Right now Congress is considering two bills—the Protect IP Act, and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA)—that would be laughable if they weren’t in fact real. Honestly, if a friend wrote these into a piece of fiction about government oversight gone amok, I’d have to tell them that they were too one-dimensional, too obviously anticonstitutional.
Make no mistake: These bills aren’t simply unconstitutional, they are anticonstitutional. They would allow for the wholesale elimination of entire websites, domain names, and chunks of the DNS (the underlying structure of the whole Internet), based on nothing more than the “good faith” assertion by a single party that the website is infringing on a copyright of the complainant. The accused doesn’t even have to be aware that the complaint has been made.
Slipstream
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Faizah and I traveled the world for nine months beginning July 1, 2009 and returned to southern California April 6th, 2010.
Photos from our destinations:
2009
July 1 - Hawaii
*cross intl dateline*
July 27 - Fiji
Aug 16 - Australia
Sept 27 - New Zealand
Nov 15 - Bali
Dec 6 - Thailand
(Side Trip to Cambodia) 2010
Jan 3 - Bangladesh
Jan 16 - India
Feb 6 - South Africa
Mar 2 - Europe
April 5 - Back home
Tue
Jan
3
MythBuster Adam Savage: SOPA Could Destroy the Internet as We Know It