Author Topic: LETS GET SOPA TO PASS!!!  (Read 2103 times)

I'm also getting loving sick of seeing "SOPA" stuff everywhere.

A quick search brings up that 27 topics have names that contain the word "SOPA". And 73 topics have SOPA said at least somewhere in them.

Destroyer you know as well as I do that we're doing something meaningful on this forum

Destroyer you know as well as I do that we're doing something meaningful on this forum

It doesn't need to be spammed though


It was a joke

I guess my Sarcasm detector was off then, sorry

I guess my Sarcasm detector was off then, sorry

Maybe I just didn't make it obvious enough lol

Maybe I just didn't make it obvious enough lol

Nah, I see now you were kidding, you probably would have been like "I apologize for other's spam, but people need to hear about it!" or something like that if you were srs

>IF SOPA PASSES

>-snip-
there is an angry guy laying on the floor and the table leg has him pinned down

there is an angry guy laying on the floor and the table leg has him pinned down

can't unsee

More about SOPA and PIPA
Members of Congress are trying to do the right thing by going after pirates and counterfeiters but SOPA and PIPA are the wrong way to do it.

1. SOPA and PIPA would censor the Web

The U.S. government could order the blocking of sites using methods similar to those employed by China. Among other things, search engines could be forced to delete entire websites from their search results. That’s why 41 human rights organizations and 110 prominent law professors have expressed grave concerns about the bills.

2. SOPA and PIPA would be job-killers because they would create a new era of uncertainty for American business

Law-abiding U.S. internet companies would have to monitor everything users link to or upload or face the risk of time-consuming litigation. That’s why AOL, EBay, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Mozilla, Twitter, Yahoo and Zynga wrote a letter to Congress saying these bills “pose a serious risk to our industry’s continued track record of innovation and job-creation.” It’s also why 55 of America’s most successful venture capitalists expressed concern that PIPA “would stifle investment in Internet services, throttle innovation, and hurt American competitiveness”. More than 204 entrepreneurs told Congress that PIPA and SOPA would “hurt economic growth and chill innovation”.

3. SOPA and PIPA wouldn’t stop piracy

To make matters worse, SOPA and PIPA won’t even work. The censorship regulations written into these bills won’t shut down pirate sites. These sites will just change their addresses and continue their criminal activities, while law-abiding companies will suffer high penalties for breaches they can’t possibly control.

There are effective ways to combat foreign “rogue” websites dedicated to copyright infringement and trademark counterfeiting, while preserving the innovation and dynamism that have made the Internet such an important driver of American economic growth and job creation. Congress should consider alternatives like the OPEN Act, which takes targeted and focused steps to cut off the money supply from foreign pirate sites without making US companies censor the Web.

The way to fight piracy is to fight smarter, not harder

The introduction of the digital music market place (IE: Itunes, Amazon mp3, etc.) turned many pirates that used Napster and peer-to-peer piraters into buyers again because they demanded a more convenient and reasonable way to buy music that didn't require them to go to a store, buy the whole CD along with the extra cost of packaging and store mark-ups and such. You can't kill piracy, but by outdoing the pirates, you can shrink the population of internet pirates. Also, for something someone might know is copyrighted such as a picture or something, just make the copyright clearer and give them a warning if the copyright holder would want them to get proper permission or to not use it at all.

Also, for something someone might know is copyrighted such as a picture or something, just make the copyright clearer and give them a warning if the copyright holder would want them to get proper permission or to not use it at all.
That's like saying make the Terms and conditions more noticable. No one reads those, and on the internet everyone thinks they are big and tough and won't worry about a warning. Just how some things work..

NO

GOD
NO

NO NO NO
PLEASE NO

GOD

NO


This is for the immature people that think this is a joke.
« Last Edit: January 19, 2012, 12:57:55 AM by erupter76 »

-snipsnipsnipsnipsnipohmygodI'msewingsnipsnipsnipsnip-
you don't need to keep copying this everywhere