As most of you are aware, yesterday, Wednesday, January 18, 2012, witnessed the largest protest in the relatively short history of the Internet. Phish.net joined the massive protests against SOPA (H.R. 3261) and PIPA (S.968) by going dark for 24 hours. Yesterday, many of you exercised your civil rights and responsibilities and made your views known by contacting your representatives. As we return to live service, we'd like to take this opportunity to remind all of our users that democracy is something that happens every day. To learn more about phish.net's participation in this protest, please visit Hidden Track's interview with the phish.net and Mockingbird Foundation director of technology, Adam Scheinberg.
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side rant....US laws should not govern the internet...a worldwide network
I actually wrote a lengthy note to my appropriate congressmen.
I'm on this site every single day, and phish.net has my constant support.
To think that any government or overseer could ever have any say in how a place like this operates appalls me, and I will do what it takes to never let that happen.
Thanks for all you do!
Nice job, guys! @sethadam1 is the man!
I wrote to my reps in DC and 2 of the 3 I wrote to have come out against SOPA/PIPA when they hadn't been before. Oddly enough it was the 2 Republicans who did, I am very disappointed in my Democratic Senator right now and she will be hearing from me again if she doesn't announce something soon.
[Just so you guys know, @sethadam1 was very serious about this blackout - I tried to get to the admin tools to do some behind the scenes work yesterday and I was locked out there too!]
One thing users of Phish.net know is that we are already vigilant about enforcing copyright laws and protecting rightsholders. Our site's Terms of Use prohibit posting copyrighted materials (like pirate links to LivePhish.com soundboards, as opposed to band allowed audience recordings). We request (and receive) permission to sometimes reproduce Phish’s copyrighted photos and videos. When we do, we properly display their ©.
Anyone who has tried to post links to copyrighted materials in the forum for instance knows that admins (and users!) enforce the ToU with thumbs down and calling out violators.
While we don’t think Phish would ride roughshod over ToU enforcement in a SOPA/PIPA world, the same cannot be said for many other corporations. We know the RIAA and MPAA have tried to sue individual users, sometimes children, over downloading pirate materials. In countries like China and Russia (as well as here with WikiLeaks), the copyright laws are sometimes used to quash political dissent, by forcing payment processors or advertisers not to use a site, or jailing dissidents who have unlicensed copies of software like Microsoft Word on their hard drives, as a pretext.
We already have tools to go after piracy, which is less of a problem anyway with subscription service models like iTunes, Spotify and Netflix. SOPA/PIPA is a sledgehammer approach to kill a fly, and anyone who thinks folks like the RIAA and MPAA should just be able to shut down entire websites on their say-so without notice and opportunity for the sites to respond is advocating for a world like George Orwell would have imagined in 1984.
Historically Republicans support less govt. regulation and a smaller govt. so it seems to make sense to me; however, I do agree with most of what you wrote. When I tried to write to my CO Senators the links to their emails were conveniently not working the last couple of days. Props to phish.net for doing the right thing!
It's great that it got so many senators (10 - 13) to change their stance on the bill. At the same time, it's pathetic that so many senators put their support behind bills that they didn't understand.