With SOPA-palooza going on around here the past couple weeks, I completely neglected my shameless self-promotion duties. Now Marketing Darrell is upset with Blogging Darrell, and won’t talk to him, which frustrates Gamer Darrell since he needs those two guys to help playtest the new game designs. Sigh. Such is the life of a multi-tasking freelancer.

So yes, if the American government’s commitment to Hollywood hadn’t hijacked the blog for a week, I surely would have mentioned that the new expansion for The Big Bang Theory: Mystic Warlords of Ka’a has just come out.

For the uninitiated, Mystic Warlords is a Facebook card game. It’s based on the card game played by the characters in the Big Bang Theory television show. It’s a fantasy game, with elves and dragons and magic swords and such, but it’s got a wide vein of humor running through it, in the Big Bang Theory style.

The game is developed by those stalwart champions of online card games, Dire Wolf Digital, who I’ve been helping out with game design duties. The expansion features a ton of new cards, the deliciously eeevil Twilight Elf faction, and some cool new mechanics. If you’re (a) on Facebook, (b) like card games, or (c) like The Big Bang Theory, you should take the game for a spin and see what it takes to be mystic warlord.

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Earlier this week I discussed how SOPA and PIPA, if passed, would censor the Internet by blocking access to websites that are accused of hosting copyright-infringing materials. Today I want to talk about how these bills are also an assault on free speech.

You might not think these laws would affect you. After all, you’re not pirating movies or running websites with user-generated content. But let’s look again at that bullet point from the Entertainment Consumers Association:

It strips current laws by now making internet companies, which used to be immune, liable for their users’ communications.  This means that Facebook, Youtube, WordPress, Google and more are now on the hook for what you post.

Now put yourself in the shoes of one of these companies. If any one of your millions of users posts a copyrighted photo, a music video, a scene from a movie or TV show, or even links to another site that hosts one of these things… You could be shut down and liable for astronomical sums in damages. What’s the most logical thing to do? Prevent users from posting things, of course.

Well, that kills Facebook, Youtube, WordPress, Google (via WordPress and Google+), LinkedIn, Twitter, Reddit, and virtually every other social media site or service online. Message boards? Gone. DropBox? Gone. Heck, I wouldn’t be surprised if it killed online e-mail services; after all, e-mail can be used to send links to pirated materials.

Now put yourself in the shoes of an important person who doesn’t like what people are saying on a given website. Under these laws, all it takes is an official copyright infringement complaint, and that website is gone. Don’t like the site broadcasting news of the Occupy movement? Point out that they don’t have the official written permission to show the news footage of the protest. Want to keep your people ignorant of your human rights violations? Claim the site pirated your copyrighted images. (It doesn’t matter if they did or not; all it take is an accusation to get them shut down, and the probably don’t have the lawyers or money to prove the accusation false.)

Censorship is a slippery slope.

Google’s got a petition up today. I’m skeptical of petitions–especially online petitions–doing any good. But it’s Google, so I’m sure they’ll get thousands and thousands of “signatures,” most of which are not “Mickey Mouse,” which will at least make it awkward for politicians  to continue to ignore their constituents.

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In case you haven’t heard, the Internet as we know it is under attack. If we don’t act quickly, it might be destroyed at the hands of the U.S. government.

I’m talking about the Stop Online Piracy Act (H.R. 3261, “SOPA”) and its Senate counterpart, PROTECT IP Act (S. 968, “PIPA”). The alleged purpose of these bills is to shut down websites that provide unauthorized access to copyrighted materials: books, music, movies, and other media.

I can get behind that idea. As a guy who makes his living with words and games, I’m not too keen on folks pirating those things and not paying for me them. I like getting paid. But still I don’t like SOPA / PIPA. Why not?

Here, I’ll post this handy list from the Entertainment Consumers Association hit the high points:

 

  • It strips current laws by now making internet companies, which used to be immune, liable for their users’ communications. This means that Facebook, Youtube, WordPress, Google and more are now on the hook for what you post.
  • It gives the US Attorney General, with court order, the power to seize websites that possibly infringe or partially infringe copyright. There would be no due process and no chance to defend yourself before the seizure. The mere accusation can get a website taken away.
  • It violates Net Neutrality by ordering internet providers, advertising companies and payment systems to block accused websites with technology that just doesn’t exist.
  • It threatens users by imposing fines or jail time for posting even derivatives of copywrited work(s). A video of your karaoke, playing the piano, video game speed trial would now all be punishable if a copyright holder decides to enforce it.

 

Furthermore (as if that wasn’t enough), even though these laws would make American Internet look like China’s or Iran’s, it still won’t stop piracy. The core effect of the bills is to target specific websites–and that sort of whack-a-mole legislation isn’t going to do anything. If we’ve learned anything from over a decade of trying to police content on the Internet, it’s that as soon as you shut down one “rogue site,” another one appears with the same content. Putting more laws on the books won’t change anything.

So what can we do?

I know it’s a cliche, but please, contact your Congressional representatives and Senators and tell them this is a terrible idea.

The ECA has a handy form for finding your congressional people, complete with a well-worded letter to copy, paste, and make your own.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation also has guidelines for contacting politicians.

Stop American Censorship has a full program of actions you can take to fight these bills and raise awareness of the problem.

Blackoutsopa.org has a handy tool for tweaking your avatars to support the cause. It’s a little thing, akin to wearing a pink ribbon. No, it doesn’t stop the cancer, but it does remind people there’s something out there trying to kill them (or in this case, the Internet).

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I blame The Walking Dead.

My wife has long stated her heart-felt intention to read the comics. “Oh, a new one,” she’s said every month for the past eight years. “I love zombies. I should read that.” (Every month. For eight years.)

But it wasn’t until the second season of the Walking Dead TV series on AMC that she asked me to pull the comics out for her. I gave the woop of joy unique to the geek who gets to share the media he loves with the woman he loves, sprang to the comics closet where I keep my longboxes, and realized:

Every month. For eight years. That’s a lot of comics.

I’ve always claimed that when it came to comics, I’m a reader, not a collector. But if you’re reading 5-10 comics a month since 1990 or so, you’re still going to build up quite a collection. And if you’re me (I know you’re not, but since I started this paragraph in second person, I’m feeling committed to it), you haven’t kept them quite as organized as you’d hoped, so finding all 90+ issues of a single series means digging through a lot of comics. I mean a lot a lot. I mean if one of those bookshelves of longboxes tipped over, it would have crushed me.

I found all but one or two of issues of The Walking Dead. It took hours of digging over the course of several days, but I was pleased with the results:

  1. My wife is caught up.
  2. I’m eyeballing comiXology.

For the uninitiated, comiXology is a service providing electronic versions of comics, especially on your handheld device. You could consider it an iTunes of comics.

If I’m really a reader, not a collector, this should be perfect for me — especially since I (a) now have a handheld device device and (b) am worried those “Hoarders” TV folks are going to start poking around my closets, clucking and tutting like disapproving Geiger counters.

And yet… Every month. For eight years. That’s more than a habit. That’s a tradition. Even if I do follow the future down the e-published rabbit hole, I don’t think I can give up the local comic shop.

I’m too much of a collector.

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