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Congress Has Plans for an Internet Blacklist in the Works -- Let's Stop This Now

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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-03-10 05:03 AM
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Congress Has Plans for an Internet Blacklist in the Works -- Let's Stop This Now
Congress Has Plans for an Internet Blacklist in the Works -- Let's Stop This Now
MEDIA AND CULTURE
AlterNet / By David Segal and Aaron Swarz

October 1, 2010 | When it really matters to them, Congressmembers can come together -- with a panache and wry wit you didn't know they had. As banned books week gets underway, and President Obama admonishes oppressive regimes for their censorship of the Internet, a group of powerful Senators -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- have signed onto a bill that would vastly expand the government's power to censor the Internet.

The Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA) was introduced in late September, but it's greased and ready to move, with a hearing in front of the Judiciary Committee this Thursday. If people don't speak out, US citizens could soon find themselves joining Iranians and Chinese in being blocked from accessing broad chunks of the public Internet.

COICA creates two blacklists of Internet domain names. Courts could add sites to the first list; the Attorney General would have control over the second. Internet service providers and others (everyone from Comcast to PayPal to Google AdSense) would be required to block any domains on the first list. They would also receive immunity (and presumably the good favor of the government) if they block domains on the second list.

The lists are for sites "dedicated to infringing activity," but that's defined very broadly -- any domain name where counterfeit goods or copyrighted material are "central to the activity of the Internet site" could be blocked.

One example of what this means in practice: sites like YouTube could be censored in the US. Copyright holders like Viacom often argue copyrighted material is central to the activity of YouTube, but under current US law, YouTube is perfectly legal as long as they take down copyrighted material when they're informed about it -- which is why Viacom lost to YouTube in court.



unhappycamper comment: Think about it:

I get around 98% of my news off the internets. How 'bout you?

Newspapers in the United States have been in decline for years.

Reich-wingers are attempting to control the whole news delivery bidness.
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