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SOPA: All Your Internets Belong to U.S.

Posted: 11/16/11 02:33 PM ET

The U.S. Congress is currently embroiled in a heated debated over the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), proposed legislation that supporters argue is needed combat online infringement, but critics fear would create the "great firewall of the United States." SOPA's potential impact on the Internet and development of online services is enormous as it cuts across the lifeblood of the Internet and e-commerce in the effort to target websites that are characterized as being "dedicated to the theft of U.S. property." This represents a new standard that many experts believe could capture hundreds of legitimate websites and services.

For those caught by the definition, the law envisions requiring Internet providers to block access to the sites, search engines to remove links from search results, payment intermediaries such as credit card companies and Paypal to cut off financial support, and Internet advertising companies to cease placing advertisements. While these measures have unsurprisingly raised concern among Internet companies and civil society groups (see letters of concern from Internet companies, members of the U.S. Congress, international civil liberties groups, and law professors), my weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) argues the jurisdictional implications demand far more attention. The U.S. approach is breathtakingly broad, effectively treating millions of websites and IP addresses as "domestic" for U.S. law purposes.

The long-arm of U.S. law manifests itself in at least five ways in the proposed legislation.

First, it defines a "domestic domain name" as a domain name "that is registered or assigned by a domain name registrar, domain name registry, or other domain name registration authority, that is located within a judicial district of the United States." Since every dot-com, dot-net, and dot-org domain is managed by a domain name registry in the U.S., the law effectively asserts jurisdiction over tens of millions of domain names regardless of where the registrant actually resides.

Second, it defines "domestic Internet protocol addresses" -- the numeric strings that constitute the actual address of a website or Internet connection -- as "an Internet Protocol address for which the corresponding Internet Protocol allocation entity is located within a judicial district of the United States."

Yet IP addresses are allocated by regional organizations, not national ones. The allocation entity located in the U.S. is called ARIN, the American Registry for Internet Numbers. Its territory includes the U.S., Canada, and 20 Caribbean nations. This bill treats all IP addresses in this region as domestic for U.S. law purposes.

To put this is context, every Canadian Internet provider relies on ARIN for its block of IP addresses. In fact, ARIN even allocates the block of IP addresses used by federal and provincial governments. The U.S. bill would treat them all as domestic for U.S. law purposes.

Third, the bill grants the U.S. "in rem" jurisdiction over any website that does not have a domestic jurisdictional connection. For those sites, the U.S. grants jurisdiction over the property of the site and opens the door to court orders requiring Internet providers to block the site and Internet search engines to stop linking to it.

Should a website owner wish to challenge the court order, U.S. law asserts itself in a fourth way, since in order for an owner to file a challenge (described as a "counter notification"), the owner must first consent to the jurisdiction of the U.S. courts.

If these measures were not enough, the fifth measure makes it a matter of U.S. law to ensure that intellectual property protection is a significant component of U.S. foreign policy and grants more resources to U.S. embassies around the world to increase their involvement in foreign legal reform.

U.S. intellectual property lobbying around the world has been well documented with new Canadian copyright legislation widely viewed as a direct consequence of years of political pressure. The new U.S. proposal takes this aggressive approach to another level by simply asserting jurisdiction over millions of Canadian registered IP addresses and domain names.

This post originally appeared on www.michaelgeist.ca.

 

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The U.S. Congress is currently embroiled in a heated debated over the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), proposed legislation that supporters argue is needed combat online infringement, but critics fear w...
The U.S. Congress is currently embroiled in a heated debated over the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), proposed legislation that supporters argue is needed combat online infringement, but critics fear w...
 
 
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08:37 AM on 11/21/2011
Maybe we can use this legislation against the big corporations that are sponsoring it. If the law gets enacted, let's just accuse all the big corporations of piracy and have their websites shut down. This law is a double-edged sword. The corporations sponsoring it better be careful. There will be massive retaliation for their attempt to control the People's Internet.
cwaged1002
There is hope but not for us
02:59 PM on 11/19/2011
The USA Government, and the Corporations, that own them, treats the entire globe as a domestic region for USA law purposes; as the bill clearly indicates.
02:09 PM on 11/19/2011
In other words, our government has created a global firewall, backed by millions of dollars in bribes, in order to censor the internet. Land of the free.
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koos458
The Weather is Aways Nicer in Coos Bay
12:19 PM on 11/19/2011
The kleptocracy strikes again!
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Scott Leland
12:01 PM on 11/19/2011
Steve Jobs and Rupert Murdoch initiated this legislation because they wanted to increase their subscription profits from the Internet:

http://www.flixya.com/post/brightlights/1989192/Apples_Plan_To_End_The_Free_Internet
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ
10:35 PM on 11/18/2011
The congress will enact, and Obama will sign, any law no matter how damaging to the US and the American people if someone "donates" to them enough to do it.
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Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
03:28 AM on 11/17/2011
Screw America and their products.
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egal
Reality disagrees with Conservative assessments
02:00 AM on 11/17/2011
Technically, that should be "All your Internet are belong to us."

;-P

But on a serious note, it feels more and more like we live in a Corporations-run theocracy where money is god and if you don't have money you're just a serf, at best.
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Andrea Blackwell
Why watch the news? The truth's on Comedy Central!
01:21 AM on 11/17/2011
Yeaaaah, noooooo...
I'm not feeling it.
We have enough freakin' borders.
I'm thinking beyond piracy, mind you.
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Bishop Coxcomb
Hard work leads to more hard work.
01:16 AM on 11/17/2011
SOPA would be another rung in the ladder of government oppression in the united states. What are we building up to? I hope they at least feed us.
12:45 AM on 11/17/2011
SOPA is one of the worst bills ever written
cwaged1002
There is hope but not for us
03:01 PM on 11/19/2011
Right up there with the Free Trade bills.
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
12:41 AM on 11/17/2011
The third part of the bill is to protect US secrets, military to business innovations, from foreign espionage by phishing spears. China is very devoted to rebuilding their military with our technology via cyber theft. We honestly have insufficient firewalls. Anonymous has brought that out several times. The Watchdogs need to make sure they don't fill the bill with a lot of other political censorship crap.
cwaged1002
There is hope but not for us
03:02 PM on 11/19/2011
China doe not have to steal it. The US government will happily sell it to them.
Ask any country.
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
08:38 PM on 11/20/2011
There is a lot of truth to what you are saying. LIGNET is my source of info.
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
12:33 AM on 11/17/2011
So how much federal money are we going to spend chasing rabbits? We don't even provide basic healthcare to the elderly like we should. So let us MISAPPROPRIATE more dollars we do NOT have.
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egal
Reality disagrees with Conservative assessments
02:02 AM on 11/17/2011
We're just seeing where our leadership's priorities lie.

Instead of focusing on creatin jobs like Obama has asked, they're focusing on stirpping more free speech methods so that we can't mobilize against their obviously-bought incompetence.
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
11:04 PM on 11/17/2011
Amen.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Counterintuitive
We'll steer by the beacon of our 100 year forecast
11:36 PM on 11/16/2011
Since the US claims ownership of the Internet, Canadians need to create their own version of the Internet that uses the same browsers, etc. but hosted on Canadian only servers. Instead of calling it the Internet we'll simply call it 'Fred'. People should be free to hop back and forth between the two depending on which one best fits their needs at the moment.
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mlkx
occupy the overworld
11:25 PM on 11/16/2011
American hegemony. . .