Wednesday, October 26, 2011

PROTECT IP Opponents Claim Upcoming House Version May Hurt Twitter, YouTube, Facebook

urlApparently "innocent until proven guilty" isn't going to hold up well on the interwebs. At least not according to a group called Demand Progress, who claims that the upcoming House version of the PROTECT IP Act could offer even more power to the accuser. And even worse, sites like Twitter and YouTube may be under fire in no time at all. The bill, which is a rewrite of the unpopular COICA bill, was passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee in May. Even in its original state, the bill seemingly contradicts this country's assumption of innocence in many ways, allowing not only the Department of Justice, but private rightsholders to accuse a site of infringement and have it yanked with court approval. If the Department of Justice levels the charge (rather than a private rightsholder), the scope of the order extends past payment processors and ad networks to ISPs and search engines, thus requiring search engines to censor allegedly infringing sites out of their index.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/vsMMLpfGWwE/

Mariah OBrien Marika Dominczyk Marisa Coughlan Marisa Miller

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