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  • Archive: January, 2012

    OB General Assembly Consents to Proposal Condeming SOPA

    On Saturday night’s General Assembly, Boston’s General Assembly consented to the following proposal regarding SOPA, as well as blacking out the website on January 18th:

    A Proposal for Solidarity in Condemnation of Legislation to Destroy the Internet in Favor of Corporate Interests
    Brought forth by independent members of Occupy Boston and the Occupy Boston IT working group.

    Congress is currently contemplating laws that will dramatically change the way the internet functions. First introduced in the United States House of Representatives on October 26, 2011, the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA),also known as H.R. 3261, and its counterpart, the Protect IP Act, also known as Senate Bill S.968, expand the ability of U.S. law enforcement and copyright holders to allegedly combat online trafficking in copyrighted intellectual property and counterfeit goods.

    SOPA/PIPA’s success in Congress has been in a large part due to lobbying by the infamous Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). They are opposed by nearly every internet content provider, electronic civil society organization, and the ACLU. The lobbyists are winning: As of last count 81 Congresspeople are in favor of the Act, and 29 are against.

    SOPA/PIPA extends current copyright laws, making websites liable when a user links to a page with copyrighted content. Websites such as Google, Youtube, and Reddit will be forced to proactively review any user generated content; the cost of this review will prevent the creation of the next Googles, Youtubes, and Reddits. Sites may be permanently taken down without judicial review because a user on a site linked to suspected copyrighted content. Any website which hosts user-generated content is a potential target of these acts. SOPA also makes content providers, such as Comcast, AT&T, or Verizon, liable when a user utilizes their bandwidth to access suspected copyrighted content. In order to protect their corporations, telecom companies and websites will be forced to filter and pre-approve all content. This would effectively transform the internet from a place for sharing and creativity, into a barren corporatocracy. The internet, a crucial tool of contemporary horizontal democracy, is vital to social movements such as Occupy, the global exchange of ideas, and businesses across the world.

    This proposed legislation is troubling to members of the Occupy Boston community, for reasons including, but not limited to, the following:

    •1. Freedom of Speech: The passage of SOPA/PIPA would infringe upon Internet users’ fundamental rights to freedom of speech and privacy. All speech would be pre-screened by both telecommunications companies like Cox and AT&T, and websites, like Google, Facebook, and Youtube. Websites which allow the collaborative exchanges of ideas, like Reddit, and message boards would be liable for any individual user’s link to copyrighted content. This will fundamentally transform the roiling marketplace of ideas that we currently know of as the Internet into a barren corporate landscape resembling the Internet known by web denizens in authoritarian regimes. This type of prior restraint on speech will destroy the internet as we know it and has always been unconstitutional in America.

    •2. Quelling Social Movements: Under SOPA/PIPA internet social networking could be destroyed on a whim. This would profoundly transform the way the internet is used for social movements around the world, harming any popular movement which relies on social networking. This includes the 2009 Iranian protests, the popular revolutions in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Syria, Occupy, and other movements across America.

    •3. Jobs: SOPA/PIPA is job-killing legislation. Experts and industry professionals agree that if SOPA/PIPA passes thousands of jobs in the tech industry will be destroyed or shipped away from America to more speech friendly nations. If SOPA passes every small business that uses the internet will be negatively impacted; many startups will have little chance of surviving. Every aspect of internet business will be devastated from online advertising to telecommunications. By crushing the internet, SOPA/PIPA crushes the American spirit of innovation which has created jobs, and been a cornerstone of the American economy.

    •4. Corruption: This bill benefits a small number of Hollwood executives and music industry companies (a $10b industry), and is being pushed by their lobbyists, to the detriment of the $800b technology industry. You are not hearing about it because they control the mainstream media. This is but one example of the control well heeled corporations have over our political process, and our action is necessary to inform people who are being failed by the corporate media.

    Therefore, we, Occupy Boston do resolve the following:

    •1. To join in solidarity with other internet communities in a ‘website blackout’, Janurary 18th, where all visitors to occupyboston.org will be directed to a page containing information about both SOPA and PIPA. Functionality of the website will not be disrupted.

    •2. To encourage and implore supporters of Occupy Boston to write to their Senators and Congresspeople concerning the detrimental effects of both SOPA and PIPA.

    •3. To condemn the proposed legislation known as SOPA and PIPA for fundamentally crippling free speech on the internet, stifling social movements and creativity, recklessly destroying jobs and annihilating small businesses, and as an example of the endemic corruption which permeates our legislature in the interest of the 1%.

    •4. OBIT will work with the Media working group to use social media to proliferate the above message about SOPA. Media working group posts for the day of January the 18th will focus on SOPA. These messages will include information about the Android app SOPA Boycott.

    Any individuals with comments about ideas or possible actions are encouraged to join the live chat and share your thoughts.

    The OB Media Rundown for 1/16/12

    Occupy protesters in Quincy target Bank of America

    According to occupyquincy.org, Occupy Quincy is part of a larger group, Occupy the South Shore, speaking out against big banks, primarily Bank of America.

    “Bank CEOs take home millions in bonuses for making more and more families homeless with aggressive foreclosures and squeezing more money out of customers with inflated interest rates and fees,” the website states.

    Those who attended the peaceful rally were encouraged to close their Bank of America accounts and do business with local credit unions. Quincy police were present, but no issues were reported.

    http://tinyurl.com/7r3pzvl

    Occupy the Courts protests planned

    The Occupy Boston encampment in Dewey Square is a fading memory. But now some of the same protesters have their eyes on another target, at least for one day: the federal court system.

    Organizers of Occupy The Courts are hoping for protests at federal courts across the country on Friday to commemorate the two-year anniversary of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the U.S. Supreme Court opinion which found that corporations have a First Amendment right to make unlimited campaign contributions.

    http://tinyurl.com/79r3qcg

    Protesters organise global candlelit vigil in honour of Martin Luther King day (and there’s another three months of demos to look forward to)

    Occupy protesters coordinated a global series of candlelight vigils tonight in honour of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

    Hundreds of Occupy activists, alongside members of the National Action Network, braved freezing temperatures for a march through Harlem, New York.

    Protesters aimed to light candles at 7pm in every time zone from ‘California to Cairo, New York to New Orleans, Germany to Nova Scotia.’

    http://tinyurl.com/7y2e453

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 1/16/12” »

    OB Funds Travelers to DC Action

    The General Assembly of Occupy Boston consented to the following proposal on Jan 14, 2012:

    $2500.00 to send 2 vans of OB activists to Occupy Congress in DC. These activists are to be mindful of OB’s Statement of Autonomy and are to understand that they attend as individuals within the movement and not as chosen representatives. Participants and friends of this action will fundraise to offset these costs with donations going to the general fund. The hashtag #OBDC will be used to track our activities and encourage donors’ involvement. Unspent money will be dispensed to people who drive up themselves. The DC contingent will give a presentation upon return.

    The OB Media Rundown for 1/15/12

    Harvard Administration seizes, dismantles Occupy Harvard domeOn Day Sixty-Six of the longest occupation in Harvard’s history, and in a direct reversal of their previously stated commitment to ensure free speech in Harvard Yard, university administration removed and dismantled Occupy Harvard’s geodesic dome this afternoon at 4:55pm.

    http://tinyurl.com/84ql225

    MLK anniversary inspirational reading: Posthumous letter from an assassinated journalist (2009)

    In the course of the last few years, the independent media have increasingly come under attack. Electronic and print institutions have been burned, bombed, sealed and coerced. Countless journalists have been harassed, threatened and killed. It has been my honour to belong to all those categories, and now especially the last.

    http://tinyurl.com/7sph9z

    New York Times editor asks public: ‘I’m looking for reader input on whether and when Times reporters should challenge ‘facts’ that are asserted by newsmakers they write about’

    The comments at Brisbane’s blog post are blistering. . .  I will just quote one to give you the tone. Matt Talbot in California: “That this should even be an open question is a sign that our supposedly independent press is a cowed and timid shadow of its former self.”

    http://tinyurl.com/6uk9u23

    Bus drivers’ union wins historic contract

    Following nearly a year of bitter struggle, the 800 members of the Boston School Bus Drivers’ Union, United Steelworkers Local 8751 rang in the new year, having won a successful contract. It contained the first-ever “Retirement with Dignity” package for those who have served the city’s schoolchildren and the cause of equal, quality education since 1974.
    . . .

    The union rallied daily with the Occupy Boston encampment at Dewey Square and Occupy the Hood in Roxbury’s Dudley Square. They led militant marches with Verizon and hotel workers, set up sound trucks for anti-war and labor marches, and participated in teach-ins, community speak-outs and veterans’ demonstrations.

    The bosses noticed, even docking union officers’ pay when they left a meeting early to join the occupation, hoping in vain to slow the workers’ momentum. The union gained the upper hand in the yards, on the streets and in the communities.

    http://tinyurl.com/7l4ueny

     

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 1/15/12” »

    Support Occupiers Headed to Occupy Congress on #J17

    The #BostonGA passed a proposal on Saturday, January 14, 2012 allocating $2500 from our general fund to send more than 30 Boston occupiers to Washington, DC to join thousands of others occupying Congress on #J17. This historic event is the first major occupy-led national demonstration in DC. Boston’s voice will be well represented as we continue to build the movement to take back our nation’s capital.

    Today, we ask you to support Occupy Boston as we stand in solidarity with the 99% nationwide; your support will also allow us to continue our critical work in Boston and around the county.

    >> Donate to Occupy Boston <<

    Without a steady physical presence at Dewey Square, donations to OB have been less frequent. Can you support us today to ensure that we can continue to fund efforts like #J17?

    A rundown of costs:

    • $1500 for transportation. We will be renting two 15 passenger vans, (the most cost-effective solution).
    • $500 for food.
    • $500 for miscellaneous items to make sure occupiers are safe.
    Follow Occupy Boston’s #J17 efforts on Twitter with the hashtag #OBDC. Thank you for your support!

    Continue reading “Support Occupiers Headed to Occupy Congress on #J17” »

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    Occupy Boston Media <Media@occupyboston.org> • <Info@occupyboston.org> • @Occupy_Boston