How the US is using Fascist Methods, Censoring the Internet in other Countries (WORSE than Sopa!), page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 7 times
Topic started on 25-1-2012 @ 10:01 PM by flexy123
Until last year, file-sharing in Spain and Canada was a big thorn in the eye of major media moguls in the states like MPAA, RIAA etc.

I am shocked to read that after Spain got a new government now, it took the new government (so called "People's Party) less than TWO WEEKS to implement an EXTREMELY invasive and censoring new law, the so called "Sinde Law"

www.sfgate.com.../g/a/2012/01/05/businessinsidernow-the-us-is-trying.DTL
(Link doesn't work, i shortened it here so you can access this: tiny.cc...)


torrentfreak.com...

The "Sinde Law" *will* enforce the blocking of Filesharing sites ON ISP LEVEL, that means that the service providers here in Spain have to/can block whatever sites "within 10 days of receiving a complaint"

Reading the news about this HORRIBLE law, it becomes clear that this law which was put in place by the so called "People's Party" (Does this remind you of Orwell?) was merely put in place following direct "recommendation" BY THE UNITED STATES.

In other words: Spain is being bribed by the US Government and big US corporates which threatened Spain with several sanctions due to its lax copyright laws in the past.

For example, the US corporates want to introduce Netflix here in Spain plus establish other, similar services - but made it a requirement that Spain complies to US DEMANDS implementing this law.

What is the sad thing about this?

The sad thing is that there is a likelihood that 99% of people in Spain dont even have a clue what is going and how this will affect them.

The fact that the USA is imposing *its* laws in other countries such as Spain with threats and demands is OUTRAGEOUS. The blocking of potentially inconvenient sites and filesharing sites on an ISP level is outrageous also!

In practice this can mean that Spain might get a complain from some US lawyers, MPAA or RIAA..with the very likely result that filesharing sites (THE FEW WHICH SURVIVED from the recent raids, like rapidshare etc.)...but also torrent sites like demonoid, piratebay etc. might be blocked here in Spain likely within the next months...AND PEOPLE HAVE NO IDEA THIS IS HAPPENING!

www.guardian.co.uk...



The US ambassador in Madrid threatened Spain with "retaliation actions" if the country did not pass tough new internet piracy laws, according to leaked documents.

The latest revelation comes amid a fierce debate over America's own plans to pass online piracy legislation that critics claim will damage the infrastructure of the internet and restrict free speech.


You have to read this to believe this, and if you are in Europe and in particular in Spain (Hey Expats!) please spread the word what is going right now!

Edit: I want to make it clear - this is not an "i advocate piracy thread", it's about censorship and the US bribing and imposing laws to other countries.
edit on 25-1-2012 by flexy123 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 25-1-2012 @ 10:06 PM by flexy123
reply to post by Ixtab



why should it get 404ed? It's NOT about piracy or debating whether we should pirate..it's about censorship and how the US is bribing other countries.



reply posted on 25-1-2012 @ 10:09 PM by Ixtab
reply to post by flexy123



Yeah the last one was exactly that too, I dunno man, individual mods must have personal issues about it I guess. Basicaly though talking about file sharing is apparently illegal?, that was the rationale behind the last thread closure.


reply posted on 25-1-2012 @ 10:16 PM by flexy123
Originally posted by Ixtab
reply to
post by flexy123



Yeah the last one was exactly that too, I dunno man, individual mods must have personal issues about it I guess. Basicaly though talking about file sharing is apparently illegal?, that was the rationale behind the last thread closure.


As far as i know, file-sharing was "legal" or "semi legal" in Spain...but then you need to understand bureaucracy in Spain...LOL..it is something which basically does not exist here. In other words: No one really gave a ####.

Now, don't get me wrong...there is a huge difference to make a new law and simply do what other countries do and declare filesharing illegal (as in any other country) - as opposed to a law which will enable site blocking on an ISP level simply because some lawyer IN THE STATES doesn't like that people from Spain go to piratebay or demonoid etc.?

I mean..people demonstrating SOPA in the states...while they *implement* such a law right now and here.


reply posted on 25-1-2012 @ 10:19 PM by Ixtab
reply to post by flexy123



Well its legal in Switzerland, I know what your sayin man, but its like that stuff that grows in the ground, that stuff people sometimes like to smoke?, if you are thinking its tobacco YOUD BE WRONG. Well its a bit like that stuff, your just not allowed to talk about it.

Ive probably said too much already, a warning no doubt coming my way, woops!.


reply posted on 25-1-2012 @ 10:22 PM by flexy123

Last month, the U.S. threatened to blacklist trade with Spain if it didn't pass a SOPA-style law blocking file-sharing sites. A letter leaked from the U.S. ambassador to Spain's outgoing president detailed the threat, concerning Spain's so-called Sinde Law. The letter was published by the Spanish newspaper the El Pais.

The TorrentFreak blog reports: "More than 100 leaked cables showed that the US had helped draft new Spanish copyright legislation and had heavily influenced the decisions of both the government and opposition.

Now, another diplomatic leak has revealed how the U.S. voiced its anger towards outgoing President Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero last month upon realizing that his government was unlikely to pass the U.S.-drafted Sinde (site blocking) Law before leaving office."

US Ambassador Alan D. Solomont sent the letter December 12. In it he said that Spain's trade relationship with the U.S. could be "degraded" and potentially put on a "priority watch" of countries that the U.S. considers "the worst violators of global intellectual property rights," El Pais reports.

Those on that list are subject to serious trade sanctions.

Almost everyone in the tech industry thinks that SOPA is one of the worst ideas ever to spring from Congress, and that it would severely damage the Internet in the U.S. But that apparently isn't stopping the U.S. from exporting it.



Short: The US is quietly and candidly "exporting" SOPA to other countries.
edit on 25-1-2012 by flexy123 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 26-1-2012 @ 03:50 AM by PsykoOps
reply to post by flexy123



It's a simple act of removing the unwanted sites from the isp's dns. My isp was just ordered to remove all piratebay's dns's from the dns. So I cannot connect to those. It takes me such an huge efford to type in the pirate party address and clicking their link that goes around that
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