http://yro.slashdot.org/story/10/11/18/ ... l?from=rss
That's right. The Senate Judiciary Committee has approved the bill that would authorize the US government to shut down websites for infringing activities related to copyright. The best part? A number of law professors have argued that this is a clear violation of free speech. Since it was a 19-0 vote, here's a list of all the wonderful senators who voted for it:
- Patrick J. Leahy
- Herb Kohl
- Jeff Sessions
- Dianne Feinstein
- Orrin G. Hatch
- Russ Feingold
- Chuck Grassley
- Arlen Specter
- Jon Kyl
- Chuck Schumer
- Lindsey Graham
- Dick Durbin
- John Cornyn
- Benjamin L. Cardin
- Tom Coburn
- Sheldon Whitehouse
- Amy Klobuchar
- Al Franken
- Chris Coons
If you live in a state where one of these retards is a senator of yours, you probably ought to write them a letter congratulating them for laying down the framework necessary to turn us into yet another censored society akin to Australia or maybe even China.
Here's to hoping it'll die in the House, if it should make it that far given how close we are to the end of their session. Plus, a freedom-loving senator from Oregon, Mr. Ron Wyden plans on blocking this inane piece of legislation. I'm curious to see what's going to happen in the coming weeks, but unfortunately, the shear money backing this (hello, RIAA!) doesn't give me much hope. Imagine what'll happen if the government orders Google to pull the plug on Youtube for all the infringement going on there...
As I understand it, the proposed legislation would probably involve modifying the DNS root servers. All of the root servers are, conveniently, hosted here in the United States and direct traffic worldwide. In other words, when you type in google.com, the root servers are responsible for determining where that query is supposed to go. Your ISP's DNS then caches the response (or your own, if you run one) so that anyone else requesting google.com don't trigger another inquiry to the root servers. But, if the request is blocked at the root server level, there's not much that can be done. Plus, if the root servers aren't involved in this, then the burden would likely fall on ISPs which are already stretched pretty thin with the inane legislation that has been pushed through in previous years.
Inalienable human rights. It was fun while it lasted. Here's hoping more senators join Senator Wyden now that Thansgiving is over.