About UsIssuesLibraryNews + EventsBlog

News + Events

News
Events





 

News and Events

Senate Judiciary Committee Embraces French Proposal for Internet Regulation
5/26/2011
Within 48 hours of French President Sarkozy proposing sweeping international regulation of the Internet at the eG-8 meeting, the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill allowing the U.S. Department of Justice to blacklist Internet sites and regulate certain industries having contact with those sites. 

The newly introduced S. 968 is a stronger version of the controversial, Hollywood-backed COICA bill that was blocked last year. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved it today a voice vote during a meeting that was closed to the public.

The Computer & Communications Industry Association, which fights Internet filtering and censorship at home and abroad, opposes this approach to Internet regulation. 

“We had feared that the U.S. Government might backslide toward the French approach to Internet regulation that was rejected so emphatically earlier this week, but we didn’t expect it this soon,” said CCIA President & CEO Ed Black.

“At a time when U.S. businesses are increasing confronted with barriers to Internet trade and censorship abroad, a government committed to Internet openness should not be in the business of blacklisting Internet sites,” Black added.

The Protect IP Act (PIPA, S. 968) proposes to empower the U.S. Attorney General, and in some cases private copyright owners to obtain court orders requiring the blocking of sites that meet a broad statutory definition of “dedicated to infringing activities”.  Sites that may be subject to this regulation include domain name servers, search engines and other sites using directories, indexes, or hyperlinks, payment processors, and advertising networks. 

The bill was blocked last year after prominent Internet scientists and engineers warned it would break the Internet. Several released another report  explaining the risks to the Internet itself if domains were blocked in this way and search results are manipulated to erase results that could contain infringing material.

Black published an op ed in the San Francisco Chronicle this week warning of the risks to the Internet with this legislation that will, unfortunately, in the end fail to block the problem of online infringement.


©2008 Computer & Communications Industry Association
900 17th Street, NW, Suite 1100   Rue de Corps-Saints 10
Washington, DC 20006   1201 Geneva, Switzerland
Phone: (202) 783-0070   Tel: +41 22 534 99 45
Fax: (202) 783-0534   Fax: +41 22 594 85 44

ATEAC Business Center
Rond Point Schuman 11
B-1040 Brussels Belgium
Phone: +32-2-888-8462

Login
space