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January 18, 2012
01:02 • 1 year ago
What you guys will see if you head to the blog today. It’ll only show up once and will go away quickly. Promise.

What you guys will see if you head to the blog today. It’ll only show up once and will go away quickly. Promise.

01:25 • 1 year ago
newsweek:

Tweets from kids trying to use Wikipedia for their homework—and failing. SOPA! 
[h/t gangster curator Katie Notopoulos]

We knew it was gonna happen. It’s totally satisfying, right?

newsweek:

Tweets from kids trying to use Wikipedia for their homework—and failing. SOPA! 

[h/t gangster curator Katie Notopoulos]

We knew it was gonna happen. It’s totally satisfying, right?

01:27 • 1 year ago

“Today is gonna be the the day/Wikipedia’s gonna close for you/By now you should’ve known how/Jimmy Wales was gonna screw you fools/I can’t believe that anybody acts the way you do/About research”

‘F*@& me’, the words are in the tweets/Of the kids who all ignored the news/Not sure you’d heard of it before?/This blackout against SOPA’s rule/Didn’t you see the giant message plastered on the page/For ‘Mountain Dew’?”

“And all the time I have to work is fading/And all the tools I have to search are missing/There are many things that I/Would like to find tonight/But I don’t know how”

“And you say ‘maybe/I’m gonna play a game/or something/’cause after all/I’m a slacker, y’all’”

01:36 • 1 year ago
The Wikipedia blackout presents a horrifying picture of a world with no knowledge. So does the Fox News website, which is running normally.
Andy Daglas (via kateoplis)

Quote of the night. 
02:09 • 1 year ago
02:32 • 1 year ago

Via Hacker News (not closed, greyed-out): For those looking to make a quick phone call to your representative about SOPA, it doesn’t get much easier than this. Get your own widget here.

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03:11 • 1 year ago

Looks like Fark is going a different route with this whole SOPA thing, according to founder Drew Curtis. All will reportedly be revealed at 8:00 a.m. ET.

EDIT: The reasoning for the joke? “While a bunch of other sites are going ‘dark’ to protest SOPA/PIPA, we’re over the moon about the whole thing. Why? Honestly, we’ve been bringing you the latest news happening across the internet for 12 years, and we’re tired. And SOPA/PIPA is the perfect excuse to quit.” Drew Curtis needs a vacation.

09:33 • 1 year ago

One of the things that always gets me is the way that people always assume the worst intentions of mainstream media outlets, as if they’re large organizations who always think in terms of protecting their own vested interests, over the generally-more-accurate approach that it involves hundreds of people individually working for common goals. And last night, I pointed out how genius I thought the #altwiki idea was — as sort of a way for The Guardian, The Washington Post and NPR to avoid taking a formal stance on SOPA while still getting a chance to be active in the blackout off to the sidelines. I got some blowback from a few folks, but I’ll defend the approach heavily. It gets people engaged in the event (and thinking about the issues involved) without forcing the outlets to take a stance — allowing them to keep their objectivity. That’s win-win to me. — Ernie @ SFB

09:36 • 1 year ago

joshsternberg:

Tumblr’s communicating to its users. Whether it’s activism like this or protectionism against Missing E, seeing these popups is intriguing…

Really dig that Tumblr is giving its users the option to black out, rather than just doing it for them.

09:47 • 1 year ago
thisistheverge:

Game, set, and match. via @Encarta95

And friends, we have our first Great Blackout meme.

thisistheverge:

Game, set, and match. via @Encarta95

And friends, we have our first Great Blackout meme.

Recent posts and stuff we dig:
14:51 • 1 year ago

  • 3 SOPA/PIPA sponsors withdraw support on day of blackout source

» Feeling some heat? Of these three co-sponsors of the SOPA or PIPA legislation, Florida Senator Marco Rubio is by far the biggest name. Rubio cited concerns about “a potentially unreasonable expansion of the federal government’s power to impact the Internet.” The other two co-sponsors were Rep. Lee Terry of Nebraska, and Rep. Ben Quayle of Arizona. A Quayle spokesman, Zach Howell, made it clear the Arizona congressman could vote for a reworked bill: “The bill could have some unintended consequences that need to be addressed. Basically it needs more work before he can support it.”

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18:36 • 1 year ago

mashable:

“Because the biggest producers of content on the Internet are not Google and Yahoo — they’re us – we’re the ones getting policed. The real threat to the enactment of PIPA and SOPA is our ability to share things with one another.”

-Clay Shirky, in his “emergency” TED talk about SOPA and why it would create a “consumption-only Internet.”

Watch this, all. “The threat is this inversion of proof.”

20:01 • 1 year ago
20:02 • 1 year ago

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