Historic Web Blackouts Catapult SOPA into Headlines

 

 

The tide may be changing in the controversy over SOPA and PROTECT IP (or “PIPA”), the anti-piracy bills that have been making their way through, respectively, the House and the Senate in recent months. Yesterday’s unprecedented 24-hour global blackout of the English Wikipedia site in protest of the legislation and the new enforcement powers it would create has acted as a lightning rod for public attention. In concert with Wikipedia, Google ran a “censored” version of its logo on its home page yesterday, with a plea to users to contact their legislators, and many other popular sites displayed blacked-out screens together with information about the bills. Wikipedia reports today that SOPA was featured in a quarter-million Tweets per hour during the blackout.

Yesterday’s high-profile online activism follows months of public debate about SOPA and PIPA, which critics fear could chill online speech and destabilize the architecture of the Internet. While the legislation still has many vocal supporters – the Motion Picture Association of America’s chairman, former senator Chris Dodd, called the blackouts “stunts that punish users” – the ranks of opponents seem to be growing, and now include such strange bedfellows as the ACLU and the Tea Party. Ars Technica reports that 18 senators, seven of whom are former co-sponsors of PIPA, announced their opposition to the bill yesterday.

 

 

The White House Speaks

The White House has also expressed reservations about the bills in the past week, explaining in a statement released January 14 that, “While we believe that online piracy by foreign websites is a serious problem that requires a serious legislative response, we will not support legislation that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global internet.”

Sponsors Tone Down Enforcement Powers to Move Bills Forward

Nevertheless, the bills’ lead sponsors are pressing on, albeit with some concessions to their critics. On January 13, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-TX), a sponsor of SOPA, announced that he would remove the bill’s provisions requiring ISPs to block domain names of offending sites, which had been criticized as a threat to Internet stability and security. This week, he stated that markup hearings on the amended SOPA would continue in February.

In the Senate, PIPA’s lead sponsor, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) announced on January 12 that he was preparing an amendment to require that domain-name-blocking provisions be subjected to further study following passage of the bill, before they could take effect. Action on PIPA is likely to resume on January 24, when the Senate will hold a “test vote” on a motion for cloture, to lift a hold placed by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and begin debate on the bill.

Alternatives and Workarounds Spring Up

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) and Sen. Wyden, the leading opponents of SOPA and PIPA, have introduced their own alternative legislation in both houses of Congress. The Online Protection & Enforcement of Digital Trade Act (or the “OPEN Act”) would give the International Trade Commission jurisdiction over challenges to allegedly infringing websites, and would target only payment processors and advertisers that support offending sites, not search results or domain name lookups.

And in another form of tech activism, the anonymous coders behind MAFIAA Fire, who originally created a browser plug-in to circumvent domain name seizures by the Department of Homeland Security, have come up with a new plug-in to address the domain-blocking measures of SOPA/PIPA. (As the MAFIAA Fire FAQs point out, such circumvention is legal at least until SOPA passes.) The MAFIAA Fire team also claims to have technical responses in the works to counteract other measures proposed in SOPA/PIPA.
 

MAFIAA Fire Potentially Meets Its Match

Back in May, we wrote about MAFIAA Fire, a browser plug-in created by anonymous coders to counteract the government’s efforts to shut down copyright-infringing web sites by seizing the domain names. 

As we mentioned at the time, the PROTECT IP Act currently pending in the Senate would give the government (and private parties, for that matter) enhanced tools to bring down foreign-hosted rogue sites. 

Now the House has its own version of the legislation, dubbed the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), and it has a provision that appears to be directed squarely at MAFIAA Fire. The bill would empower the Attorney General to seek an injunction against anyone who provides a service or product designed to circumvent the government’s enforcement efforts, including domain name blocks. This, of course, is exactly what MAFIAA Fire does.

The most notable other change in the House bill is the addition of a notice-and-takedown procedure that would allow private plaintiffs to instruct payment processors and advertising services to cut off the revenue to alleged rogue sites without having to go to court first. This robust new tool is backed by a broad coalition of industries.

For further information about both bills, see http://www.fightonlinetheft.com/, a web site set up by supporters. For an opposing view, check out the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s comments on SOPA. The House Judiciary Committee has scheduled a hearing on the bill for Wednesday, November 16. Check back soon for more updates on the bills’ progress. 

A Dispatch from the Copyright Front Lines: MAFIAA Fire takes on ICE

 


The ongoing conflict between content-industry groups and “open Internet” proponents has been heating up recently in a battle over Internet sites that allegedly allow users to access pirated or counterfeit content. Since last summer, the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) division has been running a campaign it calls “Operation: In Our Sites” to seize domain names used in alleged criminal copyright infringement activities. Following seizure, visitors to affected web sites, such as www.watchnewfilms.com, see a notice stating that “This domain name has been seized by ICE – Homeland Security Investigations, pursuant to a seizure warrant issued by a United States District Court under the authority of 18 U.S.C. §§ 981 and 2323.” The fourth and latest round of seizures reportedly took place on May 21. Opponents of these measures charge that the seizures amount to censorship, and have questioned their legality as well as their effectiveness.

 

 

The seizure orders work by requiring the domain name registry to redirect the URL of an allegedly infringing web site to the warning notice quoted above, instead of the targeted site. The site still remains accessible via its IP address, however, and many owners simply set up new domain names, often registered in foreign countries, to direct users to their sites. Enter the anonymous coder(s) behind MAFIAA Fire, a browser plug-in designed to circumvent ICE’s shut-down efforts. When a user downloads and installs the plug-in and then points his or her browser to a domain name that has been seized, the MAFIAA Fire software consults a list of seized and replacement domain names and automatically redirects the browser to the new URL. The user is taken seamlessly to the requested site, not to the ICE warning at the original URL. (As explained in MAFIAA Fire’s unabashedly partisan FAQ, the name refers to the “Music and Film Industry Association of America,” a spoof “industry group” purportedly created out of the merger of the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America, the real organizations that MAFIAA Fire’s creators believe to be behind ICE’s enforcement efforts.) The MAFIAA Fire site claims the plug-in has been downloaded more than 70,000 times since it became available in early April.

MAFIAA Fire obviously stands to put a significant dent in the effectiveness of ICE’s seizure technique. Shortly after the tool became available, the Department of Homeland Security contacted Mozilla, the nonprofit organization behind the popular Firefox browser, and asked it to disable access to the MAFIAA Fire plug-in for Firefox. According to a blog post by Harvey Anderson, Mozilla’s VP of Business Affairs and General Counsel, Mozilla responded by sending back a series of pointed questions about the legal basis for the request. Anderson explained in his blog post that Mozilla’s “approach is to comply with valid court orders, warrants, and legal mandates, but in this case there was no such court order.” As of Anderson’s latest report, Homeland Security had not responded to Mozilla’s queries, and for now, MAFIAA Fire remains available on Mozilla’s Firefox add-on download site.

Meanwhile, Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) has introduced this month the “Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act of 2011” – a.k.a. the PROTECT IP Act – which would enhance the government’s enforcement options against foreign sites hosting infringing content, and potentially shrink the loophole that MAFIAA Fire exploits. And so, as the content provider/open Internet war rages on in battlegrounds ranging from Congress to courts to activist coders’ individual laptops, MAFIAA Fire is playing its own small part in shaping the evolving legal and technological boundaries of copyright.