What are SOPA and Protect-IP?

by Bobby Samai on January 6, 2012


SOPA, or the Stop Online Piracy Act, is one of two pieces of legislation currently being considered by Congress to combat online piracy.  This legislation would mandate the prevention of access to foreign web sites and shut down U.S. web sites that are deemed to be infringing on the rights of copyrighted materials.

The Protect IP Act (PIPA) is a U.S. Senate bill introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy. Along with its House counterpart Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), the bills are designed to provide the government and copyright holders with powers to block access to “rogue websites dedicated to infringing or counterfeit goods,” especially those registered outside the United States. Since its introduction on May 11th, 2011, the proposed bill has been met by opposition from various digital rights activists and bloggers for its encroachment in online activities protected under the first amendment of free speech. Congressional hearings for both bills began on November 16th.

Background

If passed by Congress, Protect IP Act would allow the government to curb public access to websites that have “no significant use” other than infringing copyright, enabling or facilitating copyright infringement. It would also make unauthorized media streaming an act of felony and hold the web publishers and hosting services responsible for curbing their users from posting copyright-infringed content.

In addition, Stop Online Piracy Act would effectively rid of the safe harbor provisions in the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, which grants Web sites immunity from prosecution as long as they act in good faith to take down infringing content upon notice. Under strict interpretation, a wide range of online communities and social networks including YouTube, Twitter and Facebook would have to censor users or get shut down and ordinary users could be imprisoned for five years or posting any copyrighted work.

Online Reaction and Developments

The legislation has been opposed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), Yahoo!, eBay, American Express, Google, Reporters Without Borders, and Human Rights Watch. EFF’s blog post titled “What’s On the Blacklist?” listed media-sharing services Vimeo and Flickr and e-commerce community Etsy as websites that could be put at risk under the Stop Online Piracy Act. Fight for the Future published a 3-minute infographic video explaining the basics of the bills and their impact on everyday activities of online interactions.

Let us know what you think of these proposed bills in the comments below.

bobby
  • Brenda Gaines

    It could open the door to widespread Internet censorship. 

  • Rebecca

    Did you mean to say “Privacy” in the first sentence, or is that a slip?

  • Anonymous

    Thank you for catching that. It was a typo!

  • Steve

    Do Not Allow Online Censorship, which is both these bills represent, Write your representives and congressmen urge thm to vote down both these bills

  • Rick

    I agree with Steve and Brenda. These bills are the beginning of Government/ Industry control of the Internet. Call/Write/Email your Congressmen.

  • Marysrvrmusic

    Thank you, Peak Internet, for coming down on the right side of this issue!

  • http://www.webhostings.in/ web hostings

    Great explanation about this topic and i am new guy to this job  thanks to sharing the wonderful articles .

  • Anonymous

    We now have ACTA More dangerous and our “fighting for smaller govt and freedom loving” lawmakers are listening to Hollywood/Dodd post failure of SOPA/PIPA to create new legislation. 
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Counterfeiting_Trade_Agreement

  • Lapichon

    I understand that the legislators have presently backed off!  This is good, and speaks to the power of the Internet “population.”  (I emailed my representatives, and one replied indicating he thought the proposed bills were a very bad idea…bless him…)

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