Reid postpones vote on anti-piracy bill

By JIM ABRAMS | Associated Press – 4 hrs ago

http://news.yahoo.com/reid-postpones-vote-anti-piracy-bill-144213479.html

WASHINGTON (AP) — Yielding to strong opposition from the high tech community, 
Senate and House leaders said Friday they will put off further action on 
legislation to combat online piracy.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he was postponing a test vote 
set for Tuesday "in light of  recent events." Those events included a petition 
drive by Google that attracted more than 7 million participants and a one-day 
blackout by the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

House Judiciary Committee chairman Lamar Smith, R-Texas, quickly followed suit, 
saying consideration of a similar House bill would be postponed "until there is 
wider agreement on a solution."

The Senate's Protect Intellectual Property Act and the House's Stop Online 
Piracy Act have strong support from the entertainment industry and other 
businesses that lose billions of dollars annually to intellectual property 
theft and online sales of counterfeit products. But they also have strong 
opposition from Internet-related companies that argue the bill would lead to 
over-regulation and censorship of the Internet.

Reid has also seen at least a half-dozen senators who sponsored the bill 
announce they now oppose it.

Reid said counterfeiting and piracy cost the American economy billions of 
dollars every year and "there is no reason that the legitimate issues raised by 
many about this bill cannot be resolved." He said he was optimistic about 
reaching a compromise in the coming weeks.

The main Senate sponsor, Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., 
said he respected Reid's decision to postpone the vote but lamented the 
Senate's unwillingness to debate the bill.

"The day will come when the senators who forced this move will look back and 
realize they made a knee-jerk reaction to a monumental problem," he said. 
Criminals in China, Russia and other countries "who do nothing but peddle in 
counterfeit products and stolen American content are smugly watching how the 
United States Senate decided" it was not worth debating the bill.

The two bills would allow the Justice Department, and copyright holders, to 
seek court orders against foreign websites accused of copyright infringement. 
They would bar online advertising networks and payment facilitators such as 
credit card companies from doing business with an alleged violator. They also 
would forbid search engines from linking to such sites.

The Tuesday vote was on whether to move the legislation to the Senate floor for 
debate. With the recent desertions and a statement Thursday by Senate 
Republican leader Mitch McConnell that it is too early to consider the bill, it 
appeared supporters lacked the 60 votes needed to advance the measure.

McConnell on Friday applauded Reid's decision, saying it would "prevent a 
counterproductive rush toward flawed legislation."

In the House, Smith said he had "heard from the critics" and resolved that it 
was "clear that we need to revisit the approach on how best to address the 
problem of foreign thieves that steal and sell American inventions and 
products." Smith had planned on holding further committee votes on his bill 
next month.

The bill's opponents were relieved it was put on hold.

Markham Erickson, executive director of NetCoalition, commended Congress for 
"recognizing the serious collateral damage this bill could inflict on the 
Internet."

The group represents Internet and technology companies including Google, Yahoo! 
and Amazon.com. Erickson said they would work with Congress "to address the 
problem of piracy without compromising innovation and free expression."

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who has joined Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., in 
proposing an alternative anti-piracy bill, credited opponents with forcing 
lawmakers "to back away from an effort to ram through controversial 
legislation."

But the CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, former Connecticut 
Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd, warned that, "as a consequence of failing to act, 
there will continue to be a safe haven for foreign thieves." The MPAA, which 
represents such companies as Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, Twentieth 
Century Fox Film Corporation and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., is a leading 
advocate for the anti-piracy legislation.


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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