come to think of it, authors like me) to take action not only against “bad” web sites that make copyrighted material available (against the wishes of the copyright holders), but also against web sites that simply link to such “bad” web sites. For example, the copyright holder can require payment network providers (PayPal, credit card networks) to block payments to such web sites (in either category above) and can require search engines to stop providing advertising for such web sites—simply by sending them a letter. That’s SOPA § 103(b).*
    Another controversial provision is the one in § 102 that allows the Justice Department to order domain name servers to stop translating URLs (like “www.google.com”) into the IP addresses that actually point your browser to the web sites you want to go to—essentially without due process. This has been described by some as tantamount to “breaking the Internet” because it would break the integrity of the domain name system that keeps the Internet organized. (For overviews of the bills, see Brad Plumer and the EFF; for the case that it violates the First Amendment, see Mike Masnick, who quotes extensively from and links to Lawrence Tribe’s argument).
    Naturally, I was wondering how the bill would affect me. Many people think it would impose a requirement that web sites police not only the content they produce themselves, but the content contributed by visitors (e.g., blog comments), and all the content on all the sites they link to (including links in blog comments). I think this is based on § 103(a)(1)(B)(ii)(I) (don’t you love bill numbering?), which puts your site in the wrong if it “is taking, or has taken, deliberate actions to avoid confirming a high probability of the use of the U.S.-directed site to carry out acts that constitute a violation of section 501 or 1201 of title 17, United States Code.” What does it mean to take actions to avoid confirming a high probability that someone is using your site to link to copyrighted material?
    Now, § 103 only allows copyright holders to cut you off from payment networks and advertising, and since we don’t do either one here, I don’t think it would mean the end of The Baseline Scenario. But it could mean the end of every commercial blog, or at least the end of comments on any commercial blog that doesn’t have the staff to police comments and sites linked to in comments. And if it passes, I will at least turn off comments until I can get an opinion from a real IP lawyer whom I trust.
    So if you like the Internet the way it is, tell your representatives that you oppose SOPA and PIPA, via the EFF, Google, or Wikipedia. Thanks.
    (I know it’s been a slow start to the year on the blog. I had a wedding to go to out of the country and an intensive week of edits on an upcoming book. Things should return to normal slowly.)
    * Section 103, in bipartisan Orwellian fashion, is entitled “MARKET-BASED SYSTEM TO PROTECT U.S. CUSTOMERS AND PREVENT U.S. FUNDING OF SITES DEDICATED TO THEFT OF U.S. PROPERTY.” What’s market-based about a system that allows one party to cut off the revenues of another party simply by sending a letter to PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, and American Express?
     

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • Anti-piracy company in Montreal finds itself accused of using pirated images on its own website

      MONTREAL — Chalk this one up as a mildly embarrassing coincidence for the company leading the fight to uncover, and punish, online copyright infringement in Canada. The Montreal-based company has been forced to change the images on its website — upon learning that several had been copied without permission. It was an awkward twist for Canipre, given that the company name stands for Canadian Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement and that it offers “takedown services” on behalf of clients like Hollywood studios.

    • Mish on Capital Account Live TV: Discussion of Money Supply, Inflation, the Fed, SOPA; GOP Chairman Shelves Stop Online Piracy Act - A Triumph for Whom?

      On Thursday I had the pleasure of doing another segment on Capital Account with Lauren Lyster. I come in at about the 3:45 minute mark for much of the rest of the 30 minute session.

    • Anti-piracy firm wants to bring U.S.-style copyright lawsuits to Canada

      Massive lawsuits targeting people who illegally download copyrighted content are common in the U.S., where people have been stuck with hefty fines and out-of-court settlements. Now there’s an attempt to bring that to Canada. At the center of the effort is Canipre, the only anti-piracy enforcement firm that provides forensic services to copyright-holders in Canada.

    • LEAKED: Verizon's New Anti-Piracy Measure Will Give Offenders 6 Chances (VZ)

      If you use BitTorrent or other services to download illegal content and Verizon is your Internet service provider this is something you need to know.

    • Google And Yahoo! Ad Networks Accused Of Helping Finance Online Piracy

    • SOPA, PIPA, Intellectual Property And Netflix

      By New Century: Tensions boiled over as the internet partially shut down last Wednesday, January 18, in protest over SOPA and PIPA, the Congressional bills intended to crack down on online piracy but viewed by many as being potentially invasive and harmful to internet users and the internet itself.

    • Top U.S. Lawmakers Back Mobile Phone Unlocking Bills

      Several prominent lawmakers from both political parties have thrown their support behind legislation to allow consumers to “unlock” their mobile phones, after the White House formally objected to a recent ban on the practice. The ban makes it a federal crime for consumers to unlock newly purchased mobile phones in order to use a different wireless network without their current carrier’s permission.

    • An Interview With Rep. Jared Polis: Why We Need To Stop SOPA

      All across the internet today, websites have gone dark to protest two bills in congress that aim at cracking down on online piracy. However, these bills ? SOPA in the House and PIPA in the Senate ? are widely believed to go too far, netting many law-abiding citizens and websites in their attempt to quash ...

    • What Are SOPA and PIPA And Why All The Fuss?

      ? Knowing that Wikipedia would go dark for 24 hours in protest to SOPA and PIPA, I took the precaution of printing it out last night. Just kidding. Wikipedia is huge. I wanted to say just how big it is, but when I went to to look up ?size of Wikipedia,? all of the??relevant??results directed ...

    • Plain English in Congress

      There's an interesting -- well, sort of interesting -- debate going on at the Finance Committee's mark-up right now. Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.) has an amendment forcing the Senate Finance Committee to delay its vote until a final CBO score of the final legislative language is available. This would essentially delay a vote for three weeks: First the so-called "conceptual language" has to be converted into legislative language. Then the legislative language has to undergo a two- to three-week final scoring process.

    Latest

    Here's How A Successful Lawyer Knew For Sure She Was A Sociopath
    Here's How A Successful Lawyer Knew For Sure...
    It’s Official: Gold Is Now The Most Hated Asset Class
    It’s Official: Gold Is Now The Most Hated Asset...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Aviva steps up drive for cost cuts
    • Food Demand, JM Financial, UK Startups Incubator and Sina in Our News for Today 05/17/2013
    • Budget black hole at heart of George Osborne’s finances

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1667.47 1.02% FTSE: 6723.06 0.52% Nikk.: 15138.12 0.67% DAX: 8398.00 0.33% HSI: 23082.68 0.17% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1821 USD/EUR: 1.2833 JPY/USD: 103.165 Commodities: Gold: 1360.15

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions