As long as you don’t examine the details, the Stop Online Piracy Act (HR 3261) might sound like a good idea. Many people agree that using illegal copies of movies or music is a bad idea.
That’s the reason we have copyright laws, and that’s the reason you see that FBI warning about illegal reproduction of copyrighted works at the beginning of a DVD. But the SOPA bill now under consideration by the House Judiciary Committee seems hell-bent on stopping piracy by stopping the Internet. After all, if there’s no way to use the Internet, then such piracy would be impossible.
For example, the government would be able to force anyone with a Domain Name System (DNS) server to stop providing name services to alleged piracy sites. These orders would not require proof, and the requests could originate from anyone. So under the proposed act, it’s conceivable that Apple could decide that the Android Marketplace is a pirate site, and force it to be removed from DNS servers and shut down.
And that’s the problem with the current bill. It features a complete lack of understanding of how the Internet works, a total lack of understanding of the technology behind the Internet, and a disregard of some basic constitutional protections. It looks like the Republican-led committee got a big wet kiss from the recording industry and has become so smitten it believes everything the industry says, disregarding other opinions.
This is evidenced by the fact that five of the six witnesses testifying before the committee Nov. 16 hearing were backers of the bill. Only one company opposing the bill, Google, was invited. The nonpartisan public interest group, OpenCongress, called the hearings a “sham,” and a “love fest.”
“The hearing was very disappointing,” Tech Freedom Senior Fellow Larry Downes told eWEEK. “The witness list was not balanced. Five out of six of the witnesses strongly support the bill,” Downes explained. “The bill will regulate a wide range of actors in the ecosystem, and none were represented in the hearing.”
The only witness opposing the SOPA bill was Google policy counsel Katherine Oyama. Oyama said that SOPA would undermine existing copyright laws, endanger innocent US businesses and create security risks to Critical US infrastructure by preventing the use of the Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC).
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