Internet Blackout Day
 New  Delhi: Internet Blackout Day – is a date that will live in ignorance,  as the world’s largest encyclopaedia Wikipedia started a 24-hour  blackout of the English version of the website.
 Wikipedia  joined other big and small websites in a protest against pending US  legislation aimed at shutting down sites that share pirated movies and  other content.
 Wikipedia  and other proponents of a free Internet believe that if Stop Online  Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) are passed it “will harm  the free and open Internet and bring about new tools for censorship of  international websites inside the United States.”
 It  is the first time the English site has been blacked out. Wikipedia’s  Italian site came down once briefly in protest to an Internet censorship  bill put forward by the Berlusconi government. The bill did not  advance.
 The  decision was reached after polling the community of contributors, but  dissenters say political advocacy undermines the site’s mission as a  neutral source.
 However,  it’s not complete: the block could be bypassed by changing browser  settings to disable JavaScript, or by using the version of the site  designed for cellphone screens.
 Unlike  Wikipedia, Google didn’t black out its entire website but only its  logo, reminiscent of the doodles that the search engine giant puts up to  commemorate special occasions. Google also directed users to a page  titled “End Piracy, Not Liberty” that put together information on why  SOPA and the PIPA are wrong and users could also add their names to a  petition against the bills.
 “Like  many businesses, entrepreneurs and Web users, we oppose these bills  because there are smart, targeted ways to shut down foreign rogue  websites without asking American companies to censor the Internet,” said  a Google spokeswoman.
 The  legislation being debated in the US Congress target foreign websites  that violate copyrights online by banning US companies from providing  them with advertising, payment or other Internet services.
 The  Internet companies are concerned that the legislation, if passed, could  be used to target legitimate sites where users share content.
 US  payment processors and advertisers would have to end service to foreign  websites that copyright holders say are infringing their rights, or be  liable to be sued. Search engines and Internet companies would be banned  from providing links to infringing sites.
 Critics  of the proposed legislation argue that the proposals would stifle  Internet innovation and online freedom, a key driver of US and global  economic growth.
 The  White House raised concerns over the weekend, pledging to work with  Congress to battle piracy and counterfeiting while defending free  expression, privacy and innovation in the Internet. The administration  signalled it might use its veto power, if necessary.
 With  public sentiment on the bill shifting in recent weeks and an implicit  veto threat now emerging from the White House, Congressional staffers  are resigning themselves to writing replacement language or possibly  entirely new bills.
 Three  key section of the existing legislation seem likely to remain. They  comprise provisions aimed at getting search engines to disable links to  foreign infringing sites; provisions that cut off advertising services  to those sites; and provisions that cut off payment processing.
 But  critical provisions that would require Internet service providers such  as Verizon Communications and Comcast Corp. to cut off infringing sites  through a technology known as DNS blocking are now likely to be  eliminated.
 Critics  have said that such measures would only encourage people to navigate  the web in riskier ways, with modified browsers or other tweaks that  could lead to their Internet sessions getting hijacked by scammers.
 Lawmakers had already been coming around to the realisation they would have to hold back on the DNS-blocking provisions.
 Supporters  of the bills include movie and music companies such as Walt Disney,  content providers such as the National Football League and News Corp.,  pharmaceutical companies such as Eli Lilly, and the US Chamber of  Commerce.
 They  argue the bills’ sweeping provisions are necessary to shutter the  burgeoning numbers of foreign-based cybercrime sites that sell  counterfeit goods, pirated software or fake pharmaceuticals, or stream  copyrighted content like music and movies.
 Reddit.com shut down its social news service for 12 hours. Other sites made their views clear without cutting off surfers.
 WordPress,  one of the world’s most popular blogging platforms, also put its weight  behind the protests by blacking out the homepage of WordPress.org.  Thousands of WordPress-powered blogs also joined in using one of the  many SOPA Blackout plugins made available by developers.
 Local  listings site Craiglist took a middle route, changing its local home  pages to a black screen directing users to an anti-legislation page.  After 10 seconds, a link to the main site appears on the home page, but  some surfers missed that and were fooled into thinking the whole site  was blacked out.
 Topics  related to the Internet Blackout Day dominated the top Twitter trends  on Wednesday, but the protest did not get Twitter itself getting  involved in a direct role. “Closing a global business in reaction to  single-issue national politics is foolish,” Twitter CEO Dick Costolo  tweeted, but he followed up with a Tweet stating the company will  continue to take an active role in opposing the bills.
 That  position of criticising the bills, but sitting out the blackout is  echoed by many big tech companies, including several who wrote to  Congress in November to complain about the legislation, such as AOL Inc,  eBay Inc, Mozilla and Zynga Inc.
 “We  are not adjusting the consumer experience on our properties tomorrow,  but we will be helping to drive awareness of key issues around these  bills to our users,” said Tekedra Mawakana, senior vice president for  public policy at AOL.
 In  November, a number of technology companies wrote to key lawmakers  expressing opposition to the bill, including eBay, Facebook, Google,  Twitter and Mozilla.
 Supporters  of the bill were quick to attack the protests. “This publicity stunt  does a disservice to its users by promoting fear instead of facts,” said  Lamar Smith, chairman of the US House Judiciary Committee and a sponsor  of SOPA. “Perhaps during the blackout, Internet users can look  elsewhere for an accurate definition of online piracy.”
 Former  US senator Chris Dodd, who now chairs the Motion Picture Association of  America, labelled the blackout a “gimmick” and called for its  supporters to “stop the hyperbole and PR stunts and engage in meaningful  efforts to combat piracy.”
 Internet  Blackout Day got thousands of websites to participate and generated  public discussion and succeeded in attracting the attention of lawmakers  and industry leaders backing the bills.
Category: film news

