Celebrating Internet Freedom Day With An Eye On Battles Ahead
1/18/2013
Many in Washington
and around the country are celebrating a key battle in the war against Internet
freedom today – the one year anniversary of the defeat of the Stop Online
Piracy Act or SOPA. The Computer & Communications Industry Association had been
an early opponent of the bill and its two previous incarnations. We join in
celebrating this step that woke up Internet users, and we urge all those who we
fought this battle to remain focused on the many challenges to Internet freedom
and openness that we will continue to face.
The following
can be attributed to Computer & Communications Industry Association
President & CEO Ed Black:
“We are
grateful that one year ago today Internet users, along with public interest
groups and Internet companies, halted extreme copyright legislation that would
have altered and harmed the Internet. Once even a piece of Internet freedom is
lost, it is hard to get it back.
“Since the
United States’ own challenge to Internet freedom, via SOPA/PIPA, we have
witnessed over the past year citizens in Iran and Syria who have faced Internet
censorship and shutdowns, and a continued effort at control by China -- most
recently by requiring all citizens to register their full names with Internet
access providers. Russia and its allies have pushed for greater governmental
regulation of the Internet by targeting a UN agency to advance their goals of
Internet control.
“The overall
threat to Internet freedom, though, comes not from just those who overtly
oppose it, but also from those who want to carve out seemingly well-intended
exceptions to Internet freedom in frustrated attempts to fix social ills. We
must remain equally vigilant in protecting the Internet from a death by a
thousand cuts and direct assault. We must look at all policies impacting the
Internet, measure the intended and collateral damage and analyze the costs and
benefits carefully.
“While there
is an overwhelming realization on Capitol Hill, thanks to the SOPA defeat, that
measures that tinker with how the Internet works can have collateral damage, we
expect those pushing for extreme copyright enforcement measures will try
again.”