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OPEN Act Emerges as SOPA, PIPA Take a Beating

Senators desert PIPA amid public backlash

By Rob Quinn,  Newser Staff

Posted Jan 19, 2012 4:36 AM CST

(Newser) – The public backlash and Internet protest yesterday made the SOPA and PIPA anti-piracy bills look a lot like a sinking ship—one many lawmakers decided not to go down with. Sen. Marco Rubio dropped his support for the PIPA bill he co-sponsored and he was joined by 17 others, including six co-sponsors, leaving the bill's supporters without a majority, Gizmodo reports. More than a dozen former backers of the House's SOPA also announced their opposition.

As PIPA and SOPA took a beating, Rep. Darrell Issa and Sen. Ron Wyden sought support for their alternative anti-piracy bill, dubbed the OPEN Act, reports the Seattle Times. The bill would have the quasi-governmental International Trade Commission—which already investigates counterfeit imports—handle rogue overseas websites instead of the Justice Department. Its backers say it avoids potential Internet censorship, but the entertainment industry and other SOPA/PIPA supporters say it doesn't go far enough to tackle piracy.

Protesters in New York City demonstrate against SOPA and PIPA yesterday. More than 4.5 million people signed Google's petition against the bills.
Protesters in New York City demonstrate against SOPA and PIPA yesterday. More than 4.5 million people signed Google's petition against the bills.   (Getty Images)
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COMMENTS
Showing 3 of 8 comments
OuttaHere
Jan 21, 2012 10:47 AM CST
Just like Congress. Screw everybody and then say "I didn't do it".
NoddaAndYou
Jan 19, 2012 4:12 PM CST
Ron Wyden is the senator that placed a hold on PIPA that is preventing it from leaving committee. Reid is going to force a vote (I believe a 2/3rds vote is required to override Wyden's hold on PIPA, yes?) no word as to Reid's intent for doing so. Wyden had proposed OPEN long before PIPA/SOPA were written by lobbyists. I would always be weary of anything that would give power to any government over the internet, especially when it comes under the guise of fighting piracy, or securing privacy. That being said, Wyden's bill may be worth a look.
odowd80
Jan 19, 2012 11:06 AM CST
Why is this a top priority for Republicans? Last time I checked, we were in the middle of a deep recession. There is no evidence that piracy is contributing to this recession. How about voting on the Jobs Bill Obama introduced last September? This is the kind of bullshit we have to look forward to if Republican win in November. Big Government initiatives that do nothing to help ordinary Americans.
 

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