You should be very afraid of a pair of bills that threaten Internet freedom.
By James Losey and Sascha Meinrath
Posted Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011, at 7:19 AM ET
The United States of America was forged in resistance to collective
reprisals—the punishment of many for the acts of few. In 1774, following
the Boston Tea Party, the British Parliament passed a series of
laws—including the mandated closure of the port of Boston—meant to
penalize the people of Massachusetts. These abuses of power, labeled the
“Intolerable Acts,” catalyzed the American Revolution by making plain the oppression of the British crown.
More than 200 years later, the U.S. Congress is
considering bills that would lead to collective reprisals against online
communities.* The Senate’s PROTECT IP Act and the Stop Online Piracy Act
in the House are supposed to address copyright infringement and
counterfeiting. In reality, they are so technically impractical that
they do little to address these problems. They would, however, undermine
participatory democracy and human rights, which is why these bills have
garnered near-universal condemnation from both human rights groups and
technologists.
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