Tagged with piracy

This war between government and online anarchists must stop

As I mentioned in my last blog post (I’ve got to stop beginning posts like this, it’s just getting annoying now) the hacking collective Anonymous went after a series of major websites last night. This has happened because US authorities have chosen to close down Megaupload in order to clamp down on piracy.

The scale of the arrest is quite huge: each person arrested have been charged with five counts of copyright infringement and conspiracy. This includes the founders who were arrested by local police in Auckland, New Zealand. The maximum jail sentence for copyright infringement? Five years. The maximum jail sentence for conspiracy to commit racketeering and money laundering? Twenty years. This is also all rather timely following the SOPA/PIPA outrage and goes to show that perhaps SOPA/PIPA isn’t needed to go after people who are hosting copyrighted material.

The one major problem of this whole battle between the authorities and online anarchists is that it weakens the prospect of proper dialogue between people who have the power to make laws and citizens. If you thought that the idea of a compromise was a stretch before all this kicked off then it seems like a near-impossibility at this moment in time. The longer that this ‘war’ goes on the less likely we are to make major process on an issue that has polarised politicians, the entertainment industry and internet users for at least a decade.

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SOPA Strike

Boing Boing goes dark

Wikipedia, Boing Boing, Reddit and Not On The Wires have ‘gone dark’  or in the process of ‘going dark’ in protest of SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and PIPA (Protect IP Act). It is really strange to see websites that I use a lot out of action but imagine if that was the case for most websites on the internet.

If the bill is passed in US Congress, any website that infringes copyright law could be taken down by the copyright holder. So, for example, say a video that streams the U2 song Get On Your Boots was uploaded onto YouTube. Why would you? They’re not that great a band. Anyway, I digress. If you do that, the copyright holder could actually lodge a complaint and get the website shut down. All those videos of dogs chasing their tails and cats playing keyboards? Well, they go down with the sinking ship. It’s scary to think that a website as big as YouTube could be taken down and Google are, understandably, up in arms. That’s the main issue with SOPA but there are other issues such as ISPs having the power to block websites that are suspected of copyright infringement that are also fairly rotten.

Wikipedia’s page is asking its users to contact their local representative to vote against these bills but will it actually happen? It depends on how the users take these protests; either they will be merely annoyed that they can’t find out what genre the current Coldplay album is classified under or they will be encouraged to take action. That’s the thing with grandiose acts of protests – there’s no real middle ground position to take in response. You’re either for or against.

Hopefully though most sane people will be against this form of protest and against SOPA. Vist SOPA Strike for more details and for a full list of participants and watch this excellent video explaining PIPA in great detail and in a way that puts mine in the shade.

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