Watch, gentle readers, what happens when elite interests are not given priority. The outcry, the wailing and gnashing of teeth, the injustice of it all. The MPAA CEO Chris Dodd called out the irresponsible websites – Wikipedia, Reddit etc on their egregious behaviour:
“A so-called “blackout” is yet another gimmick, albeit a dangerous one, designed to punish elected and administration officials who are working diligently to protect American jobs from foreign criminals.”
Ah, so the authors and money men who sponsored and rammed through the DMCA legislation are back for more, and of course it is all just to protect American Jobs, Apple Pie and All that is What is Right in the World (aka profit). The MPAA and friends screwed up this time because they over estimated their purchase of the American Congress and grossly underestimated the will of the American people. I’m not a huge fan of the American body politic, but this time, for once, the good guys won. The corporate lobby and its billions just got rolled by a ground swell of people calling/emailing/tweeting etc their elected representatives and telling them in no uncertain terms that if this passed, so too would their comfy digs in congress. Huzzah!
It would be me remiss of me not to point out that similar elite interests have been much more successful in herding the American populace in other areas. Perhaps the MPAA and related corporate lobby should have declared a “War on Piracy”, as that seems (going to war on common nouns to be specific) to have a much better track record in press-ganging convincing the people of America to support their government when it does horrible things in their name.
One of the instruments of douche that has been doing his very best to whip American into a blind frenzy just happens to be a representative of the Global Intellectual Property Center affiliated with, of course, the US Chamber of Commerce. Enter Steve Tepp. Steve Tepp, along with the US Chamber of Commerce is only interested in saving US jobs and making the world a better, safer place for Business Americans.
Steve was recently interviewed on CBC’s The Current by Mike Finnerty. It is a 20 minute interview, but I highly recommend you listen to the whole thing as Steve gets his ass handed to him by Rob Beschizza the managing editor from Boing Boing.net. I’ve transcribed and will reproduce some of the highlights from the interview. Watch closely how our boy Steve attempts to frame this issue:
“This issue is fundamentally about American Jobs and protecting consumers.”
Wow, the MPAA CEO and Steve are all about JOBS. Like holy-frack they are right there beside the rest of the 99% fighting just to make ends meet. They just want to protect the little guy! They certainly would not want to scaremonger or obfuscate what SOPA is really about.
“Criminals are abusing the internet to steal the most creative and innovative products that are out in the marketplace.”
I’m wondering if Steve said this with a straight face considering the creative output from Hollywood that enhances and enriches our cultural life.
” […] New twists, children’s toys, automobile parts, medicine its all fake, its all made in unsupervised facilities, it can be shoddy, people have died. This stuff can be extremely dangerous.”
This from the same people who regularly decry the EPA, food safety and consumer protection and worker health/safety legislation in general as ‘dirty socialism’ suddenly finds is voice and moral outrage at the very notion of Americans buying shoddy unsafe products. Profits Lives are on the line!
Steve tries very hard to be the good corporate PR flack but ultimately fails when confronted with the facts of the situation. SOPA like the DMCA act before it, exists only for business entities to consolidate and defend their ‘intellectual property’ in perpetuity. In essence they want a bigger stick to punish people who dare to mess with their profits.
Not this time Steve. The democratic spirit of America awoke for a little while and slapped you down. Hard. A small victory for internet freedom and expression, but the repressive forces of the corporatocracy have already fired back, taking down MegaUploads and charging people with copyright infringement and piracy. Anonymous fired back, taking down several government web sites as well as the MPAA’s own website.
This issue is not going away. The siren call of avarice is much to strong to let little things like freedom of speech and freedom from censorship to get in the way. Stay tuned for round 2.
*update* – Need Background on the issue? Check out the TED Talk.





3 comments
January 24, 2012 at 4:26 pm
Vern R. Kaine
This would be a great issue that people on both the left and right could come together on. Not that there aren’t better issues that the left and right should come together on, but at least this issue is one that is already agreed to by most where we can quickly move past ideology into fixing policy, and show that a) the left and right can actually get together and agree on something, and b) not just agree, but move forward and act in creating/removing/ratifying legislation based upon the will of the people. If we can’t come together around the issue of free speech, what can we?
Also, wouldn’t this coming together be a great contrast to shove back in the face of the politicians and all their stalemates in the House and Senate? Dare to dream!
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January 24, 2012 at 11:38 pm
The Arbourist
Such hope Vern. I think…I think I feel the wind beneath my wings…and its You! :) Err…anyhow, I think both sides of the political spectrum can agree that we should not break the internet even if the media producers are having a grade A, triple frothy, heel bruising shite-fit about the whole issue.
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January 25, 2012 at 1:14 pm
Vern R. Kaine
“I think I feel the wind beneath my wings…and its You!”
Hahaha! When I look at my own views on the issue, I do buy is that (reasonable) copyright laws be respected. What I don’t buy, however, is the so-called “losses” the industry claims file-sharing has cost them. They’re for the most part artificial. The fact that I would have to pay for something might have disincentivized me altogether from purchasing it, however it goes the other way, too – I’ve actually bought things after that… just might… have possibly… come my way through sharing of some sort… (shhhh!)
Instead, they get to use arbitrary numbers that are surely over-inflated just to give their lobby more teeth, and in the end we get the kind of sweeping legislation that is causing such a stir.
I think Kid Rock explained the situation the best when asked his feelings about file-sharing: “I’m already rich, what the f#ck do I care.”
Show me one musician who went broke due to Napster or one actor or studio who went the same route via Megauploads, and I might change my tune. In the meantime, I’ll be happy to enjoy the angelic bliss we both seem to be sharing due to our agreement on this issue. :)
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