Jan 19, 2012

Every other tweet in the last couple of days has been about SOPA and American Censorship Day. 

If you haven't been following tech news closely, you probably have no idea what either of those things mean. 


Here's a breakdown of what's going on and why everyone is so concerned. It's a big deal for tech innovators everywhere. 


What is SOPA? 


SOPA stands for the "Stop Online Piracy Act". It is one of two bills being considered by congress last week. The other is the Protect-IP Act. 



They are well-intentioned. They want to prevent piracy and copyright infringement. But they do so in an overly-aggressive, innovation-endangering way. They allow the entertainment industry to censor sites they feel "engage in, enable or facilitate" infringement. 



The issues with SOPA: 



The Electronic Frontier Foundation describes SOPA as the "blacklist bill" because it would "allow the U.S. government and private corporations to create a blacklist of censored websites, and cut many more off from their ad networks and payment providers." 

That means the Attorney General would have the power to cut off select websites from search engines like Google. It could also cut off advertisers and payment processors like Visa from the sites. The Attorney General could essentially kill all of a site's traffic and revenue in a matter of days. 
SOPA only allows targeted sites five days to submit an appeal. That doesn't leave much time for them to defend themselves before losing their site and their revenue altogether. 
What tech companies and innovators are saying about SOPA: 

The heavy regulation SOPA implies isn't sitting well with many of tech's best and brightest. People from AOL, Twitter, Google, LinkedIn, Zynga, and Facebook have all signed a letter to congress that opposes SOPA. The letter states: 

"Since their enactment in 1998, the DMCA’s safe harbor provisions for online service providers have been a cornerstone of the U.S. Internet and technology industry’s growth and success. While we work together to find additional ways to target foreign 'rogue sites,' we should not jeopardize a foundational structure that has worked for content owners and Internet companies alike and provides certainty to innovators with new ideas for how people create, find, discuss and share information lawfully online.” 

What is American Censorship Day? 

The reason you're reading about SOPA so much is because congress is reviewed both acts last week. As such, EFF, Public Knowledge, Free Software Foundation and Demand Progress have named today American Censorship Day. They're encouraging people all over the web to fight for "Internet freedom." 

What's is the Protect-IP Act?



Watch this video




To learn more about SOPA and American Censorship Day, head over to EFF

To reach out to a congressperson about the bill, check out the Protect The Net Tumblr.

Lifehacker also does an excellent breakdown of everything that's going on with SOPA.

S.O.P.A... the blacklist bill

By: Unknown on: Thursday, January 19, 2012

Jan 5, 2012

On a daily basis I see things like this in my news feed:


I'm not sure what my friends typing these things are trying to accomplish. As far as I know, god doesn't actually have a Facebook account. It's nice that they want to share their prayers with the world, but why?

Anyway, that's not even the reason I'm posting this. It doesn't really bother me that religious people put religious stuff in their FB statuses because I put irreligious stuff in mine. I'd be a real ass to complain about their statuses. 

What bothers me is that this is considered by them to be the epitome of normalcy and carries some kind of implied protection that doesn't extend to anything else on FB.

If I comment on these types of posts it invariably comes down to "stop attacking my beliefs!" or something similar. For that reason I've stopped making comments on things like this.

What really gets me is that if I post a link to a video or a news story or a quote by a famous atheist, it will immediately generate comments from my religious friends about how I should just stop talking about it or how I'm wrong. For instance:


I had to fire back on this one. It's patently ridiculous to propose that everyone in the world must respect your beliefs while continually chiding others for their views. If you want to have the privilege of voicing your opinions then you must extend the same courtesy to others. Also, if you you post something publicly on FB then you have to assume that somebody will have an opinion on it. With that in mind, you are inviting comment by posting it and must therefore be ready to defend it without getting your panties bunched up.

Seriously, stop being such hypocrites, FB people!

Facebook Hypocrisy

By: Unknown on: Thursday, January 05, 2012

 
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