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SOPA fight over 'Internet censorship' attracts Yahoo, Google

SOPA "jeopardizes" Internet business, claim Twitter, Google, Yahoo and others. The SOPA bill amounts to "Internet censorship," some argue.

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Reuters
Yahoo is one of nine Internet companies which publicly opposes the Stop Internet Privacy Act, or SOPA.

Late last month, Lamar Smith, a Republican representative from Texas, introduced a bill called SOPA (the Stop Online Piracy act), which was intended to crack down on intellectual property theft, and put up barriers against what Smith termed "rogue" sites.

"[T]he problem of rogue Web sites is real, immediate and widespread. It harms all sectors of the economy," Smith said, to the Washington Post.听

(For what it's wroth, the SOPA bill in the House has a similar counterpart in the Senate called the PROTECT IP Act.)

RELATED: Top 9 ways Internet access can save you money

Over at Information Week, Paul McDougall a run-down of five key provisions of the bill, which include the blocking of sites that provide copyrighted content 鈥 the Pirate Bay, for instance 鈥 and the targeting of websites that attempt to sell聽pharmaceuticals聽to individuals without prescriptions. McDougall quotes聽Pfizer security officer John Clark, who says "pharmaceutical counterfeiting is first and foremost an issue of patient health and safety."

The Post has reported that SOPA seems to have significant support, among both lawmakers, and Hollywood studios and pharmaceutical companies, who "argued during the hearing that they are losing an estimated $135聽billion a year in pirated material." But SOPA has met with vociferous opposition from Web companies, who have the bill "a full-on assault against lawful U.S. Internet companies."聽

Earlier this week, nine tech titans, including Twitter, Yahoo, and Google, signed an open letter to congress, voicing opposition to SOPA. "[T]he聽bills as drafted would expose law-abiding U.S. Internet and technology companies to new uncertain liabilities,聽private rights of action, and technology mandates that would require monitoring of web sites," the letter .

"We are concerned that these measures pose a serious risk to our industry鈥檚 continue track record of innovation and job-creation, as well as to our nation鈥檚 cyber security," the nine companies add. According to the Daily News, Google chairman Eric Schmidt, at an event at MIT, called the proposed SOPA provisions "draconian."聽

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RELATED: Top 9 ways Internet access can save you money

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