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Politics & Current Affairs

The Right to Piracy: The Conflict Behind SOPA

Will the conflict between intellectual property and the value of sharing knowledge be resolved?  
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Editor’s Note: Since we last spoke to Brad Burnham in December of 2011, anti-SOPA activists have gained an important ally in President Obama, who voiced his opposition (sort of) to the controversial legislation in a statement released last Saturday. The bill is delayed for now, though the House will return to the issue of piracy in a month. In light of these developments, we’re republishing the first part of our interview with Burnham. Check back tomorrow for part two.


What’s the Big Idea?

Since 2000, the United Nations has promoted universal broadband access as a human right, arguing that “knowledge, more than ever is power” and affirming the conventional wisdom that in a democratic society, information should be cheap, transparent, and easily available. But the speed with which information sharing has caught on — not just as a practice, but a value — has lead to a rift between the digital world and the industries that rely on the idea of “intellectual property” to stay in business. Never has the gap between free and mine been so apparent.

So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) was delayed indefinitely by the House of Representatives last Friday. The controversial legislation pits content providers against internet ventures like Google and Yahoo. According to Brad Burnham of Union Square Ventures and an outspoken critic of the bill, it also amounts to online censorship. Watch the video:

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