House aims to fight online piracy, but its blunderbuss approach would cripple online innovation and chill free expression on the Web."
Don't Kill the Internet
By David Sohn, The Daily Beast
25 November 11
A bill in the House aims to fight online piracy, but its blunderbuss approach would cripple online innovation and chill free expression on the Web.
opyright owners have struggled to find an effective mechanism to fight the
wide-scale online piracy of their intellectual property. Understandably, Congress wants to help. Legislation the House is now considering, however, takes a blunderbuss approach that would cripple online innovation, chill online free expression, subvert the inner workings of Internet security, and compromise user privacy. If Congress were to pass the legislation - and it launched with considerable bipartisan support - lawful businesses, innovators, and Internet users would end up as collateral damage.
The bill in question is called the
Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). It would empower the Justice Department to seek court orders compelling a number of third parties - Internet service providers (ISPs), search engines, financial networks, and ad networks - to take action to cut off "rogue" websites based outside the United States. It also would give every copyright and trademark owner a mechanism to cut off the financial lifeblood of any site the rights owner thinks is facilitating infringement (or even just not doing enough to ferret it out). A simple allegation submitted to financial and advertising networks would be sufficient to start the process, and a lawsuit could follow if necessary.
What's wrong with all that? For starters, the bill's definitions of what constitute "rogue" sites are so broad that they could sweep in all kinds of
lawful social networking platforms, cloud storage services, and online communications tools. Any site that allows users to participate by posting, commenting, or uploading material would be at risk of getting entangled in the bill's wide regulatory net. Indeed, a site could be declared "dedicated to theft" even if it has no intent whatsoever to foster piracy, the site's principal uses are perfectly lawful, and the site scrupulously removes pirated material when notified about it as directed under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
Nor does a site have to be located outside the US - and hence beyond the reach of ordinary copyright enforcement lawsuits--to be targeted. Even domestic sites would be at constant risk of allegations by whatever copyright or trademark owners are the most aggressive and litigious.
This would have a tremendous impact on online innovation. Current digital copyright law strikes a careful balance: sites must take swift action when notified of specific illegal activity. In return, they get a predictable legal environment in which they won't be held liable for infringing activity of their users. This is what has allowed YouTube and other user-generated content sites to flourish.
SOPA would eviscerate that predictable legal environment. It would effectively give every copyright and trademark owner a big club with which to threaten any new technology or feature that it thinks doesn't do enough to police possible infringing uses. And the history here is instructive: copyright holders have frequently responded to new technologies with legal challenges, from the VCR to the mp3 player and many since.
Pervasive monitoring would also undermine the privacy of user communications. SOPA would make it very risky for any online service to offer privacy features. Offering any kind of encrypted communications channel would be a non-starter.
Moreover, it isn't just websites that would be required to police user behavior. The bill ropes in ISPs as well, directing them to "prevent access" to targeted sites. Having ISPs sift through all user traffic requires the same kind of privacy robbing "deep packet inspection" that has proved highly unpopular in the advertising context.
Finally, SOPA directs ISPs to interfere with the Internet's mechanism for looking up Web addresses. As a tactic for preventing users from accessing piracy sites, that simply
won't work. For example, users would still be able to enter an IP address manually or install a browser plug-in that will always know where to look for the site. But messing with the Internet's address lookup system carries significant
technical and cybersecurity consequences.
Beyond all these immediate shortcomings, passage of SOPA would set a dangerous international precedent. It would signal that the United States believes that when governments have a concern that content posted somewhere on the Internet violates domestic law, they should look to online communications platforms as points of control. If other countries follow the US example in pursuit of whatever domestic goals they may have - be it fighting infringement, hate speech, or political dissent - it will lead directly to a balkanized Internet.
When the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the bill last week, one congressional supporter dismissed the opposition, saying, "The obstinate
opposition since the day [SOPA was introduced] is really about the bottom line. Sites that specialize in stolen goods attract lots of users and lots of ads." But that claim rings hollow given the broad array of groups aligned
against the bill. And as the hearing cast a spotlight on the issue, the Internet lit up in a major display of
grassroots protest.
Congress should heed the warning. Of course reducing online piracy is an important goal. But Congress needs to find ways of pursuing that goal that don't risk so much collateral damage.
Comments
NEVER VOTE REPUBLICAN !!
The Robert Kennedy Jr. article was good too: the internet is the only hope to counter the lies of right-wing media.
Although the economy is horrid - the GOP acts as if they the 2 unfunded wars + tax cuts has nothing to do with it. Listening to their debates and comments on the air -- I canNOT imagine any of them as president of the USA.
But we (each of us) has to actively promote President Obama's good points and what he has accomplished.
The Supremes 2010 "unconstitutiona l" decision about "person hood" - will allow the GOP/TP to LIE on the TV, Internet, radio and every which way. We have to SPEAK out and go door to door if necessary or stand on street corners with signs against the GOP.
Register early + mail-in ballots and get all minorities to do the same (in your areas)
This is all about turning off the ability of the people to communicate and organize against fascism.
SOPA should be renamed: Defense of Repressive Fascism, or DORF.
Go Wisconsin. Go OWS. Down with Police militant violence funded by the Koch Brothers (in NY at least -- maybe elsewhere)
''Where the people are many and their hands are all empty, Where the pellets of poison are flooding their waters Where the home in the valley meets the damp dirty prison, Where the executioner’s face is always well hidden'' Bob Dylan/Hard Rain
The American Public cannot be stopped. When the GOP/TP unplug the last electrical wire in an effort to save their sorry asses there will still me a "Mic Check".
We should all still wrote and call our Washington Representatives and Senators but the message is now this: "We the People....are unstoppable. We no longer make our call to beg you to stop breaking one Constitutional Guarantee after another. What We the People are doing now is telling you to STOP being Criminals!
Next stop OWS "K" Street, Washington D.C.!
If this bill becomes law,soon independent press for reporting wrongdoing by politicians could be a victim too and of course WIkileaks and others similar.! How we will know about Bradley Manning and / or the atrocities of Blackwater,whic h by the way never received the critics or rejection by Congres . The idiots that somebody mentioned here are both ,Republican and Democrats.
Let the Repugs and demo unit into a new Whig party if you are to believe th eilk of Chris Mathews,,,who seems to think a person needs to choose between either the left or the right ...and not waste you vote on some third party candidate that may only poll about 35%! Dang, sounds like the left is afraid of a third party. Are not "Indpendents" to ever be represented,...Can only hope that some thing grows out of the OWS movement and becomes a reeasonable choice to the two existing wings of the Wasghington Insiders Party that we have been stuck with my entire life. Senators if you are reading any of this...Kill the Internet Bill...(p.s. you dems do have enough votes to block it from ever coming to your floor.
The public is distracted by the holiday shopping season, Congress is eager to adjourn, and the winter weather means fewer demonstrations and police attacks to cover. The Occupy and progressive movements depend on the Internet to get the word out.
Next in the crosshairs: Net neutrality.