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English Wikipedia Anti-SOPA Blackout Joel Send a noteboard - 17/01/2012 08:31:46 AM
To: English Wikipedia Readers and Community
From: Sue Gardner, Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director
Date: January 16, 2012

Today, the Wikipedia community announced its decision to black out the English-language Wikipedia for 24 hours, worldwide, beginning at 05:00 UTC on Wednesday, January 18 (you can read the statement from the Wikimedia Foundation here). The blackout is a protest against proposed legislation in the United States—the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the U.S. House of Representatives, and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) in the U.S. Senate—that, if passed, would seriously damage the free and open Internet, including Wikipedia.
This will be the first time the English Wikipedia has ever staged a public protest of this nature, and it’s a decision that wasn’t lightly made. Here’s how it’s been described by the three Wikipedia administrators who formally facilitated the community’s discussion. From the public statement, signed by User:NuclearWarfare, User:Risker and User:Billinghurst:

It is the opinion of the English Wikipedia community that both of these bills, if passed, would be devastating to the free and open web.

Over the course of the past 72 hours, over 1800 Wikipedians have joined together to discuss proposed actions that the community might wish to take against SOPA and PIPA. This is by far the largest level of participation in a community discussion ever seen on Wikipedia, which illustrates the level of concern that Wikipedians feel about this proposed legislation. The overwhelming majority of participants support community action to encourage greater public action in response to these two bills. Of the proposals considered by Wikipedians, those that would result in a “blackout” of the English Wikipedia, in concert with similar blackouts on other websites opposed to SOPA and PIPA, received the strongest support.

On careful review of this discussion, the closing administrators note the broad-based support for action from Wikipedians around the world, not just from within the United States. The primary objection to a global blackout came from those who preferred that the blackout be limited to readers from the United States, with the rest of the world seeing a simple banner notice instead. We also noted that roughly 55% of those supporting a blackout preferred that it be a global one, with many pointing to concerns about similar legislation in other nations.


In making this decision, Wikipedians will be criticized for seeming to abandon neutrality to take a political position. That’s a real, legitimate issue. We want people to trust Wikipedia, not worry that it is trying to propagandize them.
But although Wikipedia’s articles are neutral, its existence is not. As Wikimedia Foundation board member Kat Walsh wrote on one of our mailing lists recently,

We depend on a legal infrastructure that makes it possible for us to operate. And we depend on a legal infrastructure that also allows other sites to host user-contributed material, both information and expression. For the most part, Wikimedia projects are organizing and summarizing and collecting the world’s knowledge. We’re putting it in context, and showing people how to make to sense of it.

But that knowledge has to be published somewhere for anyone to find and use it. Where it can be censored without due process, it hurts the speaker, the public, and Wikimedia. Where you can only speak if you have sufficient resources to fight legal challenges, or, if your views are pre-approved by someone who does, the same narrow set of ideas already popular will continue to be all anyone has meaningful access to.


The decision to shut down the English Wikipedia wasn’t made by me; it was made by editors, through a consensus decision-making process. But I support it.

Like Kat and the rest of the Wikimedia Foundation Board, I have increasingly begun to think of Wikipedia’s public voice, and the goodwill people have for Wikipedia, as a resource that wants to be used for the benefit of the public. Readers trust Wikipedia because they know that despite its faults, Wikipedia’s heart is in the right place. It’s not aiming to monetize their eyeballs or make them believe some particular thing, or sell them a product. Wikipedia has no hidden agenda: it just wants to be helpful.

That’s less true of other sites. Most are commercially motivated: their purpose is to make money. That doesn’t mean they don’t have a desire to make the world a better place—many do!—but it does mean that their positions and actions need to be understood in the context of conflicting interests.

My hope is that when Wikipedia shuts down on January 18, people will understand that we’re doing it for our readers. We support everyone’s right to freedom of thought and freedom of expression. We think everyone should have access to educational material on a wide range of subjects, even if they can’t pay for it. We believe in a free and open Internet where information can be shared without impediment. We believe that new proposed laws like SOPA—and PIPA, and other similar laws under discussion inside and outside the United States—don’t advance the interests of the general public. You can read a very good list of reasons to oppose SOPA and PIPA here, from the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Why is this a global action, rather than US-only? And why now, if some American legislators appear to be in tactical retreat on SOPA?

The reality is that we don’t think SOPA is going away, and PIPA is still quite active. Moreover, SOPA and PIPA are just indicators of a much broader problem. All around the world, we’re seeing the development of legislation seeking to regulate the Internet in other ways while hurting our online freedoms. Our concern extends beyond SOPA and PIPA: they are just part of the problem. We want the Internet to remain free and open, everywhere, for everyone.
Make your voice heard!

On January 18, we hope you’ll agree with us, and will do what you can to make your own voice heard.

Sue Gardner,
Executive Director, Wikimedia Foundation

'Tappears the geeks are restless. Presumably I need not worry about Wikipedia getting antsy about copyright and intellectual property issues over my reposting the full text of their announcement, since if they have their way no one will have any legal recourse for such infringement (I am not profiting from it, regardless.) :P
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English Wikipedia Anti-SOPA Blackout - 17/01/2012 08:31:46 AM 2055 Views
Yeah, man, because currently copyright holders have no recourse, am I right? - 17/01/2012 11:47:35 AM 882 Views
"altering the infrastructure of the Internet so as to render RAFO virtually inaccessible"? - 17/01/2012 08:12:27 PM 994 Views
I'll go ahead and ask before I get my panties in a bunch: do you understand these bills? - 17/01/2012 09:09:22 PM 1072 Views
I admit I have not looked into it much - 17/01/2012 11:42:30 PM 939 Views
And yet you're still arguing the matter. - 18/01/2012 02:34:04 AM 1049 Views
I love you. *NM* - 18/01/2012 03:41:03 AM 609 Views
heh, thanks. I usually find myself pushing minority opinions. Nice to be "appreciated" for once. *NM* - 18/01/2012 04:01:10 AM 587 Views
Can i second the adulation? - 18/01/2012 04:07:17 AM 778 Views
I too (three?) appreciate the common sense and reasonable explanations. *NM* - 18/01/2012 04:12:59 AM 597 Views
Thanks guys. - 18/01/2012 04:39:00 AM 935 Views
Right, because the argument is not just over THIS bill but, apparently, over ANY bill. - 18/01/2012 11:09:13 AM 938 Views
Alternatives to SOPA/PIPA have been proposed for months now. Please stop arguing this. - 18/01/2012 05:42:10 PM 896 Views
That is really all I ask. - 18/01/2012 06:26:37 PM 932 Views
"sensitive federal content"? Provide a source justifying this claim and it's relevance, please. - 18/01/2012 05:59:47 PM 951 Views
I would not have thought a source necessary. - 18/01/2012 06:24:44 PM 955 Views
Okay, I'm with Aemon now. - 18/01/2012 07:36:21 PM 971 Views
OK. - 18/01/2012 10:16:16 PM 993 Views
Surreal. It's like you're a spam-bot or something. *NM* - 19/01/2012 01:23:35 AM 723 Views
That was constructive. - 19/01/2012 03:29:53 PM 870 Views
Very nicely summarised. *NM* - 18/01/2012 02:06:02 AM 528 Views
should be interesting - 17/01/2012 12:41:47 PM 820 Views
Could be; depends on a lot of factors. - 17/01/2012 07:38:55 PM 879 Views
See, that's one of the biggest problems that people aren't understanding. - 17/01/2012 09:31:38 PM 896 Views
So tell them that. - 17/01/2012 11:54:19 PM 1037 Views
Could've done without the snide rejoinder, but, good. - 17/01/2012 02:20:08 PM 819 Views
I love the black banner, like some kind of internet Holocaust. - 17/01/2012 08:03:27 PM 960 Views
Are you aware that SOPA/PIPA has nothing to do with hackers and everything to do with copyright? - 18/01/2012 02:08:56 AM 801 Views
There seems to be some overlap. - 18/01/2012 01:08:22 PM 923 Views
Re: There seems to be some overlap. - 18/01/2012 08:13:15 PM 796 Views
Er, what Ghav said. - 18/01/2012 02:30:37 AM 823 Views
Sorry, protecting Pirate Bay and offshore gambling are not compelling counterarguments. - 18/01/2012 11:38:08 AM 871 Views
Okay, another analogy: - 18/01/2012 02:04:12 PM 849 Views
A technical examination of SOPA and PROTECT IP - 18/01/2012 08:32:44 AM 830 Views
"As a disclaimer, I am not a lawyer, I'm a sysadmin." - 18/01/2012 12:47:16 PM 1089 Views
wow, you are totally correct! - 18/01/2012 03:45:54 PM 861 Views
That is a separate issue. - 18/01/2012 04:01:24 PM 860 Views
Thank you for posting that. - 18/01/2012 03:09:07 PM 883 Views
Wikipedia has already convinced me - 18/01/2012 03:26:01 PM 708 Views
Trying to stop this legislation without proposing an alternative is trying to stop ANY legislation. - 18/01/2012 03:44:18 PM 936 Views
It isn't their job to propose legislation - 18/01/2012 04:12:53 PM 856 Views
No, but they have as much RIGHT to do so as anyone else. - 18/01/2012 05:31:55 PM 834 Views
Strike three. - 18/01/2012 05:37:55 PM 881 Views
That is fine; that is what people SHOULD be doing. - 18/01/2012 06:03:59 PM 707 Views
Things being better now than they would be under SOPA seems like a legitimate argument to me - 18/01/2012 09:04:18 PM 970 Views
Against SOPA, sure; against ANY new law, no. - 18/01/2012 10:46:48 PM 814 Views
Re: Against SOPA, sure; against ANY new law, no. - 19/01/2012 12:15:48 AM 891 Views
That is a poor approach to drafting legislation, at best. - 19/01/2012 04:37:22 PM 935 Views
About "proposing new legislation" - 18/01/2012 04:45:08 PM 968 Views
So true - 18/01/2012 05:08:45 PM 901 Views
Not to go off on a tangent about combatting piracy... - 18/01/2012 05:38:12 PM 809 Views
Entirely agree *NM* - 18/01/2012 06:13:13 PM 579 Views
That was an excellent post. *NM* - 19/01/2012 11:18:19 PM 559 Views
Re: About "proposing new legislation" - 18/01/2012 05:59:55 PM 1045 Views
For those who want a short, one page explanation... - 18/01/2012 05:41:49 PM 827 Views
Yeah, so I use Russian wikipedia for a day. Or German wikipedia, or French, or Italian... *NM* - 18/01/2012 06:23:36 PM 646 Views
We get it: You are a polyglot. - 18/01/2012 06:27:48 PM 836 Views
Or just hit stop right before the script runs. *NM* - 18/01/2012 06:52:40 PM 614 Views
Or just disable Java. *NM* - 19/01/2012 01:58:03 AM 495 Views
That's not as much fun though. *NM* - 19/01/2012 02:13:44 AM 610 Views
Exactly, this way its kind of a game. *NM* - 19/01/2012 02:20:37 AM 435 Views
Or Answers.com, or even the actual sources that are often copy/pasted into Wikipedia... - 19/01/2012 01:07:38 AM 956 Views
They all did it on twitter - 19/01/2012 01:26:19 AM 890 Views
I was asleep much of the day - 19/01/2012 02:40:11 AM 955 Views
Oh, no; now Congress will be inundated with complaints from lazy college students! - 19/01/2012 04:40:12 PM 982 Views
13 previously unopposed senators now do not support SOPA. - 19/01/2012 11:36:15 PM 935 Views
How does that "rebutt" what was a facetious post in the first place? - 20/01/2012 09:24:27 PM 1040 Views
a joke can, indeed, be rebutted... - 21/01/2012 09:07:32 PM 922 Views
Oh, draggie, I ALWAYS see what you do there. - 21/01/2012 10:01:58 PM 880 Views

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