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Lindsay: I am old enough to legally drink alcohol. I am lucky to be addicted to only three things - cats, coffee, and nail polish. I am currently living in Philadelphia, but I am extremely excited to leave and move below the Mason-Dixon Line.
January 18, 2012
kittiesandbullshit:

I hope everyone is aware of the blackout but I feel obliged to make a post here because it DIRECTLY affects this blog since I essentially quote copyrighted songs and there is a grey area as to how much you can quote/modify and get away with. It’s important to acknowledge that SOPA/Protect IP would change the internet is unimaginable ways.
TAKE ACTION TODAY: CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE  and SIGN THE PETITION
For those who don’t know about SOPA/Protect IP, I’m going to quote Reddit because they did an excellent job of simplifying the information on their front page today.

Important Upcoming Dates
January 24, 2012 – Senate votes on PIPA
February – House Judiciary Committee continues its markup of SOPA
FAQ
What is the intent of SOPA/PROTECT IP?
The stated intent of the bills is to provide tools for law enforcement and copyright holders to protect their intellectual property rights.
What’s wrong with protecting copyrights?
Nothing! The devil, as they say, is in the details. PROTECT IP and SOPA will cause too much collateral damage, have a high potential for abuse, and won’t even be that effective at stopping the crimes they target. Read alienth’s examination of where these bills fail.
I’m not in the U.S. Why does this affect me?
Many of the sites that you may use (e.g. Google, Facebook, Wikipedia, etc.) are all affected by this law and will be required to hide offending domains from you.
If a non-U.S. site is blocked in the U.S., the site could suffer financially or even be bankrupted by the loss of U.S. traffic and revenue.
What are the differences between PROTECT IP and SOPA?
At a general level, the bills are very similar. SOPA, the “Stop Online Piracy Act,” is from the House of Representatives, while the PROTECT IP Act is from the Senate. Either or both bills may pass a vote in their chamber of congress on their way to becoming law. Both must be defeated to end this threat. There have recently been more detailed explanations in an ELI5 thread and alienth’s blog post.
What about ACTA?
The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA, is a multi-national agreement with similar goals to the U.S.-only PROTECT IP and SOPA bills. It is criticized for many of the same reasons that PROTECT IP and SOPA are, but is also concerning because it has been drafted in secret. ACTA is not the focus of this blackout but please take the time to learn more about ACTA.
I’m not a U.S. citizen. How can I help?
You can still call or e-mail the U.S. representatives (sponsors of the bills would be a good choice). However, you may want to turn your attention more towards ACTA or other over-zealous copyright bills in your country.
Learn more
Read alienth’s blog post on why these acts are bad for business
Information on H.R.3261 – Stop Online Piracy Act at OpenCongress.org
Information on S.968 – PROTECT IP Act at OpenCongress.org
SOPAOpera.org keeps track of where your congressmembers stand
List of websites blacking out today at SOPAStrike.com
Read up on OPEN, a competing bill
Original reddit announcement of the blackout
Get Involved
Outside the US? Find out what’s wrong with ACTA and do something about it. Email the US state department about PIPA and SOPA viaStop American Censorship
Look up and contact your representative via the EFF
Helpful info from a redditor on making phone calls to your senator or representative
Complete the Take Action Checklist at Stop American Censorship

kittiesandbullshit:

I hope everyone is aware of the blackout but I feel obliged to make a post here because it DIRECTLY affects this blog since I essentially quote copyrighted songs and there is a grey area as to how much you can quote/modify and get away with. It’s important to acknowledge that SOPA/Protect IP would change the internet is unimaginable ways.

TAKE ACTION TODAY: CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE  and SIGN THE PETITION

For those who don’t know about SOPA/Protect IP, I’m going to quote Reddit because they did an excellent job of simplifying the information on their front page today.

Important Upcoming Dates

FAQ

What is the intent of SOPA/PROTECT IP?

The stated intent of the bills is to provide tools for law enforcement and copyright holders to protect their intellectual property rights.

What’s wrong with protecting copyrights?

Nothing! The devil, as they say, is in the details. PROTECT IP and SOPA will cause too much collateral damage, have a high potential for abuse, and won’t even be that effective at stopping the crimes they target. Read alienth’s examination of where these bills fail.

I’m not in the U.S. Why does this affect me?

Many of the sites that you may use (e.g. Google, Facebook, Wikipedia, etc.) are all affected by this law and will be required to hide offending domains from you.

If a non-U.S. site is blocked in the U.S., the site could suffer financially or even be bankrupted by the loss of U.S. traffic and revenue.

What are the differences between PROTECT IP and SOPA?

At a general level, the bills are very similar. SOPA, the “Stop Online Piracy Act,” is from the House of Representatives, while the PROTECT IP Act is from the Senate. Either or both bills may pass a vote in their chamber of congress on their way to becoming law. Both must be defeated to end this threat. There have recently been more detailed explanations in an ELI5 thread and alienth’s blog post.

What about ACTA?

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA, is a multi-national agreement with similar goals to the U.S.-only PROTECT IP and SOPA bills. It is criticized for many of the same reasons that PROTECT IP and SOPA are, but is also concerning because it has been drafted in secret. ACTA is not the focus of this blackout but please take the time to learn more about ACTA.

I’m not a U.S. citizen. How can I help?

You can still call or e-mail the U.S. representatives (sponsors of the bills would be a good choice). However, you may want to turn your attention more towards ACTA or other over-zealous copyright bills in your country.

Learn more

Get Involved