David Carr Explains Why Everyone Should Be Against SOPA

from the too-much-collateral-damage dept

I like my movies (and music and television) as much as the next couch potato, probably more. And I wouldn�t steal content for any reason, in part because I make a living generating a fair amount of it. But it�s worth remembering that the film industry initially opposed the video cassette recorder and the introduction of DVDs, platforms that became very lucrative businesses for them and remarkable conveniences for the rest of us.



Given both Congress�s and the entertainment industry�s historically wobbly grasp of technology, I don�t think they should be the ones re-engineering the Internet. The rest of us might have to just hold our noses and learn enough about SOPA to school them in why it�s a bad idea.

There is also a cultural divide at work, according to Yancey Stickler, one of the founders of Kickstarter, a Web site that helps raise funds for creative projects, and a critic of SOPA. �The schism between content creators and platforms like Kickstarter, Tumblr and YouTube is generational,� he wrote in an e-mail. �It�s people who grew up on the Web versus people who still don�t use it. In Washington, they simply don�t see the way that the Web has completely reconfigured society across classes, education and race. The Internet isn�t real to them yet.� The debate has highlighted how little Congress knows about the Internet they are proposing to re-tool. In a piece often cited on the Web, the computer culture journalist Joshua Kopstein watched the debate in Congress in which members bragged about their online ignorance, and he wrote an open letter on the technology Web site Motherboard titled, �Dear Congress, It�s No Longer O.K. to Not Know How the Internet Works.�

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NY Times media columnist David Carr -- who it should be known has been a critic of "free" economics in the past -- has put up an interesting new column explaining why even those who are vehemently against copyright infringement should be concerned about SOPA and the unintended consequences it will cause for the internet. He takes Hollywood's (somewhat laughable) numbers of jobs at risk and "losses" from infringement, to note that there is a real problem, but he still worries that SOPA's solution will make things worse. It won't actually do much to slow down or stop infringement -- but it will (almost certainly) create massive problems for the rest of the internet.While SOPA supporters have been bending over backwards to insist that anyone who points out the problems of these bills are "siding with the pirates," the fact is that many, many people are recognizing the serious collateral damage that SOPA (and PIPA) would have on the internet. The key reason much of this is happening is actually explained earlier in the article. You have those who don't understand and fear the technology trying to legislate that technology. And it's become something of a generational thing:I'd argue that is true of some in Congress, but there's another element as well. There are, certainly, some in Hollywood who have a basic grasp of the technology. The issue there is more that they. SOPA is an attempt to try to put things back into Pandora's box. The problem there isn't that they don't necessarily understand how the internet is being used... but that they don't understand how technology, and how you can never take away features that consumers want once they know those features and capabilities exist.

Filed Under: censorship, copyright, david carr, internet security, lobbying, pipa, protect ip, sopa