[UCIMC-Tech] [Imc-web] Q: should we blacken our homepage t in protest of SOPA tomorrow?

Chris Ritzo chris.ritzo at gmail.com
Wed Jan 18 09:56:50 CST 2012


I've just taken the blackout off the site. With no warning, it's not fair
to users of our site, such as Americorps members working to schedule events
in the space, or who need access to documents. While I think it's a great
thing, it also needs to have advance planning and work to make it work.

On Wed, Jan 18, 2012 at 9:45 AM, Chris Ritzo <chris.ritzo at gmail.com> wrote:

> The blackout is in effect now. If someone wants to draft a message to go
> with it, I'll put it up.
>
> On Wed, Jan 18, 2012 at 9:16 AM, Mike Lehman <rebelmike at earthlink.net>wrote:
>
>>  Since there wasn't any announcement prior to this, there should be
>> something posted after the fact to explain what we did. The blackout
>> without any explanation is confusing, although some readers will guess why.
>> Mike
>>
>>
>> On 1/17/2012 11:33 PM, Danielle Chynoweth wrote:
>>
>> Should we black out our ucimc.org site tomorrow? Wikipedia, Reddit and
>> many of our allies in media justice have already gone dark with messages
>> about the dangers of SOPA. Thoughts? - Danielle
>>    Momentum Builds Against SOPA and PIPA Tomorrow you might be wondering
>> who turned out the lights. Don’t worry — it will simply be one of the
>> biggest days in the history of the open Internet.
>>
>> Thousands of websites — including Wikipedia, reddit, BoingBoing,
>> FreePress.net and SavetheInternet.com — will go dark<http://sopastrike.com/>to protest the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and Protect IP Act (PIPA),
>> bills in the House and Senate that could open the door to widespread
>> censorship online.
>>
>> Meanwhile, hundreds of supporters of the open Internet will gather
>> outside the Manhattan offices of New York Senators Chuck Schumer and
>> Kirsten Gillibrand to urge them — both are sponsors of PIPA — to change
>> course and oppose this legislation.
>>
>> Millions of Internet users have succeeded in slowing down the
>> Hollywood-funded momentum of these bills. A House vote on SOPA has now been indefinitely
>> postponed<http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/204167-sopa-shelved-until-consensus-is-found>.
>> And the mainstream media, which had largely failed to cover<http://www.savetheinternet.com/blog/12/01/17/blog/12/01/09/news-networks-sopa-blackout>what is arguably the biggest tech story of the year, are finally waking up.
>> Last weekend, MSNBC’s Chris Hayes devoted an entire segment<http://upwithchrishayes.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/15/10161056-debating-sopa>to a debate on the legislation. Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Harry
>> Reid defended PIPA <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/> on *Meet the
>> Press* last Sunday (hey, at least it got covered!).
>>
>> Just in time for tomorrow’s blackout, the White House has announced its
>> opposition<https://wwws.whitehouse.gov/petition-tool/response/combating-online-piracy-while-protecting-open-and-innovative-internet>to provisions in both bills that pose a threat to free speech. And even
>> Google is altering its valuable homepage<http://news.cnet.com/8301-31001_3-57360223-261/google-will-protest-sopa-using-popular-home-page/>to include a note protesting SOPA and PIPA.
>>
>> A casual observer of all this activity — Wikipedia is really going dark?
>> Google is really changing up its homepage? — might wonder what all the fuss
>> is about. Here, in a nutshell, is why tech companies, individual Internet
>> users, members of Congress and the White House have all expressed grave
>> concerns about legislation that could usher in a new wave of online
>> censorship.
>>
>> Supporters claim that SOPA and PIPA are the only way to effectively fight
>> online piracy. But while the rights of content holders need to be
>> protected, these bills are the wrong way to address this issue. If they are
>> passed, corporations (with the help of the courts) will become the arbiters
>> of what is and isn’t lawful online activity, with millions of Internet
>> users swept in their nets as collateral damage.
>>
>> Both bills are said to target only foreign websites that are explicitly
>> in the business of promoting copyright-infringing content. But they would do
>> much to harm the global Internet<https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/01/how-pipa-and-sopa-violate-white-house-principles-supporting-free-speech>,
>> and a provision in both bills would allow tampering with the Internet’s
>> technical infrastructure in a way that Internet engineers agree would harm
>> online security<http://boingboing.net/2011/12/15/internet-engineers-to-congress.html>
>> .
>>
>> Another provision would empower private companies to go after any website
>> — lawful or otherwise — they accuse of infringing on their copyright. Those
>> companies could work with service providers and financial institutions to
>> shut off access to the potentially offending sites, with no repercussions
>> at all if the accused site is later judged to be lawful. Meanwhile, a
>> falsely accused site could go belly up from all of the legal fees needed to
>> defend itself.
>>
>> Innocent until proven guilty, anyone?
>>
>>
>>         --
>> Josh Levy
>> Internet Campaign Director
>> Free Press :: www.freepress.net
>> 413.585.1533 x208 <413.585.1533%20x208>
>> Twitter: @levjoy
>> *
>> reform media. transform democracy.*
>> *
>> *
>> *
>> *
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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