The Stop Online Piracy Act is a bad law that will screw up the Internet for Americans in terribly devastating ways. I’m with these guys against SOPA. You should join the fight, too by going here to find out how to call your Congressional representative.
SOPA, aka the American Censorship Bill, Up For a Vote Tomorrow, Clang on the Bars Long and Loud
December 14, 2011Roundup of Anti-SOPA Coverage
November 17, 2011As I mentioned yesterday, please let your representatives know that you do not want the Internet censored using a system similar to that used in China, Iran, and Syria. This is what the Internet Blacklisting legislation known as SOPA and Protect-IP would do. We should respect support copyright, but we should not support copyright to the detriment of all other speech, including fair use, online. The Internet is still in its infancy and it is developing in new and unexpected ways. SOPA and similarly restrictive laws will stifle that development and the empowering possibilities that might have been. Read the coverage below to learn more about what SOPA and Protect-IP mean for American citizens and the Internet. Then, go here to send a message to your representatives.
Stop the Great Firewall of America [New York Times op-ed]
SOPA Won’t Stop Online Piracy, Would Censor Everyone Else [Time]
Thoughts On The House Judiciary Committee’s Hearings On SOPA [TechDirt]
At Web censorship hearing, Congress guns for “pro-pirate” Google [ArsTechnica]
A Look At Three Popular Sites That May Be In Trouble Under SOPA [TechDirt]
More And More People Speak Up Against SOPA [TechDirt]
New Study From Booz & Co. Shows That SOPA/PROTECT IP Will Chill Investment In Innovation [TechDirt]
Sweet sanity: 75% of Americans say infringement fines should be under $100 [ArsTechnica]
American Censorship Day, Tell Congress that You Don’t Want the Internet Censored!
November 16, 2011Today is the ad hoc American Censorship Day. Why? A committee in the House of Representatives has stacked their deck of experts 5 to 1 in favor of the SOPA, Stop Online Piracy Act. Even though this law could radically change the way the Internet works in the US (so that it can be restricted in the same way that it is restricted in China, Iran, and Syria), many congressional members support this law and they do not want public dissenting voices to be heard during committee. Techdirt has coverage of the hearing today here.
SOPA and Protect-IP are intended to put the thumbscrews on online discussion, fair use, and entrepreneurship. This infographic explains the potential effects of the bill if made law.
This is another example of our elected officials catering to outmoded big business. Big media wants to consolidate its control over the Internet, because those companies are unwilling to adjust their business models to the here-and-now. Instead, they want to flex their money-muscle and reconfigure the Internet so that they remain on top. I suppose this is the logic of capital. Increased regulation helps diversify the market, which leads to benefits for consumers. Conglomerates and virtual monopolies do not want this. Instead, they want to solidify their own position by hijacking the democratic process and putting laws in place that not only gives them added control over the primary medium of discourse but also further criminalizes previously non-criminal acts.
Go to the American Censorship Day website here, and send an email (or even better–call them!) letting your representatives know that you are against SOPA/Protect-IP.
So-Called Protecting Children from Internet Pornographers Act of 2011 is a Steaming Pile of Shit, Let Your Congressional Representatives Know That Unfettered Surveillance is Not Okay
July 30, 2011This is the kind of bipartisanism that I can do without: increased surveillance on American citizens online.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation reports:
Despite serious privacy concerns being voiced by both Democratic and Republican leaders and by thousands of digital rights activists using EFFs Action Center, this afternoon the House Judiciary Committee voted 19 to 10 to recommend passage of H.R. 1981. That bill contains a mandatory data retention provision that would require your Internet service providers to retain 12 months worth of personal information that could be used to identify what web sites you visit and what content you post online. EFF had previously joined with 29 other civil liberties and consumer privacy groups in signing a letter to the Committee members that condemned the bill as a “direct assault on the privacy of Internet users.”
The so-called Protecting Children From Internet Pornographers Act of 2011 is the kind of rhetorical nonsense that has very little to do with protecting children and very much to do with unfettered surveillance of all American citizens online. If passed into law, it would require “commercial” ISPs (how many would you say are not commercial?) to maintain 12 months of records on what you do online (websites you visit, what you post, etc). These kinds of Panopticon-like surveillance tools have been promoted by the Justice Department of the Bush and Obama administrations. There are more Republican backers of this bill than Demoncrats, but it is important to note that there are elected officials on both sides of the aisle who want to push this terrible law onto the American people. Let your congressional leaders know here that you won’t stand for this kind of offensive affront to American liberties.
Interestingly, a similar law recently took effect in China. Read about it here.
Another Example of US Govt Abuse of Power: Trying to Extradite a British Citizen for Linking to Online Content
July 22, 2011According to a feature story on Ars Technica, the US government via its Immigration and Customs Enforcement is attempting to extradite Richard O’Dwyer, a British student with no ties to the US, from Britain to the US for linking to movies and TV shows available online:
In May, American law enforcement officials opened up yet another front in this war by seeking the extradition of Richard ODwyer. The 23-year-old British college student is currently working on his BS in interactive media and animation. Until last year, he ran a “link site” that helped users find free movies and TV shows, many of them infringing. American officials want to try him on charges of criminal copyright infringement and conspiracy.
I believe that this is an egregious abuse of US resources to target an individual who has not committed a crime warranting such an action by the US government. Extradition to the US for an individual who has no obvious ties and who has not committed an atrocious crime should be subjected to this kind of strong arm tactics.
Furthermore, the British government should defend O’Dwyer from extradition, because he has not violated any laws by the US government. Essentially, the US government is attempting to hold citizens around the world to its laws. What would happen if US citizens were held to the laws of more restrictive regimes and their laws? Would the US want its citizens extradited? Would the US allow its citizens to be extradited for transgressing a law in another country that it deemed too harsh? I don’t think so. Britain should likewise hold its own against the US government’s actions on the behalf of its apparent masters: big business and big media.
If we want to talk about balancing budgets and reducing government overhead, I believe that we can start by not putting government resources to work for the entertainment industry. If the entertainment industry wants to pursue legal action again O’Dwyer, that’s their prerogative. Personally, I don’t want my government wasting resources by going after individuals in foreign countries with different laws for linking to online content. This is a matter of foreign sovereignty as well as governmental resource allocation. Our government shouldn’t chase game on the behalf of big business.
The United States and Canada Declare War on Japanese Manga and Lolicon
June 25, 2011As part of efforts to “save the children,” authorities in the United States and Canada have declared war on readers and collectors of Japanese manga and they have specifically targeted the lolicon style.
Legislators have in recent years broadened the law in regards to what is considered child pornography, because they assert without any supporting evidence beyond their own beliefs that any under-18 depiction of sex or eroticism contributes to the exploitation and victimization of children. This has mostly been done through the Amber Alert Law that had additional provisions that amended the legal code including 18 USC 1466A and 2252A.
I decided to write about this problem after hearing of another abuse of law, albeit in the Great White North of Canada, but I will discuss another case of this that happened in the US a few years ago further below.
Cory Doctorow on BoingBoing reports that the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund [consider contributing to this worthy advocate of the freedom of speech by going here] is taking up the cause of an American arrested in Canada for allegedly carrying manga on his laptop deemed by the authorities to be “child pornography.” His collection of manga was discovered when a border guard decided to dump his hard drive in a fishing expedition for anything illegal on the computer.
It should be noted that Canadian and United States border guards have the authority to search your computer even without any suspicion of wrong doing. In terms of United States law, border crossing are exempted from normal 4th amendment protection from unreasonable searches and seizures. Furthermore, border guards will likely dump the contents of hard drives or flash drives of selected (I say selected rather than suspected, because suspicion is not the threshold for selection) individuals for further analysis at special facilities that are setup for computer forensic analysis. The BC Civil Liberties Association has an explanation for Canadian border searches here.
I do not agree with recent laws in the Americas–in Canada or the United States–that equate art including manga to exploitative, photographic child pornography. In the case of manga, there are cultural and historical precedents for the evolution of the art form that includes what is called lolicon. Also, lolicon is a style and a genre that has comics devoted to male readers and female readers alike. Regardless, lolicon is art and speech, and it should be protected as such regardless of whether you like it or not.
In the case of photographic child pornography, there are real children who are exploited by bad people. This is not art, but instead, it is criminal rape and exploitation. People who prey on children to create pornography of real children who have no choice in the matter should be locked up. However, it bears noting that child pornography laws should not be exploited to arrest teenagers who agree to take pictures of one another.
In the case of lolicon, artists create works from their imagination that fit into the genre expectations of lolicon readers, who are not by definition child molesters. They create art in a particular style with a long and complex history, and collectors read it, admire it, and collect it.
For example, in the unfortunate case of Christopher Handley, an Iowa man who collects manga and holds a sizable collection of Japanese comics, was arrested by federal authorities after the Postal Service intercepted a number of manga he ordered directly from Japan. Some of these included lolicon art. The authorities seized his collection at home, but they only found eight comics that they took issue with. He was tried for accepting child pornography under the GWB-era expansion of the law, but under the advice of his lawyer [read his lawyer's press release here--it provides valuable context and the reality of obscenity trials--you are not likely to win in front of a jury], he pled guilty to a charge of obscenity in May 2009, which netted him 6 months in federal prison, 3 years supervised release, 5 years probation, and the forfeiture of seized materials. His sentence could ahve been significantly longer had he not agreed to a plea deal. Let’s get something straight here–he never was suspected of or arrested for any criminal act much less any act involving a minor. Instead, he was targeted for his choice of comic book collecting. I have looked online, but I cannot find any followup of Handley’s experience as a result of his hobby. However, the best report of the case and the named comics Handley was tried for is over at the Anime News Network here.
Neil Gaiman spoke out against Handley’s arrest and trial here and here. In the latter post, “Why Defend Freedom of Icky Speech?”, Gaiman lays out his own defense for the indefensible in response to a reader’s comment:
Still, you seem to want lolicon banned, and people prosecuted for owning it, and I don’t. You ask, What makes it worth defending? and the only answer I can give is this: Freedom to write, freedom to read, freedom to own material that you believe is worth defending means you’re going to have to stand up for stuff you don’t believe is worth defending, even stuff you find actively distasteful, because laws are big blunt instruments that do not differentiate between what you like and what you don’t, because prosecutors are humans and bear grudges and fight for re-election, because one person’s obscenity is another person’s art.
Because if you don’t stand up for the stuff you don’t like, when they come for the stuff you do like, you’ve already lost.
This is the problem in a nutshell: If we really believe in freedom of speech, we cannot also believe that there is something called “obscenity.” Obscenity is a subjective and unagreed upon standard that throws freedom of speech under the bus. They are all engaging in artistic speech that should be protected. Artists and collectors should not be held accountable to a standard that says this one art is speech and another is obscenity.
Gaiman also admits that his own work Sandman: The Doll’s House could likely run afoul of the law. Similarly, Alan Moore’s Lost Girls books could be considered child pornography. Should all collectors of those books be locked up and the books burned? Should Gaiman and Moore be held accountable–Gaiman is in Minnesota, which isn’t far from Iowa as the crow flies. I don’t believe that these artists and writers have done anything wrong, and I don’t believe someone like Handley, who collected ALL manga rather than lolicon exclusively, has done anything wrong either. However, Handley crossed a line drawn in the sand by overzealous protectors of children who shield their zealotry with the supposedly unchallengeable child in need of protection from the world.
It’s summertime, so how about picking up a copy of Lee Edelman‘s No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive. Edelman questions the “think of the children” politics that pervades American culture that I think is highly appropriate for putting these unjust laws into perspective.
Why the Hell Does it Matter What a Football Player Thinks About Same-Sex Marriage? Marriage is About Rights, Not Religion
June 16, 2011According to CNN.com, football player David Tyrees weighed in on same-sex marriage through the National Organization for Marriage by claiming that allowing same-sex marriage will result in “anarchy”:
Former New York Giants receiver David Tyrees celebrated catch in the closing seconds of Super Bowl XLII was pivotal to his teams victory.
Now out of football, he is trying to claim a last-minute win over another foe — same-sex marriage.On the same day that the New York State Assembly approved a same-sex marriage bill, Tyree warned of dire consequences if the legislation becomes law.
The bills passage would “be the beginning of our country sliding toward … anarchy,” he said
via Super Bowl hero warns of anarchy if NY approves gay marriage – CNN.com.
Tyrees’ comments reflect an ignorance about what marriage actually is and insensitivity toward equal rights for all citizens.
Tyrees and others claim that marriage is an intimate bond that is grounded in their religious faith. They believe that allowing same-sex couples to marry will lessen the sanctity of marriage. Marriage is seen as a religious rather than a secular institution.
The fact is that marriage has long been held as a social and legal contract rather than something dependent upon any church. Certainly, the marriage ceremony, at least in the West following the rise of the major modern religions, is intimately connected to religious practices. However, it is approval and acknowledgement by the state that has granted marriage legal standing. Put another way, marriage is a legal contract between two people to observe certain roles and obtain legal rights not given to non-married persons.
Today, you have to have a marriage license in order to marry. It is the state, not the church, that bestows legal rights to the married couple. Those significant rights include joint ownership, rights of inheritance, rights in a court of law, and rights of care and decision making. Same-sex couples are denied these rights even though they may do the same things that heterosexual couples do, such as live their lives together, intermingle finances, and care for one another. Because same-sex couples are denied these rights, a same-sex partner may not be able to see a loved one in the hospital since they are not “family,” and they have no right of inheritance if the deceased-person’s family objects. They do not qualify for tax breaks reserved for married couples. They cannot always obtain health insurance through their partner’s policy. They may not be able to get life insurance since they do not have a legally defined relationship. They cannot obtain other juridicial or business opportunities given only to married couples. Thus, same-sex couples are denied many legal rights enjoyed by heterosexually married couples despite, because the law denies them the rights given to heterosexual couples.
In both cases, heterosexual or homosexual couples essentially desire to enter into a legal contract that guarantees them certain rights. This is the main issue at stake in extending those legal rights to homosexual couples. People like Tyrees who talk about “anarchy” and lessening the sanctity of marriage are blurring the issue in terms of their religious beliefs. I would hope that they don’t believe that heterosexual couples in general believe in the sanctity of marriage due to the high rates of divorce and low probability for marriages to survive past 10 years [read the data here].
The fact that divorce in the United States is relatively high for some age groups belies the fact that marriage itself is not a highly sanctified institution. When it comes down to it, marriage is about a relationship between two people who enjoy certain rights during the marriage and other rights to dissolve that marriage in divorce. Same-sex couples also deserve this right to divorce–a right often overlooked by those who are in happily married relationships. Nevertheless, divorce is a legal right that allows for the dissolution of the relationship and all joint properties and business relationships. The right of divorce is almost as important as the right to marry, because the right of divorce allows for a bad relationship to be dissolved in a legally arbitrated and binding way. Same-sex couples do not have access to this legally streamlined method of dissolving relationships that heterosexual couples apparently use to a great extent.
What might lead to anarchy is the fact that CNN.com gives voice to someone who can catch a football in the arena of fundamental rights. This is a problem of big media today that favors the sensationalism of celebrity opinions and pronouncements when those celebrities are neither truly invested or experts on a given political issue. Why doesn’t CNN talk to more same-sex couples to let people know the FACTS of same-sex marriage issues. These rights affect people’s real lives while the things that Tyrees and other anti-same-sex marriage advocates lament is their loss of control over other people’s lives.
What does it really matter to Tyrees that two gay men can file their taxes together? What does it really matter to Tyrees that an aging lesbian woman can visit her dying partner in the hospital? What does it really matter to Tyrees that two lesbians raising an adopted son can get health insurance for their entire family? Those things don’t matter to someone like Tyrees, because they are too caught up in what they think marriage means rather what it really means–those easily ignored rights that only married people can enjoy.
UPDATE: Sarah Kate Ellis wrote on the Huffington Post today about the issue of same-sex parents and children–an important issue that I didn’t fully explore earlier in my post above.
Chicago States Attorney Lets Bad Cops Slide, Prosecutes Citizens Who Record Them
June 10, 2011Radley Balko write on The Huffington Post about recent cases in Illinois of prosecutors going after citizens who record their interactions with the police. Apparently, Illinois law takes a hard line on recording the conversations of others, especially police officers. You would think that a state with such a seedy past of graft and corruption would fight back against that with laws that empower people to make recordings when there is not a reasonable right to privacy.
Balko writes about the importance of empowering people with recorders:
The ACLU of Illinois is also challenging the law. But in January, U.S. District Court Judge Suzanne B. Conlon ruled against the organization. Conlon wrote that the First Amendment does not protect citizens who record the police. The ACLU has appealed and expects to participate in oral arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit sometime in the fall.
In a report released just this month, the United Nations noted the importance of Internet access and personal technology in facilitating the recent Arab Spring uprisings in the Middle East. Technology has given citizens all over the world a remarkable and historic tool to bring transparency to the most brutal and oppressive governments.
But even as Americans have criticized those countries for attempting to prevent protesters from uploading photo, video, blog posts and Twitter accounts of government crackdowns, government officials in the U.S. are still arresting, threatening, intimidating and harassing Americans who attempt to document police abuse in America. See this example over Memorial Day in Miami.
No, America isnt Egypt or Yemen or Iran. But while the scale of the suppression is different, the premise is the same: When a citizen and a police officer have a confrontation, the police officers narrative has always given deference by prosecutors, judges and juries — in the same way governments in more oppressive parts of the world have the power to project their own version of events as truth.
Citizens in America and across the globe now have the ability to preserve and present a more objective narrative. This is a positive thing — for democracy, for good government and for a fairer criminal justice system. U.S. courts and legislatures need to make it abundantly, unambiguously clear that not only do citizens have the right to record on-duty police officers, but that cops and prosecutors who violate that right will be held accountable.
via Chicago States Attorney Lets Bad Cops Slide, Prosecutes Citizens Who Record Them.
I agree with Balko completely. Public workers, especially those with power over individuals such as the police. I also believe that judges should not be exempt from recording when there is no court reporter present. These are not private conversations taking place between individuals. These are conversations taking place within a network of power relationships with the recorders traditionally and substantially disadvantaged as compared to the recorded party.
Dystopias often have a technological bent where recording technologies give the hegemony power over its subjects. The people of Illinois should demand transparency and protection of its people from overzealous prosecutors and police who wish to deprive citizens of what should be a fundamental right to protect one’s self through recording technologies. Otherwise, our loss of this protection afforded by personal and affordable technology will only be a further erosion of our rights where the system is stacked in favor of the authorities.
A UN Report Slams Democratic Countries for So-Called Three Strike Laws That Cut Access to the Internet for Supposed Copyright Violators
June 4, 2011Ars Technica provides commentary on a recent UN report that comes down hard on democratic countries such as France and Britain that have punitive laws against online file sharers. These so-called Three Strikes provisions permanently cut an offender off from the Internet as a result of violating those nation’s copyright laws. The UN report calls these laws excessive. Read more here. Read the UN report as a PDF here.
US Park Rangers at Their Finest, Rough-Up and Arrest Folks at Thomas Jefferson Memorial
May 30, 2011
Originally seen here, I’m glad that the US Park Service Rangers have nothing better to do than tell protestors to shut-up or lock-up at the Thomas Jefferson Memorial (watch the video linked above). According to RIA Novosti news here, a RT American (Russian TV network) anchor and other people were arrested for silently dancing at the Jefferson Memorial after a district court ruled dancing illegal there. These protest dancers are reacting to the court’s decision against Mary Oberwetter, who was the only person arrested from a flash dance mob at the Jefferson Memorial in April 2008 [more details here]. The court ruled that it was the duty of the Park Rangers to be decorum enforcement.
If you watch shows like Jail, Campus PD, or Cops, you probably know that the police often react unfavorably to confrontations with or questioning of their authority to do whatever it is that they do. Often times in these simulational shows of the present moment under police protection, the arrested individuals might have had it coming, but there are equally a number of cases where it is not so clear if the arrest was warranted or not.
The Jefferson Memorial arrests are an example not so much of decorum, but of lowly Park Rangers with a bellyful of power who don’t like to see people doing things inexplicable in their worldview. The courts sided with these police, because I assume that the judge likewise thinks that free speech should stop at the very monuments erected to celebrate those freedoms.
I have never been arrested, but I have been in a number of confrontations with police officers who have accused me of various infractions of the law–none of which were true. I have been yelled at and called a liar (when I was 16 in Brunswick, GA) and I have had my person and car searched on the basis of dubious results of a K-9 dog walk around (when I was 25 in Atlanta, GA and when I was 31 in Kent, OH). Despite these egregious affronts to my personal rights notwithstanding the fact that I abide by the law, I do my best to cooperate and be non-confrontational, because I do not want to cool my heels in lock-up. However, this does not mean that everyone should always shut-up in the face of questionable authorities.
I respect these nonviolent protestors in the video above for their courage in the face of a violent display of governmental authority–even at the mundane level of the “protection” of public monuments and bystanders in our nation’s capital. Certainly, the RT American anchor has his own motivations in doing something to provoke the response of American authorities. Nevertheless, he does these stunts to demonstrate that the myths of America are just that: myths that we try to cling to despite the gaping holes.
Some of the folks in the video are pummeled for their antics as the rangers attempt to maintain their control of the situation. The Rangers go so far as to assert their control over the monument as if they were waging a campaign of capture the flag by closing the Jefferson Memorial and running off bystanders and especially those persons with cameras.
The average person today seems to be getting it both ways in ever increasing ways from the assertions of political authorities as well as from the entitlements of corporations via legal rights and enforcement. Certainly, many folks must see the erosion of personal rights and autonomy as a bad thing, but the most depressing aspect of the current trend is the lack of imaginative possibilities to challenge and correct the system in the favor of individuals.
Two great places to begin broadening the imaginative possibilities is first: Strange Love: Or How We Learn to Stop Worrying and Love the Market by Robin Truth Goodman and Kenneth J. Saltman. In this book, the authors argue that transnational capital and big corporations are the enemy to individuals, and we can fight back against them by electing people to government who stand for people rather than big business. Second, I highly recommend Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy of Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars. KSR demonstrates through these near-future science fiction novels the utopian possibilities of thinking and practicing government after recognizing the interpenetration of politics and economics.
Posted by Jason W Ellis