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Ironically, the live webcast of the hearing was fraught with so many problems that it was essentially useless, prompting the Electronic Frontier Foundation to tweet, “If Congress can’t be trusted to set up a simple webcast, how can we trust them to regulate the Internet?” The EFF described the problem in a blog entry during the hearing.
Tech Freedom’s Downes, meanwhile, pointed out that simply blocking DNS servers isn’t going to work. As any number of people have repeatedly pointed out in recent years, the Internet is sufficiently flexible that there will always be another way to get to material you want. WikiLeaks for instance, was kept up by supporters including the Pirate Party, when it was removed from the DNS.
“Block requests for particular domains aren’t going to help,” Downes explained, “but what it will do is create a splintered version of the Domain Name System. The result is going to be that instead of a relatively unified DNS system, if they make use of this, we’ll get a splintered DNS system.”
“That’s a big problem,” Downes said, “It has a huge potential cost to the integrity of the Internet, but it has no benefit. It won’t have any benefit to the trademark process.”
Downes also pointed out that one provision of the bill would allow anyone to demand that ad networks or payment processors immediately stop doing business with a Website that the letter-writer claims is violating copyrights.
Downes also noted that the criminalisation of violations of streaming media copyrights was so extreme that a video of a child singing something like “Happy Birthday” (still held to be in copyright) on YouTube could be prosecuted as a felony, and the person posting the video could be imprisoned.
The language of SOPA is so broad, the rules so unconnected to the reality of Internet technology and the penalties so disconnected from the alleged crimes that this bill could effectively kill e-commerce or even normal Internet use. The bill also has grave implications for existing US, foreign and international laws and is sure to spend decades in court challenges.
Fortunately, this is the House version of a Senate bill called the Protect IP Act (S. 968) that is very different. As a result, both bills if passed in something resembling their current states will have to be considered by a conference committee. The resulting merged bills probably wouldn’t resemble the current SOPA bill. But the problem with depending on the conference committee is that you never really know what will come out and what else will be slipped into the bill at the last minute.
One can only hope that reason will prevail and kill or modify SOPA before the House passes it.
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