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    Tech Companies Not Taking a Stand on Censorship Are Being Blacklisted

    Since a large group of tech companies protested the Stop Internet Piracy Act (SOPA) in conjunction with the House's first hearing on SOPA last week, civil rights advocates have been rooting out the pro-SOPA traitors. The latest two to be named are Nintendo and Sony, identified by Think Progress on Monday as having spent tens of thousands of dollars to support the Senate's similar, stalled bill PROTECT IP. Last week, we learned about a list of companies that evidently tacitly supported the legislation through their membership in the Business Software Association, who after dealing with a vitriolic wave of criticism clarified — some say reversed — their stance on the Stop Internet Piracy Act (SOPA). It's turning into a gnarly debate, that we suspect will continue to compel companies to take a stand on these laws that would effectively allow the government to censor the internet. To reposition an earlier Bush-era idiom used by SOPA's advocates, if you're a tech company that's not actively fighting against SOPA, you must be for it.

    RELATED: Unable to Offer Cash, The Pirate Bay Wants to Make Artists Famous


    Apple, Microsoft and the others on the BSA's list of members provide the industry with a teaching moment. The Apple fanboys freaked out last Friday at the news of BSA's support for the bill, first reported by The Next Web. Last week, a group of Apple and Microsoft competitors, including Google, Twitter, Facebook, Yahoo and others, took a very public stand by publishing an open letter in opposition to the bill as a full page ad in The New York Times. The Atlantic Wire asked Apple and Microsoft to comment on the bill, either in favor or in opposition. Both companies declined to comment. 

    RELATED: Rupert Murdoch vs. The Internet


    For Apple, at least, staying silent hasn't done too much to calm its customers anxiety about SOPA. Since the BSA had been labelled as pro-SOPA last week, member companies like Apple and Microsoft have been catching flak for supporting internet censorship, and even now that BSA is now actively opposing the censorship bills, Apple and Microsoft continue to be associated with the pro-SOPA camp over the pro-internet freedom camp, that includes competitors. 

    RELATED: Lawmakers Table SOPA to Bring in the Number Crunchers


    Now, the investigative journalists have started digging, following lobbyist dollars back to companies that have somehow supported the legislation and adding them to the list of traitors. Think Progress now reveals the suspicious lobbying activity of Nintendo and Sony from the government transparency site, Open Secrets.  A deeper dive into the list of tech companies that have spent money to address the PROTECT IP bill — both for and against its passage — proves that the money issue is more complicated. Others on the list of companies spending lobbyist dollars on the issue include: Google (an outspoken SOPA opponent); GoDaddy (another opponent that's worried about the government blocking internet protocol addresses); and News Corp. (an advocate, which is not a surprise given its presence in Hollywood). Both PROTECT IP and SOPA have been vigorously supported and funded by the entertainment industry, but plenty of tech companies are worried about the current wording. David Sohn and Andrew McDiarmid offer a good explainer at The Atlantic, and at the bottom of this post is a video produced by civil rights advocates at Fight for the Future.

    RELATED: The Surprises of a Wikipedia Blackout


    The debate over the SOPA/PROTECT IP legislation is being framed as a battle for the soul of the internet. It's potentially a public relations nightmare for companies that depend on internet lovers for their business. One gamer dug up a letter singed by dozens of companies from September that voices support for the legislation. Nintendo is described as "a primary sponsor of SOPA (H.R. 3261), the internet censorship bill," and even though that's not entirely true, hundreds of gamers (read: Nintendo customers) have commented. The tone is not forgiving. An example: "Nintendo has that sheen of a reputation much like Apple. Under the surface lies a demon that really hates its customers." 

    RELATED: Bring on the Anxiety Parade for the SOPA Alternative


    We can't say with certainty that Nintendo or Sony still support the bill, but again, civil rights advocates seem to be assuming that companies not fighting the bill are supporting it. We've reached out to both companies to find out their latest stance on the issue, and in the meantime, we'd be willing to bet a buffalo-head nickel that their gamer customers will stay angry.

     
    • Gnosis  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  3 mths ago
      It isn't about companies. It is about people! There are a lot of things that are good for companies, but they aren't good for people. Are people going to have a voice or will the companies take that away as well, after they have taken away our jobs. Freedom cannot exist with privacy. You see, civilization is the progress toward a society of privacy. The savage's whole existence is public, ruled by the laws of his tribe. Civilization is the process of setting man free from men.
    • Yahoo IsCrap  •  Chatsworth, United States  •  3 mths ago
      "government" is MUCH TOO STUPID to be ruling on anything related to the internet
    • Alan  •  Kansas City, United States  •  3 mths ago
      In some ways I'm looking forward to this and the US government relinquishing control over the internet. Do those morons in Washington really believe they can write laws that will apply to the rest of the world? This will cause the creation of new root domain servers in countries like Russia and China at the least. The reason companies like Google don't want this is because they will have to set up systems outside the US to take advantage of these new domains. I imagine there will be a lot of companies that will relocate their operations outside the US just so they can be assured that they will be able to service the rest of the world outside US control. This is nothing more than fascism at its finest.
    • Rick  •  Portage, United States  •  3 mths ago
      So they don't teach english composition anymore? Why isn't there a competent editor anywhere anymore. PROOF READ! PROOF READ! PROOF READ! PROOF READ!
    • A nony mouse  •  3 mths ago
      Uh...who is the idiot here? The so called journalist or the tards in Washington. An acronym has the first letter of the word...so Mobile Army Surgical Hospital is MASH...Stop Internet Piracy Act should be SIPA not SOPA...either way...someone is a dee dee dee...or TARD...
    • R1  •  3 mths ago
      Keep the internet open, I've been making money from it since I was 12 years old, I think that government having any say over the internet would ruin it forever, oppose anything that takes freedom of speech away, such as new protocols for IP Addresses that can be tracked etc.. Right now it's a free world =), and I am going to hate on every single company who supports this by boycotting products. All computer like minded people buy speakers, lcds, etc. frequently.. Well not from Sony anymore....
    • danielg  •  Boise, United States  •  3 mths ago
      Censorship is just plain wrong. Is the world becoming marxist?
      I certainly don't condone piracy,but this is not the way to do it. two wrongs don't make a right.
    • praxis  •  Farmington, United States  •  3 mths ago
      This article has a lot of conjecture on the pros and cons. But it says nothing about what is contained in the legislation. How are we supposed to make our own decisions with out any real information. I guess they hope that we are going to just jump on the bandwagon if they lead us around by the nose.
    • D A  •  Sacramento, United States  •  3 mths ago
      Lobbying- A way to take bribes legally, nothing more nothing less
    • Glenn  •  3 mths ago
      Well when you charge $20+ for a cd that contains 1 song people actually want and you wonder why they just grab it from a "friend" over the internet you deserve to loose that money. Software piracy is a completely separate issue. Why pay for a song that is on the radio about 150 times a day, in all the newest movies, etc? Software piracy can lead a company to bankruptcy which means updates become less frequent if ever, and projects die halfway to market. If you love an artist, even if you download a song you still buy shirts, posters, concert tickets, etc. Same goes for movies, the $140 Lego starwars unless you physically steal it is going to make plenty of $ even if the person who saw starwars didn't pay to see it. Software companies who make profit use that profit to invest in new projects and fixing bugs and security holes, not put gold chains on a bunch of "artists" and call it music.
    • BJ  •  3 mths ago
      Apple and Microsoft support internet censorship
    • frankiquilts  •  Heraklion, Greece  •  3 mths ago
      I'm a small business owner who is constantly on watch for my creations being pirated. Others in my industry are also on alert constantly, and we have joined together to help one another try to combat it. It's a losing battle because companies like eBay won't enforce copyright laws.

      SOPA, in addition to stopping open piracy of movies and music, will help those in my small industry. Maybe it will give us a voice.

      This article didn't talk about what SOPA truly will do. Don't be blinded by the he said/she said of the large companies listed above. SOPA will help us little guys.
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