SOPA
Objective argument: The Stop Online Piracy Act
The Internet has been called the new Wild West: there is a great deal of profit that can be made, in terms of availability of information, but there are also many hazards, due to the lack of regulation. One attempt to create a 'kinder, gentler' Internet is the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). The Act would create a kind of "national firewall by censoring the domain names of websites accused of hosting infringing copyrighted materials" (Losey & Meinrath 2011). Supporters of mainstream entertainment companies are strong supporters of the Act, which they hope will radically reduce the amount of pirated content available online. Copyright holders as well as the Department of Justice could 'take down' websites with an injunction, if there was evidence that the website was disseminating pirated content. If SOPA passes, it could enable the entire domain name of tumblr.com down based upon the copyright infringement of a single blog (and Tumblr hosts many, many blogs). The responsibility of website hosts would increase dramatically, and it would also be much more difficult for website venues to host various sources of content, because of the potential for their liability, should users accidentally or intentionally violate copyright laws.
The first criticism of SOPA is that it would effectively punish suspected infringers even before they received a fair hearing in court. "These shutdowns would happen before a site owner could defend himself in court -- SOPA could punish sites without even establishing whether they are guilty of the charges brought against them" (Losey & Meinrath 2011). Critics contend that the law provides no recourse for "legitimate sites that might get swept up along with the rogues" (Oremus 2011). Given that many legitimate hosting sites are run by small operators with little funding for legal counsel, SOPA could have a silencing effect upon many sites devoted to publishing legitimate materials with legitimate points-of-view. It could shut down sites, or could force site owners to engage in radical censorship of contributors, to avoid falling foul of the law.
Constitutional scholars have rallied against the law. "The law appears to disregard some of the 'safe harbor' provisions established in the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which has protected sites such as YouTube as long as they take down copyrighted content upon request" (Oremus 2011). Opponents of SOPA argue that this...
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