Thursday, January 19, 2012

Good morning!

More later, but in the meantime, this was an interesting little article concerning the black out from yesterday. Beside the fact that the key sponsors of SOPA both pulled their names from the proposed bill until it can be re-created in a way that will meet the goal (stopping online piracy of copyrighted material) and not cripple the internet. Other lawmakers ddi the same. Here is some more about that. There is power in the voice of the people.

Of course, that should mean that our ferries run smoothly...hmmm. Maybe we need to all go to the powers that be and look at them like this.


Have a teeny terror Thursday. Do something slightly un-tactfully.

p.s. This was in my email from last night (when I was fast asleep):


Today was nuts, right?

Google launched a petition.  Wikipedia voted to shut itself off.  Senators' websites went down just from the sheer surge of voters trying to write them.   NYC and SF geeks had protests that packed city blocks.

You made history today: nothing like this has ever happened before.  Tech companies and users teamed up.  Tens of millions of people who make the internet what it is joined together to defend their freedoms.  The free network defended itself.  Whatever you call it, the bottom line is clear: from today forward, it will be much harder to mess up the internet. 
The really crazy part?  We might even win.

Approaching Monday's crucial Senate vote there are now 35 Senators publicly opposing PIPA.  Last week there were 5.   And it just takes just 41 solid "no" votes to permanently stall PIPA (and SOPA) in the Senate.  What seemed like miles away a few weeks ago is now within reach. 
But don't trust predictions.  The forces behind SOPA & PIPA (mostly movie companies) can make small changes to these bills until they know they have the votes to pass.  Members of Congress know SOPA & PIPA are unpopular, but they don't understand why--so they're easily duped by superficial changes.  The Senate returns next week, and the next few days are critical.  Here are two things to think about:

1. Plan on calling your Senator every day next week.  Pick up the phone each morning and call your Senators' offices, until they vote "no" on cloture.  If your site participated today, consider running a "Call the Senate" link all next week.

2. Tomorrow, drop in at your Senators' district offices.  We don't have a cool map widget to show you the offices nearest you (we're too exhausted! any takers?).  So do it the old fashioned way: use Google, or the phonebook to find the address, and just walk in, say you oppose PIPA, and urge the Senator to vote "no" on cloture.  These drop-in visits make our spectacular online protests more tangible and credible.

That's it for now. Be proud and stay on it!

--Holmes, Tiffiniy, and the whole Fight for the Future team.

___

P.S. Huge credit goes to participants in the 11/16 American Censorship Day protest: Mozilla, 4chan, BoingBoing, Tumblr, TGWTG, and thousands of others.  That's what got this ball rolling!  Reddit, both the community and the team behind it, you're amazing.  And of course, thanks to the Wikimedians whose patient and inexorable pursuit of the right answer brought them to take world-changing action. Thanks to David S, David K, Cory D, and E Stark for bold action at critical times.

P.P.S. If you haven't already, show this video to as many people as you can. It works!http://fightforthefuture.org/pipa/

4 comments:

  1. Wow! I didn't know you had lions on Culebra!

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  2. I'll make sure to tell her that; she will be glad that someone finally recognizes her.

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  3. great suggestion Mj..to do as the cat is doing and stare deeply into the mysterious abyss. like it.

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  4. I just found this! Yes. She's always right.

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