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malerfique — stop SOPA 2014 !!!!!!!!!!!!!

Published: 2014-03-19 04:53:30 +0000 UTC; Views: 3655; Favourites: 36; Downloads: 15
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Description We've got almost 104,000 signatures for the 2014 SOPA petition, GOOD JOB EVERYONE!! Unfortunately we're not done!
Now we've got TPPA on our tails! Let's beat em into dust like we did SOPA. We did it once, we can do it again!! LET'S GO!!
 We've got roughly 4,350 signatures. If we can get over 100,000 in a little over a week, then this one should be a walk in the park!
We've all got a say in our laws. Let your voices be heard, it's time to SHOUT!!  

NEW petition Signatures needed by April 13, 2014 to reach goal of 100,000  petitions.whitehouse.gov/petit…

stop SOPA. SOPA stands for Stop Online Piracy Acts. In this case, all fanart will be deleted, all fan-pages, fanfics, fan made videos, etc. Please help stop SOPA.             
AND  NEW stop TPP petition Signatures www.avaaz.org/en/stop_the_corp…
 signed. Help us get to 2,000,000   STOP Trans-Pacific Partnership    signed. Help us get to 2,000,000


Stop SOPA-like policies in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Notice and Staydown efforts, and other policies

SOPA may have been stopped, but large companies with many copyrights are trying to re-institute portions of it under other names and policies. This attempt to limit protected speech in the name of copyright is unacceptable, and must be resisted.

Secret negotiations to include SOPA provisions in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, lead by a former SOPA lobbyist, draconic Notice and Staydown measures that would hold small websites accountable to electronically police media with software they can't afford, and private agreements that could be used to bully small companies into excluding protected content are all being proposed now by Big Media.

We encourage the administration to oppose any measures that would deny alleged copyright infringers due process and protect original content! 


SOPA: Dead in Congress, Alive in Trans-Pacific Partnership

Lobbyists who once unsuccessfully pushed for federal control over the Internet are now finding new hope in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

President Obama recently named Robert Holleyman deputy U.S. trade representative. Although he has worked until recently as a “chief executive of BSA/the Software Alliance, a trade organization for software companies that counts Apple, IBM, Microsoft and other top computer firms among its members,” a couple of years ago, Holleyman worked as a professional promoter of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), a bill introduced in 2011 by Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas).

The official purpose of SOPA was to “expand the ability of U.S. law enforcement to combat online copyright infringement and online trafficking in counterfeit goods.” In reality, though, the measure would have surrendered control of the Internet to federal agencies.

Much to Holleyman’s chagrin, the reaction to SOPA was so widespread that it led to the “largest online protest in history.” The bill was practically stillborn in Congress, but the multinational industries promoting it were not to be denied.

The consortium turned to the TPP and rejoiced that their agenda could still be enforced on the Internet and could be worked out in secret, safe from the protests, the protesters, and the prying eyes of civil libertarians.

As the Washington Post noted, “The United States appears to be using the non-transparent Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations as a deliberate end run around Congress on intellectual property, to achieve a presumably unpopular set of policy goals.” 

When it comes to SOPA, the name of the bill, like so many other inappropriately named federal follies (Affordable Care Act?), has nothing to do with the real intent: granting government control over the content and traffic on the Internet.

If the agreement is being worked out in secret, how do we know such SOPA-like provisions are included? On November 13, 2013, WikiLeaks released to the Internet what appears to be a portion of the secretly negotiated draft version of the TPP.

Although the entire agreement reportedly runs over 1,000 pages and covers nearly every conceivable facet of commerce, the chapter leaked by the online whistleblower focuses on intellectual property rights (IPR).

In a press release announcing its publication of this key section of the TPP agreement, WikiLeaks described the Intellectual Property provisions as “the most controversial chapter of the TPP.” This chapter deserves that designation because of its substantial effect on so many aspects of American trade and industry, including, as WikiLeaks points out, what would be irreparable harm to “medicines, publishers, internet services, civil liberties and biological patents.”

In an article reporting on the leak of the IPR chapter, Internet freedom and fair copyright advocate TorrentFreak points out the SOPA similarities in the TPP intellectual property chapter:

Burcu Kilic, an intellectual property lawyer with Public Citizen, says that some of the proposals in the text evoke memories of the controversial SOPA legislation in the United States.

“The WikiLeaks text also features Hollywood and recording industry inspired proposals — think about the SOPA debacle — to limit Internet freedom and access to educational materials, to force Internet providers to act as copyright enforcers and to cut off people’s Internet access,” Kilic says.

Popular online tech magazine The Verge recognized the potential harm, as well:

Critics have wasted no time in attacking the treaty, with IP reform group Knowledge Ecology International calling it "bad for access to knowledge, bad for access to medicine, and profoundly bad for innovation." Many of the criticisms focus on the treaty's "enforcement" section, which includes language that critics say mirrors similar provisions from America's controversial SOPA and ACTA bills. That includes provisions that would extend copyright to temporary copies of media, and others that place the burden of enforcement specifically on local ISPs, which critics say would further establish ISPs as a de facto copyright police. Other provisions would increase the software controls on consumer hardware. "The anti-circumvention provisions seem to cement the worst parts of the anti-phone-unlocking law that we saw this summer," says Matt Wood, policy director at Free Press. "We can't change the US law if we're locked into these international agreements.”

The piece by The Verge references another failed legislative effort to seize control of the Internet, a bill that would abolish Internet freedom and intellectual property rights: the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). ACTA-like provisions appear in the leaked TPP chapter.

This section of the draft agreement launches another attack on U.S. sovereignty through the mandate that member nations enact regulations requiring Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to privately enforce copyright protection laws.

These private companies — many of which are very small — would be forced to take upon themselves the responsibility of patrolling for and punishing any violation of the copyright laws by their subscribers.

Apart from the issues of sovereignty, putting such pressure on service providers is a threat not only to the owners of these small business, but also to Internet freedom, as well.

It is the good work of these ISPs that has created the Internet we know today. Were it not for the typically low-cost access these companies provide, the pool of readily accessible viewpoints, opinions, and news resources would be significantly shallower.

In a post-TPP world, ISPs would be forced to raise prices dramatically in order to cover the increase in their own overhead brought on by the requirement that they monitor and manage the websites they host.

Alternatively, there would undoubtedly be a large number of ISPs who would not only want to avoid the administrative burden of being forced into the role of Internet cop, but who would also rightly regard the risks of providing Internet access as outweighing the benefits.

A story published by the Electronic Frontier Foundation accurately describes the potential problems and predicts the future of the Internet should the United States agree to enter the TPP:

Private ISP enforcement of copyright poses a serious threat to free speech on the Internet, because it makes offering open platforms for user-generated content economically untenable. For example, on an ad-supported site, the costs of reviewing each post will generally exceed the pennies of revenue one might get from ads. Even obvious fair uses could become too risky to host, leading to an Internet with only cautious and conservative content.

As any news organization that maintains a Web presence knows, in the posting of news items time is of the essence. If the regulations of the TPP become the law, then ISPs would be forced to remove immediately any subscriber content posted online that is challenged by someone claiming a copyright infringement. This broad expansion of copyright protection could be devastating to a news organization (or blogger, for that matter) depending for their economic survival on the timeliness of their online stories and on the availability of those stories to the millions of Internet users.

Such procedures bypass the U.S. court system and the Constitution by abolishing the due process owed to those accused of crimes. Rather than require a person to present evidence of an alleged violation of a copyright to an impartial judge, the TPP would allow someone to demand that the outlet’s ISP immediately remove the content in question. Any legal proceedings on the merits of the charges would occur after the damage has been done.

Critics understand that this redrawing of the boundaries of copyright law by the globalists secretly deliberating and drafting the TPP is an attack on our laws, our courts, our freedom of expression, our Constitution, and our sovereignty.

 
Related content
Comments: 32

ZanyOnePip [2016-07-01 00:24:02 +0000 UTC]

Seriously. How many times are they going to repackage internet censorship under a different name? SOPA/PIPA then ACTA then TPP. They would probably sneak it under a different, unrelated bill giving how we protested them and how it blew up all over the media.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

charikitten [2014-08-01 02:14:28 +0000 UTC]

uh  I don't think this went threw since iv seen pictures noncensored and are very recent like a few days ago on here

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

RussianRoulette774 [2014-05-22 12:42:11 +0000 UTC]

Why is the deadline coincidentally 4/13?

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Scorching-Whirlwind [2014-04-22 23:00:07 +0000 UTC]

God, why does SOPA keep coming back?!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Private-Funny-Man [2014-04-06 16:50:51 +0000 UTC]

I don't think we're going to make it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

TwilightErika In reply to Private-Funny-Man [2014-04-12 16:17:32 +0000 UTC]

Well?   Just spam people on facebook or on here.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Private-Funny-Man In reply to TwilightErika [2014-04-12 17:04:24 +0000 UTC]

That's always an option.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Fushigi-Okami [2014-04-01 15:21:41 +0000 UTC]

WE NEED MORE PEOPLE TO BE AWARE OF THIS TPP MADNESS!!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Private-Funny-Man [2014-03-22 16:52:00 +0000 UTC]

Hmmm.... I think some how the stop the TPP votes somehow went down. Also, not there seems to be a lack of votes on it.
And here's another vote for you to look at. petitions.whitehouse.gov/petit…

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

amelokello [2014-03-20 03:23:32 +0000 UTC]

No more worries, everyone. The other petition to stop SOPA has already reached its goal. 

But who knows if they'll come back again...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

maintainable798 [2014-03-20 00:03:12 +0000 UTC]

Me too

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

gurospade [2014-03-19 22:27:46 +0000 UTC]

Awh shit!

I shall spread the news!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DuskyLunaFrostBite [2014-03-19 22:07:10 +0000 UTC]

Damn, it is already done. What now? The petition is finished. WE DID IT!!! No, actually, I have no excitement for this. *Moves on in life*

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

kisslove3 [2014-03-19 21:18:19 +0000 UTC]

* Sober subjugglator mode on* I WONT LET THIS MOTHERFUCKERS TO MESS UP WITH ME, I AM A MOTHERFUCKIN SUBJUGGLATOR AND I SHALL CULL THEM WITH THE POWER OF THE MOTHERFUCKING MIRTHFUL MESSIAH, FUCK OFF SCUM!!!!! 


Ok no, but seriously....sometimes I think they do this to input FEAR on people. I just signed the petition, don't know If it's real or not. Let's put our bit of sand in this OwO. SUPPORT OVER HERE, PLEASE!!!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Jazpii [2014-03-19 20:41:44 +0000 UTC]

AGAIN? God when are they EVER going to give up??

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

AlzhaeredTheCreator [2014-03-19 20:36:43 +0000 UTC]

KILL SOPA

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Private-Funny-Man [2014-03-19 17:22:01 +0000 UTC]

I believe SOPA has already been beaten this time already. This page should provide some support to my claim. angelofthenight666.deviantart.…

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Meinux [2014-03-19 16:38:34 +0000 UTC]

SOPA is not back, however "SOPA-Like policies" is, and we should be signing that instead

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

RadioParadise [2014-03-19 15:32:11 +0000 UTC]

honestly, if you'd please, look this up before you start advertising a hoax and getting everyone worried, it has already been proven that the bill is not going to pass, since it hasn't been suggested: fyeahcopyright.tumblr.com/post…

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

SkySerenity [2014-03-19 15:07:41 +0000 UTC]

WHAT THE FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK! I THOUGHT THEY WERE DONE WITH THAT BULLSH*T!!!!
THIS IS UNACCEPTABLLLLLEEEEEE!!!!!!!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Zinpachi [2014-03-19 15:06:02 +0000 UTC]

SHIT ARE YOU SERIOUS

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Badluk [2014-03-19 13:48:27 +0000 UTC]

Companies like SOPA would say "You can stop us, but there will always be another one to stop you later!" Try as they might, we just have to show them we can stop them every time anyone does this again.

They think they can discourage us; we MUST show them wrong.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

tigerstar5078 [2014-03-19 13:26:52 +0000 UTC]

NNOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

pokemon22255 [2014-03-19 13:13:23 +0000 UTC]

Can't they EVER give us a break?!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DuskyLunaFrostBite [2014-03-19 12:00:54 +0000 UTC]

Away dip! I knew it came back! I already started to spread the word but some didn't believe me. Now I got a speck of proof. Now I can pre upload the image. Oh and I will sign, I just need to get to a nearby computer as soon as I can. Damn bastards, they don't know when to quit.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

crazycats161616 [2014-03-19 11:20:49 +0000 UTC]

Signed it, real or not.  Cause if it is real, this is some serious shit.  OmO

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Emilythebrawler1 [2014-03-19 10:22:19 +0000 UTC]

I guess the plan that SOPA is doing is a very bad idea. We must stop SOPA right now and Destory their stupid plan.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

malerfique In reply to Emilythebrawler1 [2014-03-19 10:55:16 +0000 UTC]

yes Destory sopa

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Natureisnatural [2014-03-19 08:45:58 +0000 UTC]

 I know what it is, but what does TPPA stand for?

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

Natureisnatural In reply to Natureisnatural [2014-03-19 08:58:29 +0000 UTC]

Well, I mean that SOPA stands for "Stop Online Piracy Act," so what does TPPA stand for? Are they just random letters?

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

malerfique In reply to Natureisnatural [2014-03-19 08:55:04 +0000 UTC]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Pa… censored image and fanart Will Be deleted, deleted ​​videos fan

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

DecepticonFlamewar [2014-03-19 05:59:47 +0000 UTC]

Thank you so much for getting this information out there. If I may, I strongly suggest editing the TPP, Notice and Staydown, or both into your title to help shift the focus of those with poor reading comprehension where it belongs. The whole "SOPA 2014" misunderstanding began a blogger used a clumsy title that just so happened to have "SOPA" in it.

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