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Proposed legislation to give government more control over internet content..

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  • Proposed legislation to give government more control over internet content..

    Click HERE to sign the google petition

    While there are times that I think a big "delete" button would be a great tool to combat internet fraud (especially in this industry), I can imagine the Orwellian disaster this legislature could spawn. Isn't this the exact same type of totalitarian mindset that we see in countries such as China, North Korea, and Iran.

    Follows in an excerpt from the google page:

    "...Fighting online piracy is important. The most effective way to shut down pirate websites is through targeted legislation that cuts off their funding. There’s no need to make American social networks, blogs and search engines censor the Internet or undermine the existing laws that have enabled the Web to thrive, creating millions of U.S. jobs.

    Too much is at stake – please vote NO on PIPA and SOPA...."

    These politician are all sponsoring the bill..

    Senator - Sponsor
    Patrick Leahy [D-VT]

    Co-Sponsors

    Sen. Lamar Alexander [R, TN]
    Added May 25, 2011
    Sen. Kelly Ayotte [R, NH]
    Added June 27, 2011
    Sen. Michael Bennet [D, CO]
    Added July 25, 2011
    Sen. Jeff Bingaman [D, NM]
    Added October 19, 2011
    Sen. Richard Blumenthal [D, CT]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Roy Blunt [R, MO]
    Added May 23, 2011
    Sen. John Boozman [R, AR]
    Added June 15, 2011
    Sen. Barbara Boxer [D, CA]
    Added December 12, 2011
    Sen. Sherrod Brown [D, OH]
    Added October 20, 2011
    Sen. Benjamin Cardin [D, MD]
    Added July 13, 2011
    Sen. Robert Casey [D, PA]
    Added September 07, 2011
    Sen. Saxby Chambliss [R, GA]
    Added November 02, 2011
    Sen. Thad Cochran [R, MS]
    Added June 23, 2011
    Sen. Chris Coons [D, DE]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Bob Corker [R, TN]
    Added June 09, 2011
    Sen. Richard Durbin [D, IL]
    Added June 30, 2011
    Sen. Michael Enzi [R, WY]
    Added September 07, 2011
    Sen. Dianne Feinstein [D, CA]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Al Franken [D, MN]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand [D, NY]
    Added May 26, 2011
    Sen. Lindsey Graham [R, SC]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Charles Grassley [R, IA]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Kay Hagan [D, NC]
    Added July 05, 2011
    Sen. Orrin Hatch [R, UT]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. John Isakson [R, GA]
    Added November 02, 2011
    Sen. Tim Johnson [D, SD]
    Added October 03, 2011
    Sen. Amy Klobuchar [D, MN]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Herbert Kohl [D, WI]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Mary Landrieu [D, LA]
    Added October 17, 2011
    Sen. Joseph Lieberman [I, CT]
    Added July 07, 2011
    Sen. John McCain [R, AZ]
    Added July 26, 2011
    Sen. Robert Menéndez [D, NJ]
    Added October 31, 2011
    Sen. Jerry Moran [R, KS]
    Added June 23, 2011
    Wthdrawn June 27, 2011
    Sen. Bill Nelson [D, FL]
    Added September 23, 2011
    Sen. James Risch [R, ID]
    Added November 07, 2011
    Sen. Marco Rubio [R, FL]
    Added May 26, 2011
    Sen. Charles Schumer [D, NY]
    Added May 12, 2011
    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen [D, NH]
    Added June 30, 2011
    Sen. Tom Udall [D, NM]
    Added July 07, 2011
    Sen. David Vitter [R, LA]
    Added November 07, 2011
    Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse [D, RI]

    House Sponsor: Rep Smith, Lamar
    Co-Sponsors

    Rep Amodei, Mark E. [NV-2] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Baca, Joe [CA-43] - 12/7/2011
    Rep Barrow, John [GA-12] - 11/14/2011
    Rep Bass, Karen [CA-33] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Berman, Howard L. [CA-28] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Blackburn, Marsha [TN-7] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Bono Mack, Mary [CA-45] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Carter, John R. [TX-31] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Chabot, Steve [OH-1] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Chu, Judy [CA-32] - 11/30/2011
    Rep Conyers, John, Jr. [MI-14] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Cooper, Jim [TN-5] - 12/12/2011
    Rep Deutch, Theodore E. [FL-19] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Gallegly, Elton [CA-24] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Goodlatte, Bob [VA-6] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Griffin, Tim [AR-2] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Holden, Tim [PA-17] - 11/30/2011
    Rep King, Peter T. [NY-3] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Larson, John B. [CT-1] - 11/30/2011
    Rep Lujan, Ben Ray [NM-3] - 11/14/2011
    Rep Marino, Tom [PA-10] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Nunnelee, Alan [MS-1] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Owens, William L. [NY-23] - 11/14/2011
    Rep Ross, Dennis [FL-12] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Scalise, Steve [LA-1] - 11/14/2011
    Rep Schiff, Adam B. [CA-29] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Sherman, Brad [CA-27] - 12/7/2011
    Rep Terry, Lee [NE-2] - 10/26/2011
    Rep Wasserman Schultz, Debbie [FL-20] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Watt, Melvin L. [NC-12] - 11/3/2011
    Rep Quayle, Benjamin [AZ-3] - 12/13/2011(withdrawn - 1/17/2012)


    If your senator or representative is on this list- you may want to ask yourself whether they truly appreciate that in the United States- it is the citizens who are ultimately empowered and not the government..
    my travel website: Vacation-Times.org.

    "A vacation is what you take when you can no longer take what you’ve been taking."
    ~Earl Wilson

  • #2
    History tells us our government will regulate what the people will not.

    Well, then de-regulate it.

    That the Internet can be abusive is not even debatable. People tend to do on the Internet things they would never do in person, feeling protected by presumed anonymity. Oh, that's right . . . this is an internet forum . . . we all already know that.

    RCI Member Since 24-Aug-1989/150-plus Exchanges***THE TIMESHARE GRIM REAPER~~~Exchanging/Searching/SW Florida/MO/AR/IA/Consumer Advocacy/Estate Planning/Sports/Boating/Fishing/Golf/Lake-living/Retirement****Sometimes ya just gotta be a dick

    Comment


    • #3
      Since I grew up without internet, this isn't that big of a deal to me. My son, however, is very passionate about stopping this-age 15. I am not purchasing from the companies who support it, but doubt I will put much more energy into it.

      I know my daughter's dance crew had things removed from various sites several times because they didn't have permission to publish dancing to the pieces of music. Since it is basically free advertising for the music, I think they are making a mistake, but bottom line, all big companies only care about making the most money.

      Comment


      • #4
        I got an email from my son this morning with the same link you provided. It is all over his School which is a Computer engineering School. I was going to post it here but you beat me to it.
        Timeshareforums Shirts and Mugs on sale now! http://www.cafepress.com/ts4ms

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by bigfrank
          I got an email from my son this morning with the same link you provided. It is all over his School which is a Computer engineering School. I was going to post it here but you beat me to it.
          "Computer engineering school" sure has a different meaning from when I graduated from the university credited with developing the first computer.

          Back then there were only two forms of character assassination and personal criticism . . . to your face or behind your back. In most cases, in either form, they normally did not linger for eternity, for the world to see.
          RCI Member Since 24-Aug-1989/150-plus Exchanges***THE TIMESHARE GRIM REAPER~~~Exchanging/Searching/SW Florida/MO/AR/IA/Consumer Advocacy/Estate Planning/Sports/Boating/Fishing/Golf/Lake-living/Retirement****Sometimes ya just gotta be a dick

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Presley View Post
            Since I grew up without internet, this isn't that big of a deal to me. My son, however, is very passionate about stopping this-age 15. I am not purchasing from the companies who support it, but doubt I will put much more energy into it.

            I know my daughter's dance crew had things removed from various sites several times because they didn't have permission to publish dancing to the pieces of music. Since it is basically free advertising for the music, I think they are making a mistake, but bottom line, all big companies only care about making the most money.
            I think you miss the point.

            My x-husband is a singer-songwriter. What seems to you to be 'free advertising' is really depriving him of a credit and royalties and could actually harm his material.

            he holds the copyright, he owns the material, he gets to permit or not permit dissemination of his material. "Free advertising" can be a bad thing if the dancing that went with the owned material was not true to the artist's vision. This is why the artist gets to decide. YOU don't get to decide to advertise someone elses product "for free."

            You are not depriving a giant company of $$, you are depriving the little creative guy of deciding when/where his material is showcased.

            Honestly, getting permission is not that hard. Better than to promote the "I found it and can use it any damned way I want" mindset. This is not going to go away and fines/court judgements that Napster users ran into some time ago was just the start. I'm surprised it has taken this long.

            Comment


            • #7
              When the music industry begins to police itself and stop artists who routinely use "sampling" in their music, maybe I'll pay more attention... Of course, when those "artists" are creating profits- it doesn't seem to ruffle so many feathers.

              The target should be commercial applications of copyrighted material, which is already subject to existing laws and when discovered currently allows the owner of that copyright to litigate. Creating new laws to give the government unprecedented control over free speech is not a reasonable answer. I don't believe for one second that politicians have a "stuggling artist" as their muse for this nasty bit of trickery.

              The idea that some teenager on YouTube doing a dance routine to Lady Gaga gives the US government the right to shut down any website is just ridiculous.
              my travel website: Vacation-Times.org.

              "A vacation is what you take when you can no longer take what you’ve been taking."
              ~Earl Wilson

              Comment


              • #8
                I also think gov't is going too far (bordering on censorship, but unfair burden to content hosts is my biggest problem with it), but am in favor of sustaining creator rights. No, I also don't think preserving income to a struggling artist is the intent, I think they are attempting to prevent the problem by having content providers as police, which is not their role. But, it does get right to the John Q Public problem of it. "Gosh, I didn't know!" and down it goes. Easy, done with, no hassles, no litigation. I believe that was teh intent, have the websites police their content. Major nightmare.

                Commercial apps using copyrighted material - definitely a problem, should know better and be penalized. The young girl that was heavily penalized in the Napster thing? Well, that's too bad, and probably she was too young to understand what she was doing was wrong (having likely been taught that sharing is good), but I don't get how that whole thing was just forgotten?? The issue simply went dormant for a while, and now it's back.

                Personal use in one's home is not a problem. Play anything you want, dance, sing, tumble in pajamas while drinking martinis, who cares. But it seems common sense to me to not take the work of another to publish myself without permission. And, yes, uploading to the internet is publishing.

                You hear the warning during televised sporting events - for private use of our audience, any other use prohibited without the express written permission of (insert owner, say, NFL). If I dvr'd a game in its entirety and uploaded it, that's a violation. Seems pretty obvious to me.

                Comment


                • #9
                  I signed the petition. It looks like neither PIPA nor COPA are going to pass. This came up in the GOP debate last night and all 4 candidates are opposed to PIPA and COPA.
                  John

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by BoardGirl View Post
                    Honestly, getting permission is not that hard.
                    I beg to differ.

                    Several years back, I was putting together a video for a youth group at our church. This was before video editing via computers was as simple and cheap as it is now -- specialized hardware, etc. Therefore, the concept of a non-professional creating an edited video set to some music in the backgroud was new to most people.

                    We wanted to use some popular Christian rock songs for the video, since those had special meaning for this group. I went out and bought the music (so I had a legal copy), and then I tried to find a way to get "permission" to legally distribute a few copies (~20, the size of the youth group) of the video that included portions of the song tracks. What I found out was that is is virtually impossible for a non-professional to get that permission. I spent several weeks and it all ended in dead ends. In the end, I did what everyone else does today: simply go ahead with the project. I felt I gave a reasonable effort, and since it was a non-commercial project and I legally owned copies of the songs, I was fine with that.

                    I am very supportive of defending one's copyrights, but there has to be a better way to get usage permission. If there was a way to go to a web site, choose a song, and simply pay $X per copy, I would do that in a flash. But there isn't. Using songs in a video is not covered under your rights of owning a legal copy, so just buying X copies of the song does nothing for you, legally.

                    As to the proposed laws that are being protested, they are not the right way to combat the digital rights issues. They are simply a way for government and the entertainment companies to censor the internet with no due process. That is simply un-American.

                    BoardGirl: If you know of a simple way for the common person to get permission to use a song in a non-commercial video, I would love to know how it can be done.

                    Kurt

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      [QUOTE=rikkis_playpen;480430
                      The idea that some teenager on YouTube doing a dance routine to Lady Gaga gives the US government the right to shut down any website is just ridiculous.[/QUOTE]

                      That was not absolutely not the point of this, and it has been said that there is not legislation to control this type of activity. It is profiting from stealing that this is trying to control. And that is primarily aimed at foreign links and piracy.

                      The 4m deletes links for links that send people to free pirated movies. When the movies were created, they were copyrighted. In a sense, the 4m is doing what the legislation would do, eliminate links to pirate sites or the eliminating the pirate websites. Okay, that is stretching it, but why should they profit from someone else's work?

                      I have published articles on wine filtration or chemical use that has been pirated to other sites. I am not concerned on this because I do not make my living from this, but if I did, and my articles were copied and profiting for someone else and not me, I loose my income. This is where and why this would be a good law.

                      Yes, the law needs to be written right to now go too far, but it needs a start.

                      Or, accept that your online material is fair game for being copied and reused for someone elses profit.
                      Don

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Do you trust some anonymous government official to be able to use good judgement in determining what sites are shut down? Or where to draw the line of what is a reasonable use of this power? Do you believe that small businesses will have an effective and inexpensive means to fight and overturn such a decision if good judgement is not used?

                        Regardless of the laws on the books, criminals will continue to commit crimes.. We seem this everyday as these timeshare con artists change disguises to stay ahead of the authorities, and in most cases operate without any real impediment. If the government shuts down a criminal website, can you honestly believe that it would not be back up the next day under a new domain? The only people who would be stopped would be those who had no intent to do harm, because those would be the only sites and companies that would not just reinvent themselves.

                        Take this example:

                        This website has thousands of outside links.. Is it reasonable to expect the owner or administrator of this website to continuously monitor every link? What happens if the website that was linked to from a discussion goes out of business, and the new "owner" changes the site to promote pirated material. This is a common practice. It happens with websites that generated traffic as well as toll free numbers. The original company goes out of business and another business comes in and creates something that may be totally unrelated, in the hope that somebody takes the bait.

                        Does that make this site responsible because nobody went back to old posts to review links? Does that allow some government bureaucrat to make the decision on whether or not this site should be available to the public? How about if that individual was burned on a timeshare tour and has a preconceived notion that everything involving timeshare is a scam? What if that politician receives large contributions from timeshare developers who would prefer that a site such as this did not exist?

                        These "what if" scenarios may seem far fetched, but there is nothing more effective at creating the ridiculous than a large bureaucracy.

                        In my opinion, the only reason for individuals in a free society to give added power to government is to ensure the safety of its citizens. We've been in a constant state of giving away power and choice to the government since the terrorist attacks, and at this point our "elected" leaders in both parties seem to be hungry for more power and believe they are entitled to just take it.

                        This type of "film piracy" does have an economic impact. Ultimately that cost is passed on to the consumer in the same way that a supermarket passes on the cost of shop lifting to the consumer. Does it bother me that I have to pay a few dollars more to see a movie because some bozo at the flea market is selling pirated copies from China- sure it does.. Is that worth giving the government control over the internet?

                        Not even close!
                        my travel website: Vacation-Times.org.

                        "A vacation is what you take when you can no longer take what you’ve been taking."
                        ~Earl Wilson

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by rikkis_playpen View Post
                          These "what if" scenarios may seem far fetched, but there is nothing more effective at creating the ridiculous than a large bureaucracy.

                          In my opinion, the only reason for individuals in a free society to give added power to government is to ensure the safety of its citizens. We've been in a constant state of giving away power and choice to the government since the terrorist attacks, and at this point our "elected" leaders in both parties seem to be hungry for more power and believe they are entitled to just take it.

                          This type of "film piracy" does have an economic impact. Ultimately that cost is passed on to the consumer in the same way that a supermarket passes on the cost of shop lifting to the consumer. Does it bother me that I have to pay a few dollars more to see a movie because some bozo at the flea market is selling pirated copies from China- sure it does.. Is that worth giving the government control over the internet?

                          Not even close!
                          Agreed. Going on the responses to Salman Khan's video summary that I read this morning, the debate is basically over whether people trust the government to show restraint or not. I don't.

                          SOPA and PIPA - YouTube

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