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Re: Where Are SOPA and PIPA Now? 

By: atomicbob in RANT II | Recommend this post (1)
Thu, 19 Jan 12 1:35 AM | 44 view(s)
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Msg. 19320 of 20747
(This msg. is a reply to 19319 by kathy_s16)

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I agree with this! Fighting piracy and counterfit goods is all fine with me.

Making websites with user generated content the policeman for the fight is not practical or possible.

As written, this thing would make it my responsibility to review every post, and link, and photograph posted on here to be sure it wasn't copyrighted material, or a link to someone selling phony ipads.

I say its Impossible.

I went to a few news sites today and "commented" on their SOPA articles, pointing out that I could easily be posting a link to a music download site, or the text of a copyrighted article; right there in their comment section. Making them liable for it!

Every webmaster on the planet would be chasing his tail!




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There is no need to thank me for this valuable information: I'm doing it as a public service.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Where Are SOPA and PIPA Now?
By: kathy_s16
in RANT II
Thu, 19 Jan 12 12:38 AM
Msg. 19319 of 20747

Where Are SOPA and PIPA Now?

Both bills have taken a hit in the last week, as their authors have decided to remove the provisions that require Internet service providers to block the domain names of infringing sites. SOPA, which has yet to pass out of the House Judiciary Committee, is reportedly stalled, as lawmakers continue to work on the bill. Representative Darrell Issa (R-California) has proposed an alternative bill that is far more narrow in its focus.

Voting on PIPA, however, is scheduled to begin in the Senate on January 24.

UPDATE: (2pm ET 1/1Cool Now two U.S. Senators are withdrawing their sponsorships of PIPA. Sen. Marco Rubio, of Florida, wrote on Facebook that although he has a strong interest in stopping piracy, "we must do this while simultaneously promoting an open, dynamic Internet environment that is ripe for innovation and promotes new technologies." Senator Roy Blunt, of Missouri, also bailed on the bill, writing on Facebook that "the Protect IP Act is flawed as it stands today, and I cannot support it moving forward."


http://www.pcworld.com/article/248298/sopa_and_pipa_just_the_facts.html


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