
Who says Congress never gets anything done? On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved a  bill that would give the Attorney General the right to shut down  websites with a court order if copyright infringement is deemed “central  to the activity” of the site — regardless if the website has actually  committed a crime. The Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits  Act (COICA) is among the most draconian laws ever considered to combat  digital piracy, and contains what some have called the “nuclear option,”  which would essentially allow the Attorney General to turn suspected  websites “off.”
COICA  is the latest effort by Hollywood, the recording industry and the big  media companies to stem the tidal wave of internet file sharing that has  upended those industries and, they claim, cost them tens of billions of  dollars over the last decade.
The content companies have tried suing college students. They’ve tried suing internet startups.  Now they want the federal government to act as their private security  agents, policing the internet for suspected pirates before making them  walk the digital plank.
Many people opposed to the bill agree in principle with its aims:  Illegal music piracy is, well, illegal, and should be stopped.  Musicians, artists and content creators should be compensated for their  work. But the law’s critics do not believe that giving the federal  government the right to shut down websites at will based upon a vague  and arbitrary standard of evidence, even if no law-breaking has been  proved, is a particularly good idea. COICA must still be approved by the  full House and Senate before becoming law. A vote is unlikely before  the new year.
Among the sites that could go dark if the law passes: Dropbox,  RapidShare, SoundCloud, Hype Machine and any other site for which the  Attorney General deems copyright infringement to be “central to the  activity” of the site, according to Electronic Frontier Foundation, a  digital rights group that opposes the bill. There need not even be  illegal content on a site — links alone will qualify a site for digital  death. Websites at risk could also theoretically include p2pnet and  pirate-party.us or any other website that advocates for peer-to-peer  file sharing or rejects copyright law, according to the group.
In short, COICA would allow the federal government to censor the internet without due process.
Taken from WIRED Magazine
 
 
 
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