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510

The American Censorship link includes a lot of information about what this US law would change and how it would affect user-generated content sites like Stack Overflow. Currently, if someone posts copyright material to Stack Overflow, there is a well-established legal procedure (called the DMCA) that establishes how the copyright owner can get that material ...


126

I am sympathetic. Nevertheless, there is a difference between promoting "all kinds of awareness ribbons of various colors" (which I wouldn't want) and opposing a law that threatens the very site itself. This particular law is threatening to Stack Exchange itself. It is so badly written that we think that if it passed, a determined copyright holder could ...


73

In order to protect Stack Overflow, Super User, and Server Fault from a flood of "How do I use ssh to get around The Great Firewall of America" it is important this law does not pass. The system message is the least intrusive method we could come up with (vs writing regexes and parsers to try to detect those questions once the law passes). I hope you ...


60

The EU did Adopt a Resolution Against the Stop Online Piracy Act. Although if you are not in the US you can't use an actual vote (or lack there of) to motivate specific politicians, you can spread the word. SO and many sites are hosted in the U.S. and DNS is a global system (See these whitepapers on SOPA and DNS impact), so this law will impact the ...


48

I like the spirit behind this, but in reality, what proponent of SOPA is going to care? SOPA Proponent: "Oh well look at that. They're going ahead with SOPA and they took themselves down. Makes our job easier!" There must be more effective ways to protest SOPA than shutting down the places where people are discussing how to stop SOPA.


47

I believe that if you boycott a company because of a stand they took, you have a responsibility to stop boycotting them if they change their position. Since Go Daddy did change their position on SOPA, the original boycott of Go Daddy is over and is not a reason to refuse their advertising. The other question is whether or not we should accept ...


45

We don't own Stack Exchange... we're just taking care of it on your behalf. The content on Stack Exchange is licensed under Creative Commons, and as such, is the property of the community. We deliberately set it up that way. We set it up that way specifically to prevent the company or its successors from taking it away from you (as Expert's Exchange did) or ...


42

We're just preaching to the choir now. At this point, SOPA needs to be evangelized outside our technical ghettos. We have plenty of awareness on technical (Stack Overflow) and geek (Reddit) sites about SOPA -- but tell me, when was the last time you saw a mainstream news article on SOPA? I can't recall ever seeing a single one. It'd be a lot more effective ...


35

Time for me to break out my favorite generic response: "I think the answer lies in the middle ground between the two extremes." Here, the extremes are "never promote social causes" and "promote all kinds of social causes." In general, I agree with you. Stack Overflow very clearly defines what is on-topic — as does each Stack Exchange site — and ...


32

It looks like GoDaddy has reversed its position on SOPA not changed their position. While there were initial reports that GoDaddy had backed down, it turns out this was more or less straight BS I'm posting this for completeness of information and to neither defend nor demean them in any way. in the hopes that others will join in my pulling their business ...


30

This is mentioned elsewhere and the answer is that the act would ... require[s] ISPs to block DNS lookups for companies that it considers to be offending, and it requires banks to prevent payment transfers to those companies. Source So relocating to outside the US wouldn't help.


28

SOPA is bad for anyone who uses & depends upon the Internet. Hyperbole? No. Brad Feld, a former entrepreneur-turned VC, has written a letter to be sent to our (I live in Colorado also) senators and has, through the post below, asked other CO entrepreneurs to become co-signatories prior to sending it. As stated by Joel, Brad and dozens of others, the ...


24

Now that I have your attention, let's get to the point. The very fact that this picture exists illustrates why free Internet is important. The fact that I could mash up a picture using a well known meme to convey a message and the fact that memes exists at all is thanks to the gears and cogwheels of the established web communities. It's not the ...


20

Go Daddy has not "reversed" their support. They simply stopped outwardly support Internet censorship. Their exact words regarding SOPA: It's very important that all Internet stakeholders work together on this. Getting it right is worth the wait. Go Daddy will support it when and if the Internet community supports it. The emphasis is mine. So long ...


19

This may be mostly opinion, I don't know, but it seems that many of the technology-affecting laws that find themselves under consideration at the national level in the U.S. are written, bought and paid for by the entertainment industry (MPAA and RIAA) and wind up trampling individual's rights as well as established fair-use doctrine. This proposal is no ...


18

Just as a quick summary: Within minutes of the notice being posted there are already scores of political arguments going on in Meta As a non-US citizen there isn't really anything I can actually do about this, nor do I feel that it is my place to do anything about the internal affairs of another country because its none of my business, just as its none of ...


17

Instead of taking down SO and replacing it with a black page, why not show solidarity with Reddit et al by "blacking out" SO by giving it a black background with white text? Throw a banner linking to an anti-SOPA position at the top and you're done. That way you get around the two main objections ("SO can't just shut down without permission from the ...


16

First of all, yes, we hate these bills too! Half the New York office was just at a protest (including the Stack Exchange mascot) in front of the New York Senators' offices. Our board member Brad Burnham spoke at that protest and he has been one of the outspoken leaders of the movement against SOPA and PIPA. That said, I don't really like the format of ...


15

The notification banner has a maximum life span of 48 hours. Whoever put it up this time specified the lifetime of the banner to be 24 hours (or so). From the comments below, it appears that it was for 6 hours exactly, which happens to match peak usage times in the US. So, it appears to have been calculated to reach as many developers in the US as ...


14

It's probably not the politicians themselves more than it is intense lobbying from Big Media. My position is that major media companies like Viacom are pressuring politicians (with money, perhaps even political or legal threats) to the point where they have essentially no choice but to follow through. We the people are being silenced by Big Media, and they ...


13

They changed their public statement after intense pressure - including boycotts. As Blowski notes, that's sorta the goal of a boycott. Does anyone really think the execs have had some sort of epiphany, and now recognize SOPA as the bad idea it was? Hell no. They responded to public pressure, nothing more. But hey - at least they responded to public ...


11

You can donate money. In principle SendWrite are still accepting donations, although they aren't accepting letters, but I have not seen how one donates. The EFF has real lobbying skills; their donation page is at https://supporters.eff.org/donate - put something like "SOPA scares me" in the "Why I'm Contributing" box.


9

In your question you point out: ~300 people complained (up-voted the post about it on Meta) about the banner last time, that's less than 0.03% of Stackoverflow users... But in a comment you say: ...the amount of people that visit Meta compared to the other sites compared is insignificant. So comparing the number of people who didn't like the ...


8

I think stackexchange should join SOPA strike somehow. For example, one of: make big black banner pointing to http://www.sopastrike.com/ (wikipedia article will not work ;-)) make some black-color dominant style change CSS style to something like * { color: black; background-color: black } This way, the stackexchange content will still be available


8

I don't live in USA either, but that only makes me regret I cannot "call my senator" (not that I really believe it would change anything, but still). And I fail to see how this little bar can really annoy someone so much. I think its real purpose is to make people look around to see what's going on and think a little. I hope that message just does it. ...


7

The message is displayed on some of the other sites, they just don't use the banner. Also no notice was given to mods of other sites of placing a banner up. (because that's not what the banner is supposed to be used for nevertheless we will call this exception #2). They are displayed instead as Community Promotion Ads. This is a method for the community ...


6

I agree 100% percent with you. However on this specific case I really don't. Just this once, because this cause is the important one (but the other causes aren't) Well if others have the same possible implications I wouldn't mind seeing it. The implications of this can be really really bad for the internet as we know it. As one of the sites / ...


6

So, given what has been stated above, would not a possible solution to SOPA be host applications like stackoverflow outside of the US and beyond the control of the US government? Or is the fact that the company behind those servers is still based in the US make this approach null and void? In other words, does the proposed bill target the company hosting ...


6

I've posted this as comments, but it's really an answer to the question: This law does not materially impact any of the Stack Exchange sites. It empowers the Attorney General to take down sites that are infringing (section 102.b). However, the Attorney General must first send notice to the operators that s/he is going to proceed. It empowers the Court ...



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