I can only hope Anonymous can put a monkeywrench into it somehow when it inevitably passes.
craigslist , wikipedia, and google particpating in protests against SOPA. really takes this much for Congress not to do something useless and harmful?
well I think it's somewhat of a stretch to say you lose your freedom (not that it doesn't hurt many many things). say you posted a youtube video with a metallica song, or you put a video by mistake into a media server folder: bam years in jail : ). Also various entities will be more prone to investigate things all the time, reading your requests, etc.
The bill would make unauthorized streaming of copyrighted content a crime, with a maximum penalty of five years in prison for ten such infringements within six months. The bill also gives immunity to Internet services that voluntarily take action against websites dedicated to infringement, while making liable for damages any copyright holder who knowingly misrepresents that a website is dedicated to infringement.[4]
Quote from: TooMuchFun on January 18, 2012, 09:43:51 AMI can only hope Anonymous can put a monkeywrench into it somehow when it inevitably passes. Eh? How can a bunch of script kiddies make an effective blow against passed legislature? Even after it passes? Quote from: reaper on January 18, 2012, 08:46:00 AMcraigslist , wikipedia, and google particpating in protests against SOPA. really takes this much for Congress not to do something useless and harmful?Well, the Motion Picture Association of America is on SOPA's side, just like how internet giants like Google and Yahoo and Wikipedia are against it. Sure, plenty of big corporations want the bill passed, but there are equally as many big corporations who want it killed.Quote from: reaper on January 18, 2012, 09:47:15 AMwell I think it's somewhat of a stretch to say you lose your freedom (not that it doesn't hurt many many things). say you posted a youtube video with a metallica song, or you put a video by mistake into a media server folder: bam years in jail : ). Also various entities will be more prone to investigate things all the time, reading your requests, etc.Well, several supports of the bill SAID it's not a felony to do something like that, but would we be here if it wasn't for greed and corruption?
A DDoS isn't stopping congress from passing a bill.
Uhhhh.. no lol. No amount of "DDoS" will make the government "regret" doing something. If the entire company of google and wikipedia speak out against the bill, what makes you think the government 'fears' a few dumb script-kiddies who think they can solve all the worlds problems by hacking?
Obviously you don't know that the government can EASILY dodge a few DDoS attacks.... lol. People get bored after a while and they all just stop after a day anyway.Tell me, can you DDoS a bill out of existence? No? Then it can't do anything significant.
I'm sure politicians just sit around and fiddle around with a computer while the government's being hacked. They certainly don't, say, do the reasonable thing and get people who WORK FOR THE GOVERNMENT to fix it for them. And what use would DDoS'ing bring anyway? If anything, it'll be BAD for the bill. All the people who support SOPA would be like "these are the kind of people that oppose this bill, the hackers who just try to DDoS their problems away". Pretty stupid.