How A Few Heroes Barely Saved the Internet from Being Hijacked: Now Beware SOPA 2.0

width=100The perversely named Stop Online Piracy Act" (SOPA) itself may have been the most brazen attempted act of piracy in all recorded history.

Two years ago Hollywood no kidding masterminded a plot to in effect steal the Internet (by criminalizing certain conduct booby trapping the Web in ways that few non-mega-corporations could cope with).  There are signs as perceptively flagged by the Electronic Frontier Foundation that the perps are back at it. We should care.

This two-part column reveals an untold part of the story about how the bad guys were stopped last time.  And if not stopped again how it could lead to a fundamental loss of civil rights and freedom on the Internet.

The perversely named Stop Online Piracy Act" (SOPA) itself may have been the most brazen attempted act of piracy in all recorded history.  Truth in Legislation would have required it to be named the Ultimate Act of Online Piracy."  Enactment effectively would have pirated the World Wide Web from a common space and converted it into the private preserve of the Big Entertainment Lobby.

The Plot to steal the Internet was foiled.  It was foiled by an Irresistible Force" public opinion rallied by a twenty-something Freedom Fighter Aaron Swartz now dead.  This combined with an Immovable Object the consciences of a tiny group of legislators. Together they barely defeated one of the meanest pieces of legislation in our lifetimes.

The outside" story of the late-rallying popular opposition has been fairly extensively reported.  7000 (some claim over 100000) websites including Wikipedia and other high traffic sites were persuaded to close shop for a day.  Google draped its logo in black.  In the view of Harvard Law School professor author public intellectual and co-creator of the Creative Commons Lawrence Lessig SOPA was stopped by the most important Internet campaign so far lead by my (now dead) friend Aaron Swartz and thousands of others."

As the New York Times reported I think stopping SOPA is an important moment in the Capitol said Representative Zoe Lofgren Democrat of California and an important opponent of the legislation. Too often legislation is about competing business interests. This is way beyond that. This is individual citizens rising up."

But the inside" story four liberty-minded lawmakers who stood up in front of SOPA like the protestor in Tiananmen Square against the column of tanks has remained mostly obscure. This tells that story.

But first.  Why should you care?  Undaunted by its 2011 failure Hollywood and the Big Record Labels are staging the sequel.  This time the bad guys could win.  The Huffington Post recently spotted the perps busy inside the federal (perhaps more aptly feral) bureaucracy hollowing out the Constitution:  The Commerce departments Internet Policy Task Force last week proposed making it a felony to stream copyrighted works."

Give the Internet to to Big Business?  Hollywood and the Recording Industry appear to have found a compliant handmaiden Penny Pritzker the new U.S. Commerce Secretary to work the inside while they work the outside.  Pritzkers Commerce Department employs among other things the risible euphemism of improving the operation of the notice and takedown system" of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.  Thats a system which is working rather beautifully for all concerned content providers and distributors both.  Somethings extremely fishy here.

Secretary Pritzker a billionaire heiress recently was bragging about cavorting  with the head of the Recording Industry Association of America.  Its not hard to imagine whose side the rich and famous … or mere citizens like us? shes on.

Practical upshot?  Among much other potential damage if Big Hollywood colluding with Big Government succeeds it changes the very nature of the Web.  Quite possibly for example SOPA 2.0″ could mean the end of the Drudge Report. Drudge hardly can maintain his Report if an innocent miscall on copyright makes him subject to prosecution by any United States attorney for a federal felony.

Would the silencing of Drudge be an unintended consequence?  Or might it be intentional? Chairman Darrell Issa has written to Attorney General Holder: The suggestions that prosecutors did in fact seek to make an example out of Aaron Swartz because Demand Progress exercised its First Amendment rights in publicly supporting him raises new questions about the Departments handling of the case."

(Matt? Meet Penny.  The new Big Sis" candidate?)

The hero in challenging Big Hollywoods Big Piracy Gambit in the U.S. Senate was Ron Wyden.  The main heroes in the House reportedly were Reps. Darrell Issa (R-CA) Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) and  Jared Polis (D-CO).

 

As hacktivist Aaron Swartz stated in his keynote speech delivered at F2C: Freedom to Connect 2012 Washington DC How we stopped SOPA" six months before Swartz/s untimely tragic death:

Senator Ron Wyden the Democrat from Oregon put a hold on the Bill giving a speech in which he called in a nuclear bunker buster bomb aimed at the Internet.  He announced he would not allow it to pass without changes.  As you may know a single Senator cant actually stop a bill by themselves.  But they can delay it. …  He bought us time.  A lot of time as it turned out.  His delay held all the way to the end of that session of Congress.  … There was probably a year or two of delay there.  And in retrospect we used that time to lay the groundwork for what came later."

The reintroduction of this legislation came (in the Senate) as PIPA and (in the House) as SOPA. The introduction of the Stop Online Piracy Act and its Senate counterpart was the apotheosis of how Congress should not work" recalls Seamus Kraft then an Issa staff member and deeply engaged in the process. Kraft:

Imagine the (metaphorically) smoke-filled room special-interest authored legislation launched without warning without seeking input from stakeholders beyond a mere sop for Cerberus   or to Cyberspace: a single hearing on this bill with five or six bigwigs from the content industry to catch softballs.  And one lower level representative from Google … to be bullied."

The proposed legislation was seeking to combat intellectual property theft via the Internet.  The content creators wished to stop downloading of copyrighted content especially music and movies.  Thats a legitimate goal.  But the mechanisms proposed for doing it were horrendous a kill them all let God sort out the souls of the innocent strategy."

The Web oddly still is a novelty to Washington many of whose officials remain somewhat befuddled by the interwebs" that series of tubes   internets and website numbers" .  Kraft:

This naivete left Congress vulnerable to special interests pushing a one-sided solution to an ill-defined problem.  The relevant committee proceeded without seeking the input of representatives of those who use or whose business is the Internet.  The most important locked-out constituency was users: you and me."

The Internets precarious position then was summed up nicely by techdirt.com:

Its pretty much assured that VP Joe Biden is in favor of PROTECT IP/E-PARASITE/SOPA. Since the start of this administration President Obama has delegated most copyright issues to Biden and Bidens general view on copyright seems to be whatever makes Hollywood happier must be fantastic. How else do you describe his continued support of ever more draconian copyright law contrary to the evidence suggesting that it only makes things worse? How else do you explain his claim that he got all the stakeholders concerning copyright into a summit meeting when it only involved government officials and the big labels and studios (no consumer advocates no artists no technologists no entrepreneurs etc.)?"

Kraft:

Darrell Issa a member of the Judiciary Committee is an inventor.  He holds the most patents of anyone who ever has served in Congress.  He himself owns intellectual property and benefits from a strong streamlined system. Here however the legislative proponents seemed clueless about what the heck the Internet really is.

Even Rep. Issa did not realize the stakes were so serious until the sop to Cyberspace hearing.  His reaction was along the lines of You guys out of the blue are trying to give all this power to shut down domains to hold Google responsible for some joker who uploads some random item to federal bureaucrats? What is being proposed would change fundamentally the architecture of the best thing that has happened to humanity in the past 50 years.

 

To be continued next week….

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