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Cebu_4_2
22nd January 2012, 06:05 PM
Senate shelves Internet piracy bill following Web protest


By John Tomasic

Friday, January 20, 2012 at 1:24 pm | More from The Colorado Independent (http://coloradoindependent.com/)
The U.S. Senate has postponed voting on the controversial anti-online piracy Protect IP Act (PIPA), the upper chamber’s version of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), which was pushed hard by entertainment corporations over the last two years but shelved in the House this week after a massive opposition movement saw top Internet sites shutdown in protest (http://coloradoindependent.com/110146/popular-websites-black-out-to-protest-internet-piracy-laws) and citizen emails swamp Capitol Hill servers.
Colorado U.S. Sen Mark Udall was an early critic of the bills and welcomed news that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid had pushed PIPA off the senate agenda.
“I want to thank the many Coloradans who spoke out loud and strong on this critically important issue,” Udall was quoted to say in a release. “Internet piracy is a serious problem, but the Protect IP Act would have had serious unintended consequences to innovation, cyber security and free speech that we simply can’t risk. Thanks to the millions of Americans who have made their voices heard, Senate leaders have decided to look for a better balance that will protect intellectual property while maintaining the open Internet. I stand ready to work with any of my colleagues to ensure whatever legislation we ultimately consider protects Internet-based innovation, security and free speech.”
In the end, the Colorado delegation, led by Udall and Rep Jared Polis (CD2) (http://coloradoindependent.com/110049/stop-online-piracy-act-opposition-moves-forward), overwhelmingly came out against the bills, including Republican Reps Scott Tipton, Doug Lamborn and Mike Coffman. Senator Michael Bennet, originally a co-sponsor of the bill, retreated (http://www.kwgn.com/news/kdvr-bennet-dials-back-sopa-pipa-support-20120118,0,4749751.story) in response to concerns raised by constituents, he said.
Bennet was not alone by a long shot. Support for the bills swung wildly to opposition over the last two days, seeing traditional hundred-million-dollar lobbying efforts in support of the bills crumble under the weight of aggressive pushback from the tech industry and citizens from across the political spectrum.
ProPublica graphs visualizing shifting positions among lawmakers on the bills (http://projects.propublica.org/sopa/) from Wednesday to Thursday as the bills were set to come up for votes rocketed around digital social networks.


The entertainment industry has long been working to remake the Internet to restrict the “frictionless” sharing of material that defines it, working to bolster the country’s already sweeping copyright laws to give legal teams broad power to shutdown sites and wring settlements from startups and individual web users.

Glass
22nd January 2012, 07:49 PM
its an outstanding result. People need to be vigilant though. If they can't get it through the front door they will try a backdoor approach. Look for new and possibly unrelated legislation to carry this bills intent forward.

slvrbugjim
22nd January 2012, 08:11 PM
I remember when we protested the banker bailouts and it was killed................. Then It was passed, I guarantee this will be the same, as Ron Paul said in the last debate, be ready for the SOPA part II, it is coming and it will pass and we will not have a word said,... quote me and I will give my left dog if I am wrong.

Ares
22nd January 2012, 09:22 PM
I advise ALL OF YOU to create back up DNS host files. If you're on Windows the location is C:\windows\System32\drivers\etc In Linux the host file location is /etc/hosts it's also the same location in a MAC.

The ONLY way governments can remove a website they don't like is through removing it's DNS entry in the root DNS servers. This is different than Megaupload.com they took over the site and uploaded their own image file letting you know MegaUpload.com is under indictment. They do not have jurisdiction for servers outside of the United States. But that doesn't mean that they won't remove them from the US DNS servers so that U.S. individuals cannot view them. They'll just remove them from the DNS name that resolves the "offending" website rendering it unable to be located, which will like like to you that it's "down".

So if you have a website that is a favorite of yours, open a dos prompt in windows, it's called terminal in Linux and type in ping www.hostnamehere.com and take a note of the resolved IP address. Just copy and paste it into a notepad and keep it for a later date.

Something like this: hostnamehere.com = 123.45.67.89

Then if the fed.gov issues the order to remove the DNS entry you can browse to the host directly by doing this
http://123.45.67.89 or just edit the host file of your respective operating system and bypass the DNS request all together.

Cebu_4_2
22nd January 2012, 10:40 PM
Good point, I started this and stopped, I would put it (IP addy) in the keyword area in properties of the bookmark.

vacuum
22nd January 2012, 11:36 PM
I advise ALL OF YOU to create back up DNS host files. If you're on Windows the location is C:\windows\System32\drivers\etc In Linux the host file location is /etc/hosts it's also the same location in a MAC.

The ONLY way governments can remove a website they don't like is through removing it's DNS entry in the root DNS servers. This is different than Megaupload.com they took over the site and uploaded their own image file letting you know MegaUpload.com is under indictment. They do not have jurisdiction for servers outside of the United States. But that doesn't mean that they won't remove them from the US DNS servers so that U.S. individuals cannot view them. They'll just remove them from the DNS name that resolves the "offending" website rendering it unable to be located, which will like like to you that it's "down".

So if you have a website that is a favorite of yours, open a dos prompt in windows, it's called terminal in Linux and type in ping www.hostnamehere.com and take a note of the resolved IP address. Just copy and paste it into a notepad and keep it for a later date.

Something like this: hostnamehere.com = 123.45.67.89

Then if the fed.gov issues the order to remove the DNS entry you can browse to the host directly by doing this
http://123.45.67.89 or just edit the host file of your respective operating system and bypass the DNS request all together.
Hell, why not just backup the entire internet's dns file? Let's say there are 1 billion web pages, at 100 bytes per entry on average. That's 100 GB. If zipped, it would be cut down by probably 70%.

vacuum
22nd January 2012, 11:42 PM
Didn't they just push it back to february? When we get to it, they'll push it back again, until people get tired of constantly fighting it. Then there will be a "concession" and it will pass in a month or so.