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PIPA, SOPA and why you don't want it.

Written by Trevor Timm for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Original can be found here.

How PIPA and SOPA Violate White House Principles Supporting Free Speech and Innovation

Over the weekend, the Obama administration issued a potentially game-changing statement on the blacklist bills, saying it would oppose PIPA and SOPA as written, and drew an important line in the sand by emphasizing that it “will not support” any bill “that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global Internet."

Yet, the fight is still far from over. Even though the New York Times reported that the White House statement "all but kill[s] current versions of the legislation," the Senate is still poised to bring PIPA to the floor next week, and we can expect SOPA proponents in the House to try to revive the legislation—unless they get the message that these initiatives must stop, now.  So let’s take a look at the dangerous provisions in the blacklist bills that would violate the White House’s own principles by damaging free speech, Internet security, and online innovation:

The Anti-Circumvention Provision

In addition to going after websites allegedly directly involved in copyright infringement, a proposal in SOPA will allow the government to target sites that simply provide information that could help users get around the bills’ censorship mechanisms. Such a provision would not only amount to an unconstitutional prior restraint against protected speech, but would severely damage online innovation. And contrary to claims by SOPA’s supporters, this provision—at least what’s been proposed so far—applies to all websites, even those in the U.S. 

As First Amendment expert Marvin Ammori points out, “The language is pretty vague, but it appears all these companies must monitor their sites for anti-circumvention so they are not subject to court actions ‘enjoining’ them from continuing to provide ‘such product or service.’” That means social media sites like Facebook or YouTube—basically any site with user generated content—would have to police their own sites, forcing huge liability costs onto countless Internet companies. This is exactly why venture capitalists have said en masse they won’t invest in online startups if PIPA and SOPA pass. Websites would be forced to block anything from a user post about browser add-ons like DeSopa, to a simple list of IP addresses of already-blocked sites.

Perhaps worse, EFF has detailed how this provision would also decimate the open source software community. Anyone who writes or distributes Virtual Private Network, proxy, privacy or anonymization software would be negatively affected. This includes organizations that are funded by the State Department to create circumvention software to help democratic activists get around authoritarian regimes’ online censorship mechanisms. Ironically, SOPA would not only institute the same practices as these regimes, but would essentially outlaw the tools used by activists to circumvent censorship in countries like Iran and China as well.

The “Vigilante” Provision

Another dangerous provision in PIPA and SOPA that hasn’t received a lot of attention is the “vigilante” provision, which would grant broad immunity to all service providers if they overblock innocent users or block sites voluntarily with no judicial oversight at all. The standard for immunity is incredibly low and the potential for abuse is off the charts. Intermediaries only need to act “in good faith” and base their decision “on credible evidence” to receive immunity.

As we noted months ago, this provision would allow the MPAA and RIAA to create literal blacklists of sites they want censored. Intermediaries will find themselves under pressure to act to avoid court orders, creating a vehicle for corporations to censor sites—even those in the U.S.—without any legal oversight. And as Public Knowledge has pointed out, not only can this provision be used for bogus copyright claims that are protected by fair use, but large corporations can take advantage of it to stamp out emerging competitors and skirt anti-trust laws:

For instance, an Internet service provider could block DNS requests for a website offering online video that competed with its cable television offerings, based upon “credible evidence” that the site was, in its own estimation, promoting its use for infringement....While the amendment requires that the action be taken in good faith, the blocked site now bears the burden of proving either its innocence or the bad faith of its accuser in order to be unblocked.

Corporate Right of Action

PIPA and SOPA also still allow copyright holders to get an unopposed court order to cut off foreign websites from payment processors and advertisers. As we have continually highlighted, copyright holders already can remove infringing material from the web under the DMCA notice-and-takedown procedure. Unfortunately, we’ve seen that power abused time and again. Yet the proponents of PIPA and SOPA want to give rightsholders even more power, allowing them to essentially shut down full sites instead of removing the specific infringing content.

While this provision only affects foreign sites, it still affects Americans' free speech rights. As Marvin Ammori explained, "The seminal case of Lamont v. Postmaster makes it clear that Americans have the First Amendment right to read and listen to foreign speech, even if the foreigners lack a First Amendment speech right." If history is any guide—and we’re afraid it is—we will see specious claims to wholesale take downs of legitimate and protected speech.

Expanded Attorney General Powers

PIPA and SOPA would also give the Attorney General new authority to block domain name services, a provision that has been universally criticized by both Internet security experts and First Amendment scholars. Even the blacklist bills’ authors are now publicly second-guessing that scary provision. But even without it, this section would still force many intermediaries to become the Internet police by putting the responsibility of censorship enforcement on those intermediaries, who are usually innocent third parties.

The Attorney General would also be empowered to de-list websites from search engines, which, as Google Chairman Eric Schmidt noted, would still "criminalize linking and the fundamental structure of the Internet itself."  The same applies to payment processors and advertisers.

These are just some of the egregious provisions in PIPA and SOPA that would drastically change the way we use the Internet (for the worse), and punish millions of innocent users who have never even thought about copyright infringement. As Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian explained, PIPA and SOPA are “the equivalent of being angry and trying to take action against Ford just because a Mustang was used in a bank robbery.” These bills must be stopped if we want to protect free speech and innovation on the web. 

Please take action now and tell your Congressional representatives you oppose the blacklist bills.

General - News

A Jediist Wedding and Roseville Chapter Update.

My Family In the Force, 

                      Greetings from Minnesota and the Roseville Chapter of TOTJO!

I have excellent news and exciting times you. It has been a while since my last communique and I am glad I waited

as I can now relay to you all the joyous celebration of my one time apprentice Doriann was wed in September of this year

in full Jediist ceremony. His wife, who is interested in Jediism and often has excellent topics for debate, often attends our meetings. 

I had the honor of presiding over thier vows before thier friends, family and the Force. 

 

                   We still are a small congregation, but we do not hide who we are. There are a few who still snuff at our practicing, but 

the students here learn, and we seek our paths in many ways. At the moment our numbers are still in the single digits, but some of the 

new members wish to start a group meeting at one of the local colleges to  present opportunities for our faith to reach those who may

find thier home among us.  Again greetings and hopefully more messages coming soon. 

 

Zanthan Storm

Master Knight of Jediism,  Roseville Minnesota Chapter of TOTJO. 

General - News

Why People are Suspicious of New Religious Movements

 

 
While some people are suspicious of all religions contrary to their own, new religious movements often face even more criticism than older, more traditional religions. Much of this has to do with common assumptions about what constitutes a religion, although lack of information about such belief systems can also be problematic.
 
Criticism: New religious movements are invented by human beings
 
All religions were founded by human beings. Sometimes it is a single person, sometimes it developed within a community, and sometimes we don't know the specifics of the origins, but only because they are very old. Certain people believe their religions are the creation of a supernatural being, but that is a belief only applicable within that religion.
There is nothing inherent in the concept of religion that says a religion should be dictated by the gods. Religion can easily be formed with a person decides to share his or her religious perspective and others choose to believe it.
 
Criticism: New religious movements are scams meant to separate people from their money
 
Many new religious movements are not highly organized, and believers are not expected to give money to anyone, unless they choose to purchase books, meditation tapes or other items that they happen to find useful in their religious studies.
More organized groups may ask for donations to help cover expenses, the same as more traditional religions.
 
Religious seekers should certainly be wary of scam artists, but they remain the exception, not the rule. Each person must decide for himself what is a reasonable expenditure and what is exploitation.
 
Criticism: True religions have survived the test of time for thousands of years
 
All religions were new at some point. Should St. Paul have not bothered with Christianity because it was too new at the time?
Besides which, just because an idea has been accepted for a long time does not prove its accuracy. Causing people to bleed as a medical treatment was accepted for about 2000 years. The earth-centric universe model was accepted for more than 1000 years.
 
Age does not automatically equal truth.
 
Criticism: New religious movements encourage beliefs in nonsensical things like power crystals, alien creators, and astrology.
 
Some new religious movements do, in fact, include beliefs in such things, but certainly not all of them. This is the sort of generalization that comes from mental laziness, from those who cannot be bothered to learn about individual religions, preferring to simply dismiss all new religions with a blanket statement.
Considering them "nonsensical," however, is an opinion. According to the Torah, God spoke to Moses through a burning bush. We accept that as a proper religious belief because we are familiar with the story, while the beliefs of new religions are unfamiliar to us and, thus, strange. If you were an alien visiting earth for the first time, and you heard about power crystals and gods speaking through burning bushes, would you judge one as more sensical than the other?
 
The simple fact is that aspects of all religions sound strange to outsiders. If a religion makes total sense to a person, they generally end up following it and, thus, are no longer an outsider.
 
Criticism: New religious movements are shallow and superficial, generally lacking deep theology and catering to believers' desire for fantasy.
 
There are several reasons why someone might have this opinion of any particular religion. First, their only experience with the religion might have been a fairly negative one. Not every member of every religion is a good representative of it.
Second, the religion in question may focus on very different things than the speaker is familiar with. Many of these religions do not have holy texts, prophecies or distinct lists of dos and don'ts. They don't proclaim stories that believers literally embrace. Instead, many of these religions are more personal, focusing on meditation, introspection, personal gnosis and spiritual mysteries.
 
So while a practitioner may not be able to state with authority what all members of the religion believe or do in relation to a particular topic, that doesn't mean they cannot have deep and thoughtful insight on that topic. They can have very strong personal convictions on a matter and be are able to coherently explain how they have come to that conclusion, but many times that rationality will not refer back to a source of authority like a holy text or a prophet.

 

General - News

Norway mourns victims of anti-Islam "Crusader"

Norway mourns victims of anti-Islam "Crusader"

Click image to view more photos. (AP/Emilio Morenatti)

Click image to view more photos. (AP/Emilio Morenatti)

SUNDVOLLEN, Norway (Reuters) - Norway mourned on Sunday 93 people killed in a shooting spree and car bombing by a Norwegian who saw his attacks as "atrocious, but necessary" to defeat liberal immigration policies and the spread of Islam.

In his first comment via a lawyer since his arrest, Anders Behring Breivik, 32, said he wanted to explain himself at a court hearing on Monday about extending his custody.

"He has said that he believed the actions were atrocious, but that in his head they were necessary," Geir Lippestad said.

The lawyer said Breivik had admitted to Friday's shootings at a Labour party youth camp and the bombing that killed seven people in Oslo's government district a few hours earlier.

However, "he feels that what he has done does not deserve punishment," Lippestad told NRK public television.

 

 

"What he has said is that he wants a change in society and in his understanding, in his head, there must be a revolution."

 

Oslo's acting police chief Sveinung Sponheim confirmed to reporters that Breivik would be able to speak to the court. It was not clear whether the hearing would be closed or in public.

"He has admitted to the facts of both the bombing and the shooting, although he's not admitting criminal guilt," Sponheim said, adding that Breivik had said he acted alone.

Police were checking this because some witness statements from the island spoke of more than one gunman, Sponheim said.

NATIONAL TRAGEDY

The violence, Norway's worst since World War Two, has profoundly shocked the usually peaceful nation of 4.8 million.

King Harald and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg were among mourners at a service in Oslo cathedral, where the premier spoke emotionally about the victims, some of whom he knew.

"This represents a national tragedy," he declared.

Tearful people placed flowers and candles outside the cathedral. Soldiers with guns and wearing bullet-proof vests blocked streets leading to the government district.

Police said Breivik surrendered when they arrived on the small island of Utoeya in a lake northwest of Oslo after he had shot dead at least 85 people, mostly young people attending a summer camp of the youth wing of Norway's ruling Labour Party.

About 650 people were on the island when Breivik, wearing a police uniform, opened fire. Police said it took them an hour from when they were first alerted to stop the massacre, the worst by a single gunman in modern times.

An inadequate boat and a decision to await a special armed unit from Oslo, 45 km (28 miles) away, delayed the response.

"When so many people and equipment were put into it, the boat started to take on water, so that the motor stopped," said Erik Berga, police operations chief in Buskerud County.

A person wounded in the shooting died in hospital, raising the death toll to 93, Norway's NRK television said. Police say some people remain missing. Ninety-seven people were wounded.

ANTI-ISLAM MANIFESTO

Breivik posted a 1,500-page anti-Islamic manifesto, written in English, on Friday, describing his violent philosophy and how he planned his onslaught and made explosives.

The killings would draw attention to the manifesto entitled "2083-A European Declaration of Independence," Breivik wrote.

"Once you decide to strike, it is better to kill too many than not enough, or you risk reducing the desired ideological impact of the strike," he added.

The manifesto posted by Breivik, a self-styled founder member of a modern Knights Templar organization, hints at a wider conspiracy of self-appointed crusaders and shows a mind influenced by the fantasy imagery of online gaming.

"The order is to serve as an armed Indigenous Rights Organization and as a Crusader Movement (anti-Jihad movement)," he writes in the document, chunks of which are cut and pasted from other far-right, anti-Islam documents on the Internet.

Breivik says he is not against immigrants who integrate and reserves a lot of his fury for a liberal European political establishment he views as promoting Europe's destruction.

He hints at a wider conspiracy in the document, saying that the Knights Templar, a medieval order of crusading warrior monks, had been reconstituted in London in 2002.

Breivik attacks the "Islamic colonisation and Islamisation of Western Europe" and the "rise of cultural Marxism/multiculturalism."

A video posted on YouTube called "Knights Templar 2083" showed pictures of Breivik, including one of him in a scuba diving outfit pointing an automatic weapon.

Parliament, in recess until October, is to be recalled for a memorial service. Party leaders will discuss how the attacks would affect campaigning for local elections in September.

"We will have an election, we will have a political debate," said Stoltenberg, premier and Labour Party leader.

"But I believe everyone understands that we have to discuss the form of the debate...to avoid a conflict between the political debate and the need to show dignity and compassion."

Erna Solberg, head of the main opposition Conservative Party, said: "We have to agree the rules of the game."

IMMIGRATION

Norway has long been open to immigration, which has been criticised by the populist Progress Party, to which Breivik once belonged. Labour, whose youth camp he attacked, backs multi-culturalism to accommodate different ethnic communities.

"Norway will keep going. But there will be a Norway before and after the dramatic attacks on Friday," Stoltenberg said.

"But I am quite sure that you will also recognize Norway afterwards -- it will be an open Norway, a democratic Norway and a Norway where we take care of each other."

The attacks have prompted soul-searching in Norway.

At Oslo cathedral, Britt Aanes, a priest aged 42 said the fact that Breivik was Norwegian had affected people deeply.

"In one way, I think it was good that it was not a Muslim terrorist group behind this," she said. It pointed up the complexity of immigration and inter-religious issues for Norwegians, "a small and privileged people," she said.

"We must open our eyes and not simply think that we can keep all this wealth to ourselves."

Some analysts questioned whether Norway, focused on al Qaeda-type militancy, had overlooked domestic threats.

"While the main terrorist threat to democratic societies around the world still comes from Islamist extremists, the horrific events in Norway are a reminder that white far-right extremism is also a major and possibly growing threat," said James Brandon, research head at London's Quilliam think-tank.

Home-grown anti-government figures have struck elsewhere, notably in the United States, where Timothy McVeigh killed 168 people with a truck bomb in Oklahoma City in 1995.

Grief was still raw for survivors and relatives clustered at a hotel in Sundvollen near Utoeya island. They huddled together, many with bloodshot eyes, at terrace tables.

Inside, a board gave contact details for priests and imams. Pinned to the board was a poem that begins: "Today, today it's not the same. Our shining lights snuffed in out in shame."

(Additional reporting by Walter Gibbs, Anna Ringstrom, Henrik Stoelen, Terje Solsvik, Patrick Lannin, Johan Ahlander, Wojciech Moskwa, John Acher and Ole Petter Skonnord in Oslo, William Maclean in London; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Jon Boyle) 

General - News

human magnet

this is the third person that i've heard of with this ability. i'm truly curious as to the science behind this ability...

Brazil boy seems to attract metal objects

 

SAO PAULO (AP) — An 11-year-old boy in Brazil's northeastern city of Mossoro is drawing attention with his purportedly magnet-like qualities.

The Globo TV network has broadcast images of Paulo David Amorim demonstrating how forks, knives, scissors, cooking pans, cameras and other metal objects seem drawn to his body and remain stuck on his chest, stomach and back.

The boy's father tells Globo that he decided to test his son after learning of a boy in Croatia with a similar ability. Junior Amorim says he was surprised to find "a fork and knife stuck to his body."

The youth says classmates call him "magnet boy."

Dr. Dix-Sept Rosado Sobrinho tells Globo it is the first time in his 30-year career that he has seen a case like this.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/video/odd-15749658/boy-s-body-acts-like-magnet-attracts-metal-25897054.html;_ylt=ApwCtDuGdKtTciapz1itrdESH9EA;_ylu=X3oDMTI3MmRhOXY3BHBrZwNhZWI5ZTU5Ny0zOGZjLTVkMWItYWQ3Yy03NWJjYmU2YmVhMjkEcG9zAzMEc2VjA0luZmluaXRlIEJyb3dzZQR2ZXID;_ylg=X3oDMTJ2ZmlrZTN1BGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRwc3RhaWQDM2ZjNWVjYjMtMmI3NS0zZDkzLWJkNGQtMDY5MDA1NDUxZTM4BHBzdGNhdANob21lfG9kZG5ld3MEcHQDc3RvcnlwYWdl;_ylv=3 

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