furtech: (nodurian!)
[personal profile] furtech
[EDIT: Short version: the SOPA legislation is poorly written and should either be modified or not passed. Naughty word. The end. Those uninterested in politics can skip the rest below.]

I've heard so much about the SOPA/"Stop Online Piracy Act" that I tired to figure out what all the scraeling was about.

Yes, I understand that it gives the US Attorney General far too much power without any due process.

At the same time, I looked at all of the evil companies that support it, and I see name after name of companies that I really love--businesses who produce the creative content that I watch on a daily basis and that I am happy to throw money at because they provide an enjoyable experience. Companies who develop and produce things that make the lives of my friends, my dogs and myself better. I support these companies and, as a content provider myself, I am against piracy and creative theft.

And yet, on the other side (anti-SOPA) are companies that I also wholeheartedly support. I agree with their arguments that this will stifle creative freedom generally. Yes, technically, uploading a home video to YouTube of you and your friends dancing to a Lady Gaga song is a violation under this act. That song is still controlled and owned by a company (likely one on that list).

I think Stephen Colbert explains this well .

I place the blame on all parties for this mess: music publishers, media producers and other groups who support SOPA should have LONG AGO created allowances or practical methods to allow home videos to exist on internet sites-- but they are so fearful of "precedence" that none of them have addressed this in a general way. There -are- ways to do this, but a combination of attitude (not wanting to deal with this small-fry, aka, not enough money to care about) and laziness (wanting a simple, one-size-fits-all solution) has led to this.

At the same time, the Anti-SOPA groups did not approach this in a practical way that could have lead to a solution. They are also guilty of laziness and their own agendas: some significant number of them do NOT want to see piracy limited or stopped. Some of the larger names, IMO, purposely did not try to mitigate the law (to exclude the home-video examples or smaller websites) so that the whole law was tainted to gain the popular support of internet users and free-web supporters. It's ridiculous.

This issue is playing out like a gigantic version of the internet drama where a fan artist calls Disney (or whomever) evil and mean because they shut down their Disney character porn art...and that same artist finding some of their original work on 4chan (or whomever) and screaming about how they are taking money from the artist's pocket and how they will SUE!

Personally, I think both sides are fuckers.

I clarify: the movers and shakers (ie, companies, groups, etc.) fighting for or against this law are the above pejorative. Individuals like us are just the flotsam and jetsam thrown about by the big waves.

Again, all of this is just my own, ineffectual opinion. As someone who has real concerns on both sides of this issue--- and can see that there was a point that practical solutions could have been written into the law but weren't-- I think I have a balanced viewpoint. The best solution would be to throw this out and write a more targeted law that exempts the innocuous situations that most companies neither care about nor really want to limit, and include a procedure that includes due process.

Next up: silly dog pictures!

Date: 2011-12-23 09:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iisaw.livejournal.com
[TL:DR version- SOPA is a sledgehammer approach to a problem that would respond infinitely better to a complex and creative solution.]

There used to be an attitude in America, that old "innocent until proven guilty" one, that went along with, "Better a dozen guilty men should escape justice than one innocent man be condemned."

No more. Being accused of being a terrorist now carries a possible lifetime in prison with no due process, no trial, no method of appeal.

And as for the crime of possible harming the holiest of holies, $$$ CORPORATE PROFIT $$$? Well, now we will have complete and faceless removal, blocking, and revoking of the most common way of communicating in the modern world... no due process, no trial, no method of appeal.

It just seems in keeping with the change in attitude about citizens (Who are now more often labeled "consumers", BTW.) from the people to be served by government to the people to be controlled by government.

I agree that advocates for both sides seem to be utter assholes but that's what you see in the media. What the media presents to you... but remember that the media is all about drama and conflict, not fairness or truth. I don't like the entitled attitude of the people who want everything to be free but the arguments from the companies that claim that piracy will put them out of business are completely ridiculous.*

The real solution to piracy is simple:** Innovative products and services such as iTunes*** have shown that the vast majority of people would rather pay for their entertainment when there is an easy and reasonably-priced way to do so.

SOPA, however, is just the latest in a long line of "solutions" that take a lazy, all-out, scorched-earth approach to a problem that is better addressed by thoughtful, multi-pronged combinations of regulation and innovation.

------
* I'm old enough to remember when the music industry claimed that cassette tapes and, later, MP3 players would put them out of business and the movie industry claimed that cable TV and, later, VHS recorders would destroy them. Just a few years showed their doom-saying to be utterly, laughably false.

** Simple in its philosophy, complex and subtle in its execution... but people are clever monkeys and there are a lot of them out there with a gazzillion good ideas.

*** Just an example. I, personally, just can't deal with the malware aspects of iTunes but there are many alternatives to that 800 pound gorilla.

Date: 2011-12-23 10:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] furtech.livejournal.com
I'm totally over-reacting, especially given the vast influence I know I have over these matters. This is a reaction to all of the posts I've seen (here and on Twitter and FB, etc.) with people calling for boycotts of companies that support SOPA. The final straw for me was a call to boycott GoDaddy because of their support for SOPA. I mean really: -that's - why you'd boycott/not do business with GoDaddy? Not over their offensive/tasteless (IMO) ads or other solid reasons not to use them...SOPA? Really?

I agree with you that what many people seem to be missing is the blatant disregard for due-process that legislation is veering toward and the media's encouraging the public to choose torches and pitchforks over due-process. I love that we now have so many alternative outlets for information/news besides traditional media-- it's ants vs elephants, but they're better than nothing. Hell, the average person and their cellphone camera and YouTube can now make a huge difference!

Oh, and just for you: there's a commercial on tv now that has a dog that
looks eerily like Apache. (http://www.poptent.net/media/26719/9)


Date: 2011-12-23 11:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iisaw.livejournal.com
Overreacting? Well, it seems like citizens are so disenfranchised now, that torches and pitchforks are the only way to make any sort of impact. (Voting sure as hell won't.) But then, again... torches and pitchforks don't seem to do much good either. The various flavors of OWS didn't seem to do much but get themselves clubbed, gassed, and shot.

Ranting may be the only thing we have left... until our internet connections are cut off.

Date: 2011-12-24 12:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hoshikage.livejournal.com
I object to SOPA not because I am against any attempt whatsoever to protect copyright of creative material, but because SOPA is a really crappy attempt at said protection. Of course, at the moment I'm particularly irritated about the whole thing because my district doesn't actually even have anyone in the House of Representatives right now, so I can't even do the (potentially useless) bit of calling up the office to tell them that the legislation is crap. :P

(Edited for HTML fail!)
Edited Date: 2011-12-24 12:56 am (UTC)

Date: 2011-12-24 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] c-eagle.livejournal.com
raebnc and *sigh* .. so true.

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