Azərbaycan dili Bahasa Indonesia Bosanski Català Čeština Dansk Deutsch Eesti English Español Français Galego Hrvatski Italiano Latviešu Lietuvių Magyar Malti Mакедонски Nederlands Norsk Polski Português Português BR Românã Slovenčina Srpski Suomi Svenska Tiếng Việt Türkçe Ελληνικά Български Русский Українська Հայերեն ქართული ენა 中文
Subpage under development, new version coming soon!

Subject: SOPA - Stop Online Piracy Act

2012-01-23 15:56:52
its not property its copyrighted material.

I know very little about English law, but under Dutch (continental) law, copyright is a form of property. Most countries have chosen to respect copyright. Rights can always be voided at any time. Doesn't make them any less of a right until that happens.
2012-01-23 19:05:45
Although now, I made a dropbox account. That is probably even easier as it synchronises the whole thing.


It depends. The synchronising feature is different. Appart from that, dropbox is more or less the same as megaupload, since it allows you to link your files to other people. So far, it is used as backup/sync. However, if I start putting albums in my dropbox and publicly sharing them, and especially if others follow me, all of the sudden dropbox will become a criminal organization...
That's how much the whole megaupload affair legally makes sense :)
2012-01-23 22:44:02
2012-01-23 22:52:08
megaupload working again !!!!

just clik and look here:
2012-01-23 23:37:17
Message deleted

2012-01-23 23:40:34
it is invisible link, so SOPA can not find it :-DD
2012-01-23 23:41:13
SOPA still gives you internet access in jail? :)
2012-01-23 23:42:30

(edited)
2012-01-23 23:43:51
yes, wifi , god bless sopa :-D
(edited)
2012-01-23 23:45:15
Anonymous Hacks CBS, Universal Music — Not Colbert Report or Daily Show Twitter Accounts

Hacktivist group Anonymous made the rounds over the weekend, attacking sites from CBS.com to (once again) Universal Music.

In what looks like hacking-spree retribution following the FBI’s shut down of file-sharing site Megaupload, Anonymous didn’t just take CBS.com offline on Sunday with a series of distributed denial-of-service (DDOS) attacks — it redirected visitors to different web servers all together. This means that visitors trying to access CBS.com saw what appeared to be a completely deleted site for about 20 minutes.

Anonymous redirected CBS.com visitors to servers that showed a directory file and error messages when trying to load pages. CBS.com is now back up and functioning properly.

The group also took down other sites over the weekend, including UniversalMusic.com — a site the group attacked last week — as well as its parent company, Vivendi. Various Brazilian sites were also involved in the cyber-attacks, including one for popular singer Paula Fernandes. Elysée — the official website of the French government — as well as several Polish government sites were also hit. Although Twitter accounts for The Daily Show and The Colbert Report were also hacked Sunday night, it appears to be an act from Anonymous supporters — not Anonymous itself.

Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) indicted seven people and two companies which ran the file uploading site Megaupload.com. The site — which called itself “the leading online storage and file delivery service” has been shut down for making $175 million on about a half a billion dollars in copyright infringement. Anonymous threatened in a video (above) to bring other sites down if Megaupload isn’t reinstated soon.

The video states that Anonymous has gained access to the servers of the United Nations, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and various banks, and threatened to take them down: “We are prepared to launch a global blackout of these websites” if Megaupload isn’t back online in 72 hours. The video was released last Thursday.

“We have access to banking and credit card information of millions of citizens,” the video said. “But as for the citizens, do not fear — for your accounts will not be compromised. This is simply to raise awareness — a demonstration to those that doubt our abilities. To those that support SOPA and PIPA. To those congressmen that want to vote yes on those bills. We are not f-ing playing. You have been warned.”

According to a Huffington Post report, @ColbertReport and @TheDailyShow were also hacked on Sunday night, as identical tweets were sent out to followers with a link to this picture — two men in a disguise, one wearing a Pokemon hat. But the hackers said they were not associated with Anonymous, although they do support their efforts. The tweets also included hash-tags that referenced Anonymous and Stop ACTA!, a protest group of the anti-counterfeiting trade agreement. The tweets also included this message: “Watch your security, bro 3."

Soon after, the accounts reportedly tweeted followers to ignore the previous messages, implying that they had been hacked. Other Viacom accounts -- including @ComedyCentral and @Spike_TV -- were also hacked in the process through Hoot Suite, social media dashboard that helps companies manage and send messages to Facebook and Twitter.

The messages have since been deleted from @TheDailyShow, but @ColbertReport has left up a message denying ties to Anonymous: "We are not anonymous, however we do respect @anonops and @poisanon we are however http://twitter.com/ashpluspikachu 3 #stopACTA."

mashable.com

Also Anonymous put the complete discography list of Sony online: http://pastehtml.com/view/bllpf04jv.html.

(edited)
2012-01-23 23:45:20
Message deleted

2012-01-23 23:45:38



(edited)
2012-01-24 00:42:28
This is a great piece on the definition of "pirate" and "piracy". I like how my thoughts on online copying and advertisement advantages are given as an established fact in the article ;-)
2012-01-24 09:08:22
http://www.filesonic.com/

who is next????
2012-01-24 09:41:21
SOPA deleted my personal website !!!!

(or maybe privder, I didt pay for hosting for long time :-( )
2012-01-24 16:29:50
EU passed law like sopa now, called ACTA, where are are much worse conditions than sopa has.
Do you hear about it ?