Internet Revolts Against Go Daddy's SOPA Support

Thyunda

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May 4, 2009
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Aprilgold said:
Steve the Pocket said:
Meanwhile you don't even hear about this bill in the mainstream media. At all.
Ever... Evvvaaaeeeerrrr.... Thats a problem right there, while some random news site is going on about how this puppy dog is FUCKING ADORABLE this bill is being passed with the American people without a computer not knowing... Its probably best that this bill is only widely known through the interenet, its stopping more SOPA supporters, since the general public is either stupid or gullible, and will buy anything. Remember when there was the whole "WHERES THE BIRTH CERTIFICATE" fiasco with X-President Barack Obama where they were saying he was a sleeper agent because his middle name is Husein [not quite sure if spelled right]

It got started over either Fox or a tabloid, and it brought up a ruckus. Over something so stupid. I'm not above stupidity myself but come on people, really?

Welp, never liked Godaddy since I always thought it was a porn site, and they never really fully explained what their site was about.
Actually, I don't think we want the SOPA bill to appear on the news. So far all the petitions have been against it, but that's because we, the people who understand the bill, are on the Internet a lot. That's how we've found out about it.

You put that on mainstream news channels, and you'll have a call to arms from an ageing anchorman, riling people up about this new law that will protect American jobs, while the 'nerds' and 'socialists' are petitioning to remove copyright law entirely so they can fund terrorist organisation through piracy.

P.S. - I saw an old VHS recently. The anti-piracy adverts used to be glorious.
Piracy funds....TERRORISM.

P.P.S - I wrote 'red devils' as a joke before I wrote 'socialists', but then I remembered the healthcare reforms and the response to that, so this isn't really that far fetched.
 

Thyunda

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The_root_of_all_evil said:
This debate is about preserving, protecting, and creating American jobs and protecting American consumers from the dangers that they face on-line."
They didn't follow up with "Won't someone think of the American children?"?
((Apologies for double post, but it's a real pain to edit-then-quote.)

How often are these people actually on the Internet? Who still uses a hyphen in online? Even my spell-checker has stopped doing that, and this thing is trapped in the 1920s.
 

maninahat

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Nov 8, 2007
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You know what, I don't care what they think either way. I don't see the point in telling them what bills they may or may not support.

And though it is the consumers right to boycott GoDaddy's services, I don't expect that those doing so will have any sizeable impact on the business, or give them a moments pause. I think they're wasting their time trying to make the business re-address its (calculated) decisions.
 

Strazdas

Robots will replace your job
May 28, 2011
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Better question is, why do peopel still use godaddy to begin with? then again, its probaby as empty of a question as why do people who hate thier info being sold still use facebook.

this is a nice notion, but it will not suceed. people are NEVER united enough. we wont see french revolution.
 

kebab4you

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Jan 3, 2010
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Fun Fact: Wikipedia uses GoDaddy as their host so I would recommend you send of a few mail to them, might do something.

OT: To be honest, up to this point I always thought GoDaddy was a porn site, since this was the only ad I saw about the site(probably NSFW):
 

Sigmund Av Volsung

Hella noided
Dec 11, 2009
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So, they support idiot politicians in their pursuit to hand over the keys of the internet kingdom over to nefarious corporations?
This calls for a:

Seriously, I think TotalBiscuit(who I am quick to remind you IS A F***ING UK LAW GRADUATE)
explains it best:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhwuXNv8fJM
The thing which annoys me the most is that people who support the bill don't know anything about it, and how it can impact, literaly, everyone who uses the internet, and I cannot trust EA with anything of late, due to their screwed-up, immature marketing campaigns and Origin, which the evil sibiling of Steam.
Maybe those Corporations won't go crazy with power, but the recent MegaUpload scandal confirmed the worst.
 

_tinned_magpie_

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Feb 19, 2010
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Wait... it's about creating jobs? And there's no First Amendment concern? Good lord, the reading on my bullshit-o-meter is off the charts.

Still, I get a feeling that it's less about 'protecting American consumers' and more about this:

 

Something Amyss

Aswyng and Amyss
Dec 3, 2008
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_tinned_magpie_ said:
Wait... it's about creating jobs?
Or protecting them! Piracy destroys jobs equal to 300% of the national unemployment rate!

...Or something.

You're right, though. It's not about protecting American consumers. It's about protecting corporations at the expense of consumers.

But that's the American way, innit?
 

SilentHunter7

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Zachary Amaranth said:
You're right, though. It's not about protecting American consumers. It's about protecting corporations at the expense of consumers.

But that's the American way, innit?
But didn't you know? According to the Supreme Court, corporations are people now.
 

Blind0bserver

Blatant Narcissist
Mar 31, 2008
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You know, for a bit I didn't understand GoDaddy's motivations here. A company that licenses out internet domains supporting a bill that could actually break the internet just made no logical sense. Kind of like, say, Budweiser supporting a prohibition bill. Then a friend of mine phrased it like this:

It is like if a beer manufacturer sells you beer, but after you take a sip, some dick knocks the beer out of your hand and you have to buy another one. If it happens enough, the beer manufacturer could see a decent increase in profit.

GoDaddy is the beer manufacturer hiring dicks to knock beer out of your hand.
So that's their angle. Someone, for some asinine reason, owns a domain with GoDaddy. For whatever reason their domain gets blacklisted by SOPA and GoDaddy is ordered to take it down. The owner of said domain then buys a new domain to replace the last one, and so on and so forth.

In a nutshell GoDaddy is very aware of the implications of SOPA and is hoping to make money hand over fist by selling replacement domains after takedowns.
 

Kross

World Breaker
Sep 27, 2004
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Vanguard1219 said:
In a nutshell GoDaddy is very aware of the implications of SOPA and is hoping to make money hand over fist by selling replacement domains after takedowns.
That makes a lot of sense. Especially as spammers already pay them large quantities of money to mass register domains to send people to. Domains that already get blacklisted in a couple days. I don't imagine something like SOPA would do much to damage that tactic.
 

ThunderCavalier

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Nov 21, 2009
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I have nothing against stating your own opinions or trying a new business direction or anything like that.

But seriously, GoDaddy? As a business that primarily invests in the Internet, you'd think that the last thing you'd want to do is do something that PISSES THEM OFF. Then again, looking at your ads reminds me that you probably don't think too highly of your consumers, anyway.
 

ThunderCavalier

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I have nothing against stating your own opinions or trying a new business direction or anything like that.

But seriously, GoDaddy? As a business that primarily invests in the Internet, you'd think that the last thing you'd want to do is do something that PISSES THEM OFF. Then again, looking at your ads reminds me that you probably don't think too highly of your consumers, anyway.
 

Something Amyss

Aswyng and Amyss
Dec 3, 2008
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SilentHunter7 said:
But didn't you know? According to the Supreme Court, corporations are people now.
Not only people, but the only people of consequence.

Okay, captcha on this is assamen, amendatory.

Ass amen? Seriously?
 

brainslurper

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Aug 18, 2009
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Snotnarok said:
Aaaauuughh...*face in hands* my sites are under godaddy, I really really do not want to sit there and move them and have them reestablished somewhere else. This makes me both irritated at myself and pissed at them.
Same here. I am hoping that they will eventually abandon their stance so I don't have to bother.
 

kebab4you

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Jan 3, 2010
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Apparently they dropped it after mass rage from the internet:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/12/victory-boycott-forces-godaddy-to-drop-its-support-for-sopa.ars

I would however still advice you to switch from GoDaddy since they still stand as an awful business and have they once supported the bill they might swing back to it just in a more discrete way.
 

Psychemaster

Everything in Moderation
Aug 18, 2008
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kebab4you said:
Apparently they dropped it after mass rage from the internet:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/12/victory-boycott-forces-godaddy-to-drop-its-support-for-sopa.ars

I would however still advice you to switch from GoDaddy since they still stand as an awful business.
This. Also here's the official release.

http://www.godaddy.com/newscenter/release-view.aspx?news_item_id=378
 

Jim Profit

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Dec 24, 2011
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>It's about freedom of speech!
Coming from one of the most ban happy forums on the internet with an achievement that literally states it's near impossible to go six months without a moderator sticking his dick in your eye.

>Corporations MAN!!!
You mean like escapist? Oh, I didn't realize that petty bourgeois was so much more moral then high stakes bourgeois.