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This screengrab shows the homepage of the Wikipedia website, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia speaks during the opening session at the London Cyberspace Conference in London, Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011. (AP / Kirsty Wigglesworth) This screengrab shows the homepage of the Wikipedia website, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012.

Wikipedia plans to go dark in protest of legislation

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Canada AM: Carmi Levy on the protest
A technology analyst says while many acknowledge that copyright violation should be addressed, the so-called 'Big Brother' SOPA and PIPA laws must be stopped in their tracks.

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This screengrab shows the homepage of the Wikipedia website, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia speaks during the opening session at the London Cyberspace Conference in London, Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011. (AP / Kirsty Wigglesworth) This screengrab shows the homepage of the Wikipedia website, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012.

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This screengrab shows the homepage of the Wikipedia website, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012.

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Date: Tue. Jan. 17 2012 12:23 PM ET

Surfing the web for quick answers may become a little tougher on Wednesday, when Wikipedia goes dark for 24 hours in protest of proposed U.S. anti-piracy legislation.

The free online encyclopedia says it will "black out" its English website for 24 hours to protest two bills which take aim at online piracy, and more specifically offshore sales of pirated U.S. products.

Content on Wikipedia's English site won't be available from midnight (ET) until midnight on Wednesday.

The Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) is being reviewed in the U.S. House of Representatives while the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA) is up for debate in the Senate.

"Both of these bills, if passed, would be devastating to the free and open web," Wikipedia said in a statement released Monday evening.

SOPA and PIPA have been designed to tackle the sales of illegal music and other media, making the proposed legislation popular amongst those in the music and film industry.

Proponents have hailed the bills as a way to crackdown on the web's rapidly growing population of media pirates.

Wikipedia, on the other hand, is adding its voice to a chorus of groups and individuals from the technology industry who maintain that the bills hinder free-speech and interfere with website security.

Technology analyst Carmi Levy said Wikipedia's planned blackout will force ordinary Internet users to realize what's at stake if the bills are passed.

"Up until now, the mainstream users of the Internet really haven't been aware of this controversy that's been bubbling under the surface," he told CTV's Canada AM on Tuesday.

Levy called the anti-piracy legislation debate a battle between those who own content and copyright and those who shape the Internet and want to ensure it's "free and open to everyone."

Companies such as Google, Facebook, Yahoo and AOL have also joined the battle by openly criticizing the legislation.

Canadians are vowing to join the protest too, including law professor Michael Geist and social media service Identi. Toronto-based Tucows, which includes the management of 11 million domain names among its online services, has also vowed to go dark.

"The proposed SOPA legislation is fundamentally flawed in how it works and the damage it is likely to do to the Internet," the company said in a statement posted to its website warning users that its popular software download portal will be blacked out for a 12-hour period starting at 8 a.m. ET on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, whose headshot is often featured at the top of the encyclopedia's pages, has continued to speak out against the proposed legislation on Twitter.

In a message posted to the site on Tuesday, he urged U.S. citizens to call their senators to protest SOPA and PIPA. Correspondence between Wales and another user suggested Wikipedia will "have a tool to use on Wednesday" for supporters to access phone numbers.

Wikipedia's Italian-language site shut down temporarily last October to protest an Internet censorship bill that did not end up going through. It's the first time, however, that English Wikipedia has staged this type of protest.

In Levy's opinion, it's an effective way to direct attention towards SOPA and PIPA.

"By having Wikipedia go dark, regular everyday folks will suddenly realize like ‘Hey, wait a second, this isn't just some far off controversy. It's something that affects me,'" he said.

Comments are now closed for this story

eddytoronto
said

As I have warned 1 year ago the federal government is desperate to seize control of the Internet...Handing Government the power to control the Internet would only be the first step towards this system whereby individual IDs and government permission would be required simply to operate a website...Chinese style censorship ....Giving the state the power to shut down networks has already been passed globally including in the UK, New Zealand and Australia...Regulation of the Internet would not only represent a massive assault on free speech it would also create new roadblocks for e-commerce and as a consequence further devastate the economy...


Robert B
said

Why do governments try to control the internet ? Its to continue to try and control and engineer the people of the western world, that protest movement scared the hell out of the Western worlds governments!!!!!.


omega
said

Here's the thing. No matter what these organizations think or do, I will not be buying their stuff. I, for one, can live without it.


NoContest
said

Similar to the "war on drugs"; you can't stop piracy, you can only spend a ton of money pretending to stop piracy.


Scott in TO
said

Come on folks, this is Wikipedia...who really cares if it "goes black" for a day or so...will it really be missed?


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

@ Karl: Thanks, Karl. I'm aware that I can news-shop elsewhere; however, I happen to be fond of CTV and would like to see them cover the bases, as they typically do.


Karl
said

@Prof. Pye Chartt: And yet.... you continue to visit the site. I guess it can't be all that bad, right? I think the reason this story is one-sided is because it was meant to tell only the story of wikipedia's owner's position. If you want the other side, there's plenty of material out there to get the whole story.


Capt. Compromise
said

Yep, this legislation and the Canadian version are aweful for consumers. Of course, record executives are the ones that have the high-priced lawyers and lobbyists working on this for years, successfully placing our political system in their front pockets. So one guess as to who will win the day - anyone?I am against internet piracy of course. However these laws go too far. I always buy my music and movies, yet now the government is going to tell me that I have to re-purchase my entire collection if, for example, a new technology comes along? Hah! Good luck with getting the ordinary person to play along, guys.And at the end of the day, digital locks and other security and laws have all been proven ineffective. Pirates break locks within 45 seconds, and the only one inconvenienced (and intimidated) is the honest consumer.Record execs and our leaders need a good shake on this one. They are sooo totally out of touch, this would all just be sad if their paranoia didn't affect the rest of us.


Karl
said

Trust me, if SOPA and PIPA become law in the US, Canada will be pressured to do the same. Don't believe me? Compare Bill C-11 with the DMCA.


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

This news story is typical of today's shallow and vague journalism: report that two sides disagree about something, and then fail to indicate in summary detail what the respective arguments are, so that the public can inform themselves properly on the alleged issue (and, in the case of this website forum, intelligently discuss or debate the matter).


Joe F
said

Forgot to add that SOPA would have an effect on Canada in that the American Registration for Internet Numbers (ARIN) is based in the US yet covers Canada, Mexico & many Caribbean islands. Effectively a site "banned" in the US would affect us as well.


Joe F
said

Why no mention of the ongoing copyright situation in Canada and things like Bill C-11?


Sherry
said

Thanks all for putting me straight - "good grief " was not needed though - just let me know and I will say thanks Todd - I am polite that way. Anyways, there is still too much info out there and because of the way the Internet is, there is a lot more knowledge than you can even find in the library. Their protest is still nothing really.


Steve
said

This is governments trying to limit information on the internet to better control society for their purposes. This legislation would make so many things illegal that the protest movements in the Middle East, China and Iran would all be negatively impacted. This bill is highly anti-democratic.


bmac13
said

Just like big brother during the G8/G20 cluster, SOPA should concern & scare everyone. It is such a broad & far reaching law it "allows" the US to try & enforce laws beyond their own borders.This is a thinly veiled law that is based in greed. There are already existing laws to address piracy & technologies emerging to help control it.MY concern is that our Gov't will endorse this approach given our connection to the US.Freedom of speech is under attack & not just in the US.


me
said

You're on a slippery slope when knowledge is made unavailable to people. The truth (even if inconvenient) should not be hidden. (We have a justice system that does that very well already....)


Munro - Brampton
said

This is a case of 'the wolf in sheeps clothing'. For example, the record industry wants to prevent new music artists from sharing their own work online. The recording industry does not want new artists to get recognition without going thru their system first.


Alyx Crawford
said

Sherry -- "that kind of knowledge" has been available in libraries for centuries. The knowledge itself isn't bad, it's the "nuts" that misuse that knowledge that is a problem. They will get that information from any source they can.


David J
said

@Sherry -- you're confusing WikiLeaks with WikiPedia. "Wiki" is a prefix attached to any number of websites that allow open sharing and editing of the site.


Todd
said

Sherry, this is Wikipedia, not Wikileaks. Good grief.


Wil
said

The anti piracy legislation has nothing to do with wikipedia so this "protest" is nonsense. Wikipedia is also nonsense-an alleged "reference" site where anyone can change something to suit themselves rather than being a way to access factual information = stupidity on the rise.


Sherry
said

I agree with being open - truthful but there are some things that should not be "leaked" to the world and Wikipedia has done that and lost my backing. Not every one should know everything. There are nuts out there that can go on sites just to learn how to properly make bombs, kill people better etc - this is not the info that should have ever been allowed for every one. Not everything should be available to just anyone. That kind of "knowledge/truth" I do not support and there are things that wikipedia has done that I continue to not support.


Original Canadien
said

Although piracy is wrong, it is not an excuse to force others to police something they really have nothing to do with. I'd love to see every major site shut down for a day, thus stopping the web and showing how much it is needed day to day.Virui has tried to shut it down and failed, however, congress may have just given an excuse to do it by the people who run it.


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