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The Short Fuse, Vox Media and SB Nation's official SOPA stance

One of the rules that spans pretty much the entirety of the vast SB Nation empire (of which we are but a small fiefdom) is the "no politics" rule. We try as best we can to make these communities places where sports fans of all races, religions, gender and sexual identities, and political affiliations can gather and talk about the teams and sports that they love. Since I've been here, I don't think I've seen even one violation of this rule, and that's something that I like.

On the other hand, sometimes things happen in the world that, while they exist in the political sphere, are beyond partisanship, and when they have the potential to directly affect us (The Short Fuse, SB Nation, and the Internet-going public as a whole) I do not think it's inappropriate to comment on them.

The stance of Vox Media, our parent company, is that it officially opposes the Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA. The Short Fuse joins Vox and SB Nation in that opposition. You can read SB Nation's full statement here, and The Verge (Vox's superlative tech blog) goes into much more detail here. Additionally there are other posts on The Verge (like this one) that, if you have no idea in hell what I'm talking about right now, are quite good as a SOPA crash course.

If this bill and/or its Senate sister, the Protect IP Act (PIPA) becomes law, it could have a tremendous effect on how the Internet works, and at the very least, its spirit is one of stifling free speech and expression in a misguided and wildly ineffective attempt to protect intellectual property. And it directly affects us as fans of European football - like watching Arsenal online? Well, even if you do it legally, these bills will make your life very hard.

We're authorities on Arsenal (theoretically, at least), not on politics or law, so we'll certainly understand if you don't want to take our word for this. (Full disclosure: I was a journalism/political science/pre-law major in college, so I have some idea of what I'm talking about, though certainly I'm no expert.) What I and we ask of you is to take this day to do a little research and learn about this, and make up your own mind.

Many sites across the Internet have gone dark today in protest of these bills, which is why today's the day we've taken a stance. We are not going to shut the site down, because we don't want to take this community away, and this is probably more than enough. Honestly I don't even know how that would work, so either way it wouldn't happen. However, for the rest of today, in solidarity with the rest of the Internet, we won't be producing any content. This is the last thing we'll be posting today.

If you choose to discuss this in the comments, be sure you take care to act with class and dignity. And remember that this is not a partisan issue. Neither Republicans nor Democrats are to blame here; both bills have wide bipartisan support.

Thanks for putting up with this divergence from our usual fare. We'll be back up as usual tomorrow, and feel free to take a look at the episode of Fusillade I posted last night. Feel free to consider the comment thread there and this one here open threads for Arsenal discussion, since there won't be more posts until tomorrow.

INTERNET IN CRISIS.

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Please get the word out to your all your friends, fellow Gooners.

this is a serious violation of our freedoms. Don’t let the US internet system get China-fied.

SBN Bloglist:
The Short Fuse (Arsenal, EPL)
Sactown Royalty (Kings, NBA)

by silverace99 on Jan 18, 2012 2:10 PM EST reply actions  

Well said; while something needs to be done, action for the sake of action doesn’t help anything or anyone. I find it interesting that both politicians and sports managers, coaches, and GMs don’t always grasp that concept.

by RogueConvict on Jan 18, 2012 2:16 PM EST reply actions  

Another good SOPA explanation

is in the Guardian today, written from the perspective of “why should you care” and geared towards non-Americans. If you’re not tech-savvy (as I am sorta not) and didn’t really think about the issue, the piece is a really good introduction and will make you somewhat livid.

An example that hits home: If Arsenal decided that they didn’t like what TSF was doing, pretty much one phone call from the club to the US government gets TSF blocked. It would be that simple.

by pdb on Jan 18, 2012 3:17 PM EST reply actions  

Think of it this way:

Apple computer doesn’t get to tell the police to close Best Buy because it “induces” people to shoplift iPads. So why should a record label get to tell the authorities to shut down a website because it “induces” people to do something with copyrighted material?

Captain, there are doubt''s...

by Match Day 5 on Jan 18, 2012 3:25 PM EST reply actions  

Don't even get me started on record companies

Back in the cassette tape days (yes, kids, I am that old), their stance was, and I quote, “home taping is killing music”. It did no such thing. This is the same thing – piracy isn’t legal, and it does cost companies money, but that doesn’t mean it’s killing anything. The record labels and film companies are getting the wrong lesson from piracy – instead of “how do we make our product more accessible and less expensive”, they are going the “we need to lock the doors and protect our 50 year old business model” route, and if anything is killing the entertainment industry, that is.

by pdb on Jan 18, 2012 3:34 PM EST up reply actions  

Cool, thanks for helping get the word out TSF.

by jiduthie on Jan 18, 2012 3:49 PM EST reply actions  

Since when have pirates ever cared about rules?

LEAVE THE INTERNET LIBERATED

This message has been approved by Adnan Ilyas

by Adnan Ilyas on Jan 18, 2012 4:20 PM EST reply actions  

not that it matters

because the people that oppose it are not in the positions to stop it like the people that are in favor are.

Chuck Norris doesn't need a bat.

he just roundhouse kicks the ball out of the park.

by bearcatcardfan on Jan 18, 2012 5:24 PM EST up reply actions  

Perhaps they actually read the thing

and realized how stupid it was.

Captain, there are doubt''s...

by Match Day 5 on Jan 18, 2012 9:25 PM EST up reply actions  

It's bad press now that people actually have heard of the damn thing

the biggest thing this protest did was get the bills in the news, they’d been practically unreported by major news outlets. To be fair though, famous people were doing things, so I can see why they didn’t think the future of the Internet as we know it was that big of a deal.

WRITTEN IN THE STAAAAARS, A MILLION MILES AWAAAAAAY

I write about the Arsenal for The Short Fuse.

Twitter: Brohan_Cruyff

by Thomas Wachtel on Jan 19, 2012 9:22 AM EST up reply actions  

True.

This is the rare political issue that has almost no connection to the way we think about partisan politics.

WRITTEN IN THE STAAAAARS, A MILLION MILES AWAAAAAAY

I write about the Arsenal for The Short Fuse.

Twitter: Brohan_Cruyff

by Thomas Wachtel on Jan 18, 2012 8:45 PM EST up reply actions  

Come to think of it, SOPA/PIPA would kill just about any sports' blog

If the league/team so chose to protect their property. The word “Arsenal” could be banned. So would the Silent Stan pics, the player pics, any quotes we use, maybe not even the players names if the club chose to express them as assets (the sell them as if they were). We pretty much wouldn’t be able to say anything anywhere legal online.

by Adnan Ilyas on Jan 19, 2012 12:09 PM EST reply actions  

First they took our hat shops, and we said nothing

Then they took our blogs, and we had no way to say anything

by Loose Seal on Jan 19, 2012 2:38 PM EST up reply actions   1 recs

It's not really that the ideas that spawned SOPA and PIPA are bad...

It’s just that there was only one side that wrote it up, without consulting anyone else. This left us with a very broad area of what lawmakers could consider “piracy of intellectual property”. People that support the bill say that it won’t get so extreme to the point where sites like ours would be shut down for violating this, but we could just as easily counter that with what Arsenal did this past summer, by filing a lawsuit against a Spanish lady who named her boutique, which had nothing to do with football and didn’t even contain Arsenal colors, “Arsenale”. It can get that extreme, it already has with what laws we currently have, and if this passes, it will get tenfold worse. What puzzles me right now is, with so much criticism aimed at Congress right now (an 84% disapproval rating, much more than the President) and with so much popular criticism aimed at this bill, why would they even consider passing this bill? It’s not quite political suicide for those who support the bill, but it’s damn close…

UMD Bulldogs: 2011 NCAA DI Men's Hockey Nat'l Champions; 2008 & 2010 NCAA DII Football Nat'l Champions

by bmasson11 on Jan 19, 2012 1:13 PM EST reply actions  

Campaign donations.

Plus, the head of the MPAA is a former congressman.

Captain, there are doubt''s...

by Match Day 5 on Jan 19, 2012 1:44 PM EST up reply actions  

The Movie Business is paying them

They argue that piracy is hurting their business. Somehow, the small minority of people who pirate films will bring the whole industry down, or at least that’s what it looks like when they make their argument. These are the real constituents of these politicians, the corporations that donate to help keep their companies from stopping the increase of profits. Any way, because of the huge out pouring of hate from the big companies that really matter on the internet (sorry Disney, but nobody cares about your website), a good number of congress men have withdrawn their support.

by Adnan Ilyas on Jan 19, 2012 2:12 PM EST up reply actions  

It's not just movies, it's music too

And also the theater owners, who have a huge vested interest in keeping people going to the movies instead of renting them.

The entertainment industry as a whole has done a really bad job of adjusting their business models to the more modern delivery systems available, and instead of trying to adapt they are trying to legislate the old model into permanent existence. It won’t work.

by pdb on Jan 19, 2012 4:15 PM EST up reply actions  

Sounds like Taiwo is headed for QPR.

Really? QPR?

Carter Jurica!
"Has anyone really been for even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?"

by GrahamCrakalaka on Jan 19, 2012 2:15 PM EST reply actions  

Hey kids

SOPA has been withdrawn.

WRITTEN IN THE STAAAAARS, A MILLION MILES AWAAAAAAY

I write about the Arsenal for The Short Fuse.

Twitter: Brohan_Cruyff

by Thomas Wachtel on Jan 20, 2012 1:59 PM EST reply actions  

...for now

SBN Bloglist:
The Short Fuse (Arsenal, EPL)
Sactown Royalty (Kings, NBA)

by silverace99 on Jan 20, 2012 4:52 PM EST up reply actions  

Better this than the alternative.

WRITTEN IN THE STAAAAARS, A MILLION MILES AWAAAAAAY

I write about the Arsenal for The Short Fuse.

Twitter: Brohan_Cruyff

by Thomas Wachtel on Jan 20, 2012 6:53 PM EST up reply actions  

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