SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum? [IT'S BACK!]

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Puppeteer
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SOPA revived

#46 Post by Puppeteer »

Well it looks like that man, the best, most kind-hearted, generous and honest of men, Mr. Rupert "Faux News" Murdoch, has taken it upon himself to resurrect SOPA.

Good thing the rumour about SOPA being dead was just a false alarm - phew - was actually worried there for a bit. God bless his soul.

Rupert Murdoch, Congress Revive SOPA



(Warning for the clueless: this post contains irony).

PaulBx1
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#47 Post by PaulBx1 »

Wow, that didn't take long. If one can depend on Congress for anything, it is that awful legislation will keep being recycled until it passes.

In a way I almost hope SOPA passes. The ruling class has no idea what a shitstorm they are cooking up for themselves.

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Flash
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#48 Post by Flash »

Here is the enemy.

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kooliepup
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#49 Post by kooliepup »

How true.
MPAA and RIAA are at the pinnacle of corporate greed.

Digressing slightly,
it seems that Google witheld delivery of mail from Gmail accounts for 24 hours.
I just received an email from a Gmail subscriber, that was posted 24 hours ago.

Not a problem for me.

I just wonder sometimes, where it is that Google actually stands.
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Sky Aisling
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SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#50 Post by Sky Aisling »

Flash writes:
This is the enemy.
Seems like there was something about receiving preferential treatment from Countrywide Financial..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Dodd ... ontroversy
http://www.portfolio.com/news-markets/t ... n-Scandal/

But, what's the fuss, what was good for Countrywide was good for the country?
Just like SOPA would be?

.

TheProphet
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#51 Post by TheProphet »

Yeah, one of the iconic pictures of President Obama from the campaign was deemed "intellectual property" and Associated Press actually sued the campaign.

And it was a picture of himself...

speaking of, I noticed that the Intellectual Property claims that would be really broadly enforced have this disturbing rider, i.p. as defined by any U.S. court.

Meaning the courts in Redmond, I suppose, or California courts in Silicon Valley. Where the most cases get filed and, usually, (I shan't use an absolute modifier like "always") are settled in favor of the Big Corporations who own the jurisdictions and apparently (see, I didn't say "obviously", aren't I a clever lad?) paid off courts.

The law, in it's majestic equality, permits rich and poor alike to buy courts, legislators and entire local and global economies.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

TheProphet
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#52 Post by TheProphet »

nooby wrote:Thanks for starting the thread.
A lot of organizations and individual persons
here in Europe is very upset about it and so am I.

The companies behind the Lobby that proposed it
gets too much power in their hand.

Youtube as we know it today will most likely have to change
a lot.

and even our forum here has to be very vigilant and stop
any link to music or other copyrighted things.

So a villain that want to destroy for us can bomb us
with such links and there are too few moderators to keep up
so it is bad bad bad.
Now, there's an interesting use of words, and there's a really disturbing case from almost a decade ago, raisethefist.org.

And it involved a copyrighted picture published first by the U.S. Army and later by Time magazine, on how to make a pipe bomb.
It was the very first case prosecuted under the USA PATRIOT ACT which is an acronym for a mouthful of Police State non-patriotism. Sherman Austin, the maintainer of the site, was imprisoned for a year then placed on federal parole with no internet access.

The guy who actually posted the really crude instructions, poorly written enough that you'd lose fingers if naught more by making the stupid thing, and unlike young Mr Austin wasn't a Minor... got off scot-free.

To misquote Mr Rogers (public television show) "Can you say 'agent provocateur', 'poseur' and 'singing like a canary'? I knew you could!)

There is an ongoing case in Colorado Springs where a fellow just down the street from me was making M80 super-firecrackers and is charged on several felony counts, he got the instructions off the internet.

The local really fascist news media, who have the improbable name of Freedom Communications Inc, and are enjoying a tax-break subsidy of unbelievable proportions because they're in bankruptcy for the past several years and STILL publishing and broadcasting,

Their three main subsidiaries made a big hoo-haw about this, KOA radio, KOAA tv and the Gazette, because of the many similarities between an M80 and pipe bombs.

They also flagged for removal every YouTube video involving fireworks.

These are also among those who advocate allowing the carry of firearms in schools.

Combining the laws, PIPA, SOPA and the "patriot" act, that's a freakin' huge amount of power to put in the hands of non-elected, non-deputized, officially non-Government corporations.

They hide their contempt for the U.S. constitution and international laws also ratified by Congress like the Hague and Geneva conventions and the U.N. Charter, under the false flag of "nationalism".

Ratified under the constitution means in Article 4 that the Constitution is the law of the land and to be interpreted as such in any court in U.S. Territories and ships at sea.

And under Article 6 any treaties ratified by the Congress have the full force of law, in the U.S., as the Constitution itself.

They kind of swept that out the door with the Bush Doctrine and the "patriot" act.

Nationalism which doesn't recognize the national sovereignty of every other nation, especially the ones with whom your own nation officially disagrees, "rogue states" and "regime change" for instance, that's not nationalism and has an uglier name... "Imperialism".

It's an extreme example, maybe, but within the scope of SOPA and PIPA, for somebody in Outer Mongolia getting a copy of Windows 3.1 off craigslist could also get a visit from the FBI. Probably wouldn't happen to that extent, but the professional lawyers who wrote the bills know damned well that's how much power they're giving.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

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Sky Aisling
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SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#53 Post by Sky Aisling »


TheProphet
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Re: SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#54 Post by TheProphet »

nooby wrote:
Sky Aisling wrote:Wonder if SOPA will apply to people's avatars?


On some forum here in Sweden they have famous people as Avatars.
If the owner of that picture bark loud I guess the user is in deep trouble.

Ooops no it will be the owner of the forum that is in deep shit.
All Admins have to block any kind of jpg due to this blessing from the copyright friends.

But realistically they start out with copyrighted music on Youtube.
They will also clamp down on all clips from movies? and Commercial TV shows.

I feel unsure of how they will relate to all young artists singing covers.

The song as such is the artists but they sing something that they have
no right to sing. Only the owners of that copyright can give a yes or no.

Unless you pay a very high sum for being allowed to produce such on a
commercial basis like if you are a Radio Station on Internet instead of on air. Then you pay annually and give them lists on what music you played. To just sing others music would most likely not be allowed?

Privately maybe one are allowed to do it if those who listen are friends and it is not accessable by anybody outside the "circle of friends"
so maybe music will get moved to private clubs for sharing music?
if even that will get accepted by the law?
The song "Happy Birthday to you" and the original lyrics "good morning to you" were given over to a Trust Fund, kind of a corporate entity, which renews the copyright every time it comes close to expiring.

The song "Kookaburra" has a similar arrangement and the song "Do you come from the land down under?" was the target of a lawsuit on one flute-riff in the chorus.
Last year...

There's a song "...and the band played 'Waltzing Matilda' " which is a powerful antiwar anthem and puts a different angle on the ANZAC cock-up at Gallipoli. I wonder if since the original Waltzing Matilda was probably in the same children's songbook, if they're contemplating similar actions on that?

If I sing or play any Ira Stamphill hymn like "Mansion over the hilltop" I could get sued, in the off chance that somebody actually paid me for the performance.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

TheProphet
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#55 Post by TheProphet »

jpeps wrote:Hi starhawk, I didn't mean to undermine your efforts with my cynicism ...I did what you advise myself and strongly support it. If enough people get fed up, eventually people upstairs get uneasy.

I was thinking, though, that better than shutting down Wikipedia, what might hurt government officials more directly would be all the porno sites going off-line for a day.

BTW/ I didn't think independents registered ??
Registered to vote. I used to work for ACORN for about a week canvassing, learned a few political facts, the only snail-mail congresscritters open is from registered voters or schoolchildren (in the hopes they'll get the next "Yes Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" opportunity)

In Colorado you're given the choice on the voter registration to be "R" "D" or a write in where you put whatever party to which you belong. I put in A-N-A-R-C-H-I-S-T (it's one of those primitive Capcha scanner things where you have to write each letter in capital block-print inside a box and the letter has to be in black ink and has to be completely within the box and yadda yadda) which simply means I can't vote in either the Democratic or Republican primaries.

But any mail not coming from a registered voter? Round File. File 13. The Dustbin. The Great Exile Of Nonconformist Thought. Some seagull at the landfill will be lining her nest with your letter.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

linuxbear
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#56 Post by linuxbear »

Back when I was still (happily) living in Colorado, I considered registering my party affiliation as the "Boulder anti-lobby Lobby" In the end, I decided to register as an independent as I didn't want to be bothered by electioneering. Now I find myself constantly being bothered with pamphlets and calls as the politicos are trying to capture the independent voters and get us to vote for them........

nooby
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#57 Post by nooby »

Here is about how SOPA relates to Linux software?

http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20120116#qa
SOPA and open-source software

Wondering-about-blacklists asks: Does SOPA pose a threat to open-source software?
I have not read the text. I am a bad reader of highly technical
legal texts. So have at it. TRy to get if he is right to be that
optimistic that it does not apply.
I use Google Search on Puppy Forum
not an ideal solution though

starhawk
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#58 Post by starhawk »

I live in North Carolina... around here, "independent" means "could be democrat, could be republican, could be anything else, but I'm either not sure enough or too crafty to say which it is." IIRC, I can't vote in the primaries, but I can vote for a straight ticket later, if I want to (President separately of course).

I admit that I only vote once every four years... which makes me a rather poor member of my democracy. Democracy relies on knowledge to work properly (which is at least partially why the USA is so messed up right now). I have a hard time keeping track of who does what, where, and why, so I try to block it all out. Last time I voted, it was for Obama and a straight Democrat ticket for the rest of it.

Le oops.

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Aitch
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#59 Post by Aitch »

An alternate to corrupt political slavery

Be an active part of the 99%

http://occupywallst.org/

or get SOPA'd, PIPA'd and any dang thing else they feel like doing.....including paying off the big b[w]anker's debt!

It's a matter of choice

Aitch :)

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Sky Aisling
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SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#60 Post by Sky Aisling »

Just In...can anyone verify?
Anonymous #OpMegaUpload Attacks Justice Department, MPAA, RIAA
http://www.fastcompany.com/1809775/anon ... -mpaa-riaa

PaulBx1
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#61 Post by PaulBx1 »

Thanks for that LOLCats link, Sky.

Here's Salman Khan explaining SOPA:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/a ... 03965.html

Have we all turned into anarchists yet?

Anonymous attacked some of these bastards...

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Sky Aisling
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SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#62 Post by Sky Aisling »


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kooliepup
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#63 Post by kooliepup »

GAME ON

http://www.akamai.com/html/technology/dataviz1.html

Watch the Internet useage as a result of this.
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TheProphet
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Re: SOPA and What it Means to Users of this Forum?

#64 Post by TheProphet »

Sky Aisling wrote:Just In...can anyone verify?
Anonymous #OpMegaUpload Attacks Justice Department, MPAA, RIAA
http://www.fastcompany.com/1809775/anon ... -mpaa-riaa
It would be backward grammar to say "It couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of people" because they do that kind of thing, at public expense, to people I respect and admire, every damn day.

Happens to the nice people a lot, about time the Uglies get their share.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

TheProphet
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#65 Post by TheProphet »

Had to change my keyboard back, even on a persistent save-file boot attackpup keeps reverting to the QWERTY Hand-breaker layout.

Anyway, just a suggestion, I've noticed in my rare interactions with police in their own nests, they all use Windows on their networks, and in the late evenings and on weekends and holidays they have the Not Very Privileged officers on duty, they get bored and start surfing the web at gambling sites, shopping sites and of course porn.

Now, in order to do that they have to find ways to breach their own firewalls. Clever, that is.

Except there's the probably awkward coincidence where they get hacked more often than Lizzie Borden's Parents and probably doesn't have anything to do with them surfing unsafely.

Mind, in America there's a huge concentration of military bases. There's 18 just within an hours drive of here. The local police are therefore hard-linked to not only the Federal police apparatus but also the military since they have to deal with soldiers and airmen, marines and sailors acting all kinds of up in their jurisdictions.

I mean, what if Anonymous were to find out about that? Not that I would tell them, I mean.

Having done my unfair share of 8 hour guard duty I can understand the urge to just occupy oneself with something else. The internet was still in birthing pangs when I was in and nobody was issued a computer at his/her guard post.

It's social engineering on a fairly broad scale.

Surely somebody has to have come to the realization that there's not a whole lot of people from the Ruling Class within the Warrior Class, they routinely and blatantly recruit worker class people with the rather sideways and snotty ad campaign which tells us that we're not going to have a chance at success and upward social mobility unless we enlist in the military/and-or/police. And they've made a big stink about wanting to cut the pensions and entry-level wages for cops. You know, the ones they're counting on to protect them from the torch-and-pitchfork parade outside their gates.

"Look, all you've got to do is disperse this mob for us and we'll cut your compensation roughly by a third to express our gratitude."
Yep, they've got a wonderful plan there.
He who skydive without parachute, jumps to own conclusion.

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