PIPA advances, stalls and Wyden is the voice of reason

With the PROTECT IP (PIPA) bill out for revenge after the failure of COICA, Senator Ron Wyden stands out as a singular Congressional voice for calm and considered action on digital copyright infringement.

Yesterday the Senate Judiciary Committee approved the bill move onto the floor with a stunning unanimous vote. Thankfully, Senator Wyden has kept his ear to the ground on issues of digital due process and copyright and immediately responded to put a hold on the bill.

Click here to sign our petition and join over 60,000 others who oppose this bill. You can also vocalize your opposition along with 3,000 Demand Progress members by calling your lawmakers here.

One of the major proponents of PIPA, the MPAA, made a blunder this week and revealed just how skewed their sense of how the Internet works is. In a post on the MPAA blog they claimed that we had “allied” ourselves with Demonoid because they had linked back to our petition. It should be obvious to anyone with even a miniscule understanding of how hyperlinking works that the target site has nothing necessarily to do with the origin.

MPAA’s error is not only humorously absurd, it also gives us a glimpse into what the MPAA, RIAA and others hope the implications of PIPA will be. Its passage as-is would be “ceding control of the Internet to corporations through a private right of action, and to government agencies that do not sufficiently understand and value the Internet, PIPA represents a threat to our economic future and to our international objectives”, as Senator Wyden said yesterday.

We cannot put such power in the hands of those who do not properly understand it or may abuse it. Scores of thousands have signed already, but we still need your help.

Sign our petition and send a message to Congress.

Comments

Thanks for the cross post

I'm afraid power is already in the hands of those who definitely don't understand it, but I will sign the petition anyway.

Thanks James! Its never easy

Thanks James! Its never easy with complex issues like this, but every little bit helps.