Tech Companies Getting Called Out For Supporting PIPA/SOPA

from the might-not-be-a-wise-move dept

With the growing public sentiment against SOPA/PIPA, it seems that some of their dislike of these bills is coming back to bite tech companies that have lobbied in support of the bill. It appears that some have been combing through OpenSecrets, and discovered that Sony and Nintendo both lobbied in favor of PROTECT IP (PIPA). This isn’t a huge surprise, give who we’re talking about. Neither company relies that much on an open internet, but is more focused on closed, proprietary systems that may make use of the internet. But, either way, it seems that people’s anger is being directed at such companies pretty quickly these days. Makes you wonder if any other tech companies would actually come out in favor of such bills, and risk a public backlash.

Filed Under: , , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Tech Companies Getting Called Out For Supporting PIPA/SOPA”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
46 Comments
DannyB (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Yep

I don’t worry about having to use Windows at work. I at least maintain familiarity with it.

At home I run only Linux.

At work, I am not responsible for the Windows, or keeping it working or maintained. BTW, our IT does a great job of keeping our Windows maintained. But if it were to break, it’s not my problem.

Maybe one day I will not even have to use Windows at work. I did get my way a few years ago to use Eclipse / Java / etc. My product could, technically, be repackaged to have a beautiful turnkey install onto other OSes.

Nathan F (profile) says:

Re: Re: Yep

I would switch to a Linux build very quickly aside from one small issue.

The vast majority of my time on my home PC is spent in a very short list of programs.

Rift
EVE Online
and after Dec 20 Star Wars: The Old Republic

When Linux can run those without an emulator or development houses start releasing builds for Linux then I will make the switch at home. I have no control over what they run here at work, even less so because I work for the State Government.

E. Zachary Knight (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Yep

I felt that way for a while too. Then I just decided that I would never buy a game that does not come with Linux support out of the box. I have since bought many great games and have tons of fun. I have every Humble Bundle so far. That is more than enough for me. If I wanted, I could play Runescape or Maple Story. I play several flash games.

Seriously, there are tons of gaming options.

:Lobo Santo (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Yep

http://www.playonlinux.com/en/

A custom WINE build–I’ve had considerable success with my favorite Windows games using it.

Railroad Tycoon 3
Command & Conquer Generals
Rollercoaster Tycoon
etc…

If you were using a *very* lite-weight Linux distro (I suggest ArchBang–and easy Arch Linux build for intermediate+ Linux users) I could see your being able to run games with amazing ease.

Never know till you try…

bob (profile) says:

They also risk public support...

I may not agree with everything in SOPA/Protect IP, but I think the relentless demagoguery around here is looney. Customers want products that work and they want to pay a fair share of the development costs. Pirates lump all of the development costs on the backs of the people who obey the rules and pull their own weight.

Is it any wonder that Steam– the DRM system that’s loved around here– charges so much less than the open PC games? That’s because Steam pushes everyone to pay into the pot and that’s good for the little guy.

So aside from the rabid creator haters around here, I think there will be plenty of little guys buying Sony or Nintendo systems. Why? Because the consoles and the content, when added together, are cheaper. The little guy wins and isn’t screwed over by the freeloaders.

Spaceboy (profile) says:

Re: They also risk public support...

No one hates the content creators. People hate DRM because of the hoops it forces people to go through. People love Steam because it’s much more than DRM. It’s a community.

If and when Valve ever collapses we will be the first to scream bloody murder if they don’t do something to ensure that people will still be able to play their legally purchased games.

That never happens with file sharing…

A Dan (profile) says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Blaming things on the freeloaders, like attempting to incite class warfare, is normally an attempt to manipulate people into fighting each other instead of standing up for their own position. It’s a “divide and conquer” strategy. It’s nice when people don’t take the bait.

Steam isn’t a DRM platform, it’s a distribution platform that includes DRM with some games. And some people do hate Steam. But they’ve shown that their goal is to make money, not to control people. I can respect that.

Prisoner 201 says:

Re: They also risk public support...

“Pirates lump all of the development costs on the backs of the people who obey the rules and pull their own weight. “

I just downloaded Skyrim, deleted it and then downloaded it again. 150 times. Enjoy your negative bank balance.

…screwed over by the freeloaders.

Also, apparently I got laid.

DCX2 says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Pirates do not lump any costs on anyone. Pirates are not customers, by definition. Even if you could prevent them all from pirating (and you can’t), they still would not buy things.

BTW, people still pirate Steam games. And we aren’t “creator haters”, which sounds so very much like when Republicans go off about “taxing job creators” that don’t actually create jobs.

Finally…people buy Sony and Nintendo systems because they have exclusives that are not available anywhere else. Not because the games are cheaper; they most certainly aren’t, as evidenced by my purchase of 10 Steam games for the cost of your average Wii game.

rubberpants says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Obviously, these laws (SOPA / PIPA) are being proposed as a reaction to what the content industry sees as threats to it’s business (not out of some altruistic concept like fostering “creativity” as some might suggest).

But, the question then becomes, is the cure worse than the disease?

I don’t think you can stop copyright infringement at this point without basically turning off the Internet or restricting it so much that it ceases to be the world-changing, populous-enabling wonder that it is.

Should we stifle one of the greatest inventions of our age and all the communication, organization, sharing, and good that it’s brought with it in the hopes that we can increase the profits for an industry that’s about the size of the pet supply industry, is currently having record profits, has a history of trying to outlaw new technology, and produces what most consider to be non-essential luxury goods?

The clear answer is no.

On a side note, I’ve spent over a grand on games through Steam.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: They also risk public support...

“I don’t think you can stop copyright infringement at this point without basically turning off the Internet or restricting it so much that it ceases to be the world-changing, populous-enabling wonder that it is.”

Did it ever occur to you, that exactly *that* might be the purpose behind all this?

Trails (profile) says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Despite throwing around terms like “demagoguery”, you seem to agree with most of us. Convenient digital distribution is a good way to “counter” piracy.

Describing Steam as a “DRM system” is perhaps disingenuous, and at the very least discounts WHY it’s successful, thus missing the point(intentionally?).

I don’t think people ’round here (or anywhere) “want to pay their fair share of development costs”, so much as “are fine to pay what the feel is a fair price for something”.

Referring to people here as “content haters” is downright bullshit though, and you know it.

Archillies says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Bob,people don’t know or care about dev costs. They want a product that works at a price that they consider fair.

Players like Steam because it generally stays out of the way of playing the game. Again I don’t think price applies regarding the DRM Valve just understands their market.

Your statements just don’t match up with human nature. Nice try at trolling though, try again.

– > Archillies

Richard (profile) says:

Re: They also risk public support...

Pirates lump all of the development costs on the backs of the people who obey the rules and pull their own weight.

Exactly – and that is why copyright should be abolished.

The situation you describe is inevitable – and therefore the only sensible course of action is to accept it and move to a model that matches reality.

When you want to produce some content you solicit support from amongst the group that wants to pay a fair share of the development costs, they fund the project and then you release it for free to everyone. That way the same group of people funds the project as now – and we all lose the ridiculous costs of enforcing copyright.

You see if you follow your own thoughts to their logical conclusion then you will end up exactly where I am.

out_of_the_blue says:

"their gamer customers will stay angry."

In other words, a rabid and vulgarly vocal minority of kids who just can’t live without — frequently pirated — games.

http://denver.cbslocal.com/2011/11/09/man-threatens-to-blow-up-store-when-video-game-not-in-stock/

You few here are acivists who want to and DO mistake your self-interested (in terms of pro-piracy and game-playing) views for those of the wider society. As in that piece linked to today, MOST of those who object to SOPA still recognize copyright as essential and piracy as a PROBLEM, not “opportunity”.

It’s also generational phenomena: kids have grown up told that they’re “empowered” by the Internet when actually it’s the perfect police state tool to monitor their every move, almost exactly as in Orwell’s “1984”.

Rikuo (profile) says:

Re: "their gamer customers will stay angry."

What does a madman threatening to blow up a store have to do with SOPA? Answer: It doesn’t. The man said he did it because of video games, video games are something enjoyed and downloaded a lot, and with this practically non-existent link, you therefore thought to yourself “Pirates are just like this guy!”

ComputerAddict (profile) says:

Re: Re: "their gamer customers will stay angry."

I see what you did there… You randomly copy and pasted a bunch of non-sense together and hit submit…

For those who don’t read the whole article mike linked to here’s the whole quote:

“We can’t say with certainty that Nintendo or Sony still support the bill, but again, civil rights advocates seem to be assuming that companies not fighting the bill are supporting it. We’ve reached out to both companies to find out their latest stance on the issue, and in the meantime, we’d be willing to bet a buffalo-head nickel that their gamer customers will stay angry.”

You grabbed a sentence fragment out of context to change the focus of the article to something you wanted to talk about… Well I know I’m not suppose to, but I feel like feeding the troll, I mean someone has to do it, Think of the starving little troll children!

Wquating customers being ‘angry’ that a business supports SOPA and a customer who was angry that a game was out of stock is like saying teachers picketing for better wages are exactly like the Columbine kids shooting up a school full of kids, I have to agree with AC here, None of your post makes a shred of sense.

What I can say about the article you posted, Here is a paying customer who was unable to be served by traditional brick and mortar distribution methods. Had Modern Warfare been available through a digital download (which is technically possible even for xbox/ps3/wii, although not typically used) and used a different payment model (say pay-per-month like most MMORPGs use) than this Paying customer could have been served, and a crisis averted. This kid may have become a pirate that day, as a direct result of a Customer Service Failure, a Business issue, that doesn’t need a law to fix.

Trails (profile) says:

Re: "their gamer customers will stay angry."

That was almost Jack Thomsonian of you! Lumping people opposed to net censorship, gamers, copyright infringers and some anecdotal case of a lunatic threatening to bomb a store into one group. Couldn’t you work in pedophiles too?

The problem, though is that it only rings true to people who when asked “How do you respond to claims this will break DNSSEC?” answer with a vacant stare before deciding it’s time for lunch.

Bibi says:

I dont understand why the congress wants to do this “SOPA” non-sence. The people in America and all over the world use these music sharing websites. Like Funformobile, those are just ringtones. people are NOT just going to pay .99 for just a 20-40 second ringtone. thats just rediculous. And the people that are complaining bout not makeing money because people are “stealing” theyr music, they need to be quiet because they make alot alot of money. Other people want money too. we want loot people. so for them to do that theyr going to copy, paste alot of cd’s and put movies and music on them and sell them for a good profit.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...