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    The Week

    After the blackouts: What's next for SOPA?

    After web-wide blackouts protesting controversial anti-piracy bills, former supporters from both parties appear to be fleeing the legislation. Is SOPA dead?

    The fight over the House's Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Senate's companion Protect IP Act (PIPA) is a largely a proxy war between two of California's biggest industries: The movie and music industries on the pro-SOPA/PIPA side and the Silicon Valley tech enclave on the other. On Wednesday, the tech side flexed its muscle — Wikipedia and scores of other websites went dark in protest, 4.5 million people signed Google's petition against the bills, and SOPA/PIPA opponents flooded Congressional phone lines and websites — and Congress apparently took note. An impressive number of lawmakers dropped their support for the bills, and legislation that was soaring through Congress not too long ago now appears to be on the verge of crashing or being completely revamped. What's next for the controversial anti-piracy measures?

    Did the web blackouts really move the needle?
    It's hardly a coincidence that lawmakers "are rushing for the exits in the wake of the internet's unprecedented protest," says Timothy B. Lee in Ars Technica. At least 18 Senators just came out in opposition to PIPA or withdrew their support, including seven former co-sponsors. House members are defecting in significant numbers, too. Most of the new defectors are Republicans, which is notable because conservatives "have traditionally been strong supporters of copyright and trademark protection," says Jon Healey in the Los Angeles Times

    SEE ALSO: Can Vizio outsmart the big PC makers?

     

    Why are lawmakers jumping ship on the bills?
    The rash of defecting Republicans tend to cite reasons like opposition to federal regulation, the threat of lawsuit abuse, or just online freedom, while the Democrats talk up censorship concerns and civil liberties; the White House warned last weekend that aspects of the bills could stifle innovation. The opponents clearly make for strange bedfellows: The conservative Heritage Foundation and National Review are now against SOPA/PIPA, but so are the left-leaning civil libertarian groups like the Electronic Freedom Foundation and the Center for Democracy and Technology. But "support for the bills is equally bipartisan," says the Los Angeles Times' Healey, "suggesting that this issue won't be decided by ideology."

    What's the vote count in Congress?
    According to an OpenCongress tally, there are 33 yes votes in the Senate, 37 no votes, and 40 unknowns or undecideds. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says there won't be a vote in the House anytime soon, because "there's a lack of consensus at this point." 

    SEE ALSO: Will Wikipedia's one-day blackout sink SOPA?

     

    So are SOPA and PIPA dead?
    The bills "appear to be doomed to ignominious defeat," says Matt Asay in The Register. But Congress will tackle the underlying piracy issues again soon, with good reason. Don't let the "dancing-in-the-street mentality" among SOPA opponents mislead you, says David Kravets in Wired. "By no sense of the imagination are these bills scuttled." House Judiciary Committee chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas) says he will keep on fighting to get SOPA passed, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has a key procedural vote for PIPA scheduled for Jan. 24. Still, everyone who participated in "the largest online backlash to proposed U.S. legislation should briefly pat themselves on the back." 

    Sources: AP, Ars Technica, CNN, Los Angeles Times, National Review, OpenCongress, Oregonian, PC World, Register, TIME, Wall Street Journal, Wired

    SEE ALSO: Students panic over Wikipedia's blackout: The best jokes

     

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    • azzhole  •  4 mths ago
      now only if we could get this kind of support to rid washington of lobbyist
      • True Patriot 4 mths ago
        Like the google lobby that killed the bills
      • Warren Y 4 mths ago
        The difference between SOPA and lobbyists is that the internet was fully invested in getting rid of SOPA. If we can only figure out how to to get internet pressure on congress...
      • Gary 4 mths ago
        Now if we could only get this kind of support to replace them all; lock, stock, and barrel.
    • DrunkenDonuts®  •  4 mths ago
      As others have noted, this isn't a Democrat/Republican issue. Most Republicans cringe at the thought of yet another big government oversight program, and the Democrats use buzzwords like freedom and civil liberties to get people on the bandwagon. There are already plenty of laws against copyright infringement and theft. These laws are simply about funneling more money into hands of people that have already profited from their efforts. I don't need to send LG a check every time I turn on my monitor to use my computer.
      • Hesperos 4 mths ago
        Amen. This issue transcends left and right, but not right and wrong!
      • Candichu 4 mths ago
        Well put sir! Well put. I couldn't have said it better myself.
      • David 4 mths ago
        If the republicans don't like big government, why did the republicans push it as hard as they did?
    • Dr. Knuts  •  Fort Lauderdale, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      We should get rid off the PIRATES that are in Washington.
    • Pwyll  •  4 mths ago
      "there are 33 yes votes in the Senate, 37 no votes, and 40 unknowns or undecideds." That wold be very impressive, given that there are only 100 senators.
      • Hesperos 4 mths ago
        You're forgetting, in Obama's world there are 57 states.
      • Spiffster 4 mths ago
        some of us get to vote twice.....
      • wunuvthem 4 mths ago
        But 37+33+40 = 110 only. That leaves 4 votes unaccounted for.
    • Bloody Bill  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  4 mths ago
      SOPA needs to die on the vine
      • XYZFRED 4 mths ago
        SOPA wasn't started on a vine, it grew in a rat and maggot infected cesspool called our elected representatives of the house and senate, until we clean the cesspool more rats and maggots will come along and reproduce
    • Use your brains, ppl!  •  4 mths ago
      It think they got confused... they started with an Anti-Piracy bill and ended with an Anti-PRIVACY bill.
      • Shane 4 mths ago
        This happens all to often these days.
      • ♥ urself 4 mths ago
        When i went on google one day i clicked on the pic o google and there like fighting cause there tracking us...kinda like a STALKER. watch out...
      • Hat 4 mths ago
        You mean an anti free speech and crush the politically incorrect media bill don't you?
    • Sid Long  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Side note, SOPA / PIPA are not about stopping internet piracy. They're about controlling the flow of information and profiting from it.
    • Make It So  •  Riverside, Missouri  •  4 mths ago
      Just another tool of the establishment to bring us down. To all of them i say ┌∩┐(◕_◕)┌∩┐
    • Steven  •  4 mths ago
      Do NOT let up on this! The MPAA and RIAA are throwing loads of cash at politicians, and they feel they have a right to this legislation even to the extent that it's none of the voting public's business. SOPA and PIPA are not dead. This isn't just some abstract fight; if you're online, it *will* affect you. Keep corporations and politicians out of your computer.
    • LB  •  4 mths ago
      SOPA was touted as an anti child porn law. Guess what? There already are very strict laws aggressively enforced dealing with this. It's like making murder illegal when it's already illegal. SOPA is nothing more than big brother watching you, or in this case, big government. The clowns on capitol hill who want to keep there cushy jobs would run as far away from this bill as they possibly can.
    • Spiffster  •  4 mths ago
      Sopa needs to be killed.....period. end...finished....gone....
    • Sid Long  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Funny how Congress just won't admit they got so much pressure from their CONSTITUENTS that they decided to back-pedal on this. And, what's gonna happen to SOPA is it will go away, to merely get diced up and pork-bellied onto other bills piece by piece at a later time.
    • Stephan  •  4 mths ago
      SOPA better be dead, or some legislators political careers will not exist any longer. DON'T F* WITH OUR INTERNET. UNDERSTAND?
    • C Lloyd  •  Front Royal, Virginia  •  4 mths ago
      If I build a house.Should I receive a check every time the house is used or sold? These types of laws do nothing but drive up the cost of everything we use every day.
    • SCOTT  •  Santa Clara, California  •  4 mths ago
      If only 4.5 million Americans would protest the NDAA bill...
    • Hugh  •  4 mths ago
      just let the freaking thing die already.
    • Rickie  •  4 mths ago
      Resist all totalitarian rule, everywhere. Freedom requires vigilance!
    • Rob  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  4 mths ago
      Isnt it amazing how easily the two side come together when they are planning on #$%$ us the beggars in washington are so unscrupulous, if they thought they could con us out of a few more dollars, they would all ban together and horsewhip their own mothers!
    • RealVoiceReason  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  4 mths ago
      SOPA is a great example of how our Congress is bought and paid for. Chris Dodd is now threatening, right out in the open, to cut Democratic campaign funds if they vote against this poorly written SOPA legislation that is like the Patriot Act for Hollywood.

      This SOPA is not Dopa. It is too brood based and will be used to keep Americans from watching YouTube videos and other content and force small Internet businesses to devote too much resources to make sure they comply with crazy government requests. That is what you get when the rules are written with a wide soft brush.

      Now, our puppet masters like Goldman Sachs also want this put in place to keep the Internet from being too powerful of a tool for people to collaborate on the election cycle, which was easily manipulated with big money in the past. Ron Paul is a good example of the power of the Internet and our youth. Do we The People want that taken away? Heck no!

      Hey Chris Dodd, keep your stinking hands off of our Internet! Hollywood should find their own ways to protect their movies. Better security systems, different technologies, etc. Not by having government police the system all over the world with wide open powers. Does anyone think the government can do that job fairly without having its own interests (like controlling grassroots campaigns) in check?

      Ron Paul always warns us about how government slowly creeps up and takes your freedoms and liberties away bit by bit. Wise words. Power corrupts but it also creeps.
    • Todd  •  4 mths ago
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      This comment has been found in violation of H.R. 3261, S.O.P.A and has
      been removed.