| With a vote on the Stop Online Piracy Act  (SOPA) delayed indefinitely due to political pressure, Reddit.com has  confirmed with Digital Trends that it still plans to blackout the  popular site on Wednesday, in protest of the equally-controversial  Protect IP Act (PIPA). UPDATE: Wikipedia will also blackout its pages on Wednesday. See more details here, and below. A vote on the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) has been delayed indefinitely, but the fight against Internet censorship continues: Reddit.com will go forward with its site-wide blackout on Wednesday, January 18, to protest the Senate’s Protect IP Act  (PIPA), Digital Trends has confirmed. PIPA, a similar bill to SOPA, is  scheduled to go up for a vote before the Senate on January 24. “Protect IP Bill is still scheduled for a vote. Senator Reid said on  Sunday that they’re still going forward with it, so [the Reddit blackout  is still on],” said Erik Martin, Reddit’s general manager, in a phone  interview with Digital Trends on Monday morning. While SOPA has received the brunt of the backlash, PIPA contains  similar provisions, which critics say could usher in an unprecedented  level of government-enforced censorship online, harm the underlying  infrastructure of the Internet, and hamper online innovation by stifling  investment in Internet startups due to a more risky investment  environment. In the face of constituent outrage, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), co-author of PIPA, said in a statement on Thursday that he would be willing to remove the portion of the bill  that would empower Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to  foreign websites that have been accused to distributing copyrighted  material illegally. Despite the possible removal of this highly  contentious provision, the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Trevor Timm wrote on  the EFF’s website today that “the fight is still far from over,” due to  a number of other potentially “damaging” parts of the bill. These  include the “vigilante” provision, which allows ISPs to block sites  voluntarily, without recourse; and the anti-circumvention provision,  which seeks to punish sites that give users information for how to  access blocked sites. In addition to Sen. Leahy’s admitted willingness to remove one of the  most-criticized parts of PIPA, six Republican senators sent a letter to  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, urging him to postpone a vote on the  bill, reports ComputerWorld. “We have increasingly heard from a large number of constituents and  other stakeholders with vocal concerns about possible unintended  consequences of the proposed legislation, including breaches in  cybersecurity, damaging the integrity of the Internet, costly and  burdensome litigation, and dilution of First Amendment rights,” the  senators said in the letter. Signers of the letter include Senators  Charles Grassley (R-IA), Orrin Hatch (R-UT), Jeff Sessions (R-AL), John  Cornyn (R-TX) Mike Lee (R-UT), and Tom Coburn (R-OK). Greater focus on PIPA follows an announcement from House Oversight  Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA), a vocal opponent of SOPA, who said that  House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) “assured” him that SOPA will  not be brought up for a full House vote until consensus on the bill is  achieved. “While I remain concerned about Senate action on the Protect IP Act, I  am confident that flawed legislation will not be taken up by this  House,” Issa said in a statement, quoted by The Hill.   ”Majority Leader Cantor has assured me that we will continue to work  to address outstanding concerns and work to build consensus prior to any  anti-piracy legislation coming before the House for a vote.” Sen. Cantor’s promise to shelve SOPA indefinitely — a major win for the opposition — follows a statement from President Obama’s chief technology officer, Aneesh Chopra, and  National Security Staff cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt, which  said that the White House “will not support legislation that reduces  freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the  dynamic, innovative global Internet.” The statement is not an explicit  declaration that President Obama would veto SOPA or PIPA, were they to  make it to his desk, but the possibility of such a veto appears to have  resonated on Capitol Hill. |