Can Google defeat SOPA? How you can partner with google to stop SOPA

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The Stop Online Piracy Act, known colloquially as SOPA, is a United States bill meant to protect copyright holders against online intellectual property violations. The bill would make web hosting services legally responsible for policing the content on their own sites. For example, Google would have to police YouTube (which it owns) to ensure that all videos are the legal property of the uploader. Furthermore, internet service providers would have to block copyright-violating sites from being viewed and search engines would have to remove them from search results. ISPs would also be encouraged to deny service to sites that offer medication that requires a prescription in the United States. Internet Search Results Will Change One of the most obvious changes that average internet users will notice after SOPA is in internet search results. Any search that would have previously included both foreign and domestic sites that may contain copyright infringing material will no longer appear in the search results. Even direct searches for the domain names of those sites may turn up blank pages, if ISPs block them as the bill suggests. The obvious problem with this is policing what gets nixed and what does not. Because the bill provides immunity for ISPs blocking sites they believe are covered by the bill, there is the potential for blocking sites that are not breaking any rules. ISPs would have to verify the copyrights of every web page they block for this to be truly accurate. If there is not enough policing of these blocks, internet users might find sites being blocked unfairly. Copyright law is very complicated, as there are often exceptions to the established rules with regards to fair use practices, public domain rights, transfer of copyright from one intellectual property owner to another on varying levels, etc. If ISPs are not carefully assessing the rights used by each website they take down and verifying whether the rights to any content were properly obtained, average internet users may find their social networking sites, blogs and personal family websites being blocked over a mistake on the part of the ISP. Process of Removing Copyright Infringing Content Many average internet users have personal blogs or social networking accounts, and SOPA will undoubtedly affect the functioning of these sites. That means that copyright infringing material posted on one person's account on Twitter or Facebook could result in the blocking of these domains entirely. In the past, a DMCA - Digital Millennium Copyright Act - takedown could be issued, which would give the copyright infringing user a chance to remove the content, making it easier for those who mistakenly post illegal content to remedy the situation without legal repercussions. With SOPA, internet users do not get the opportunity to rectify mistakes. The average internet user is not a legal copyright professional, so copyright infringing material is often


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