This is how the U.S. government wants to treat you, say SOPA critics.
Intended to combat the trade in pirated movies and music, the two bills would give copyright holders and law enforcement officials added powers to cut off websites and require search engines, payment collectors and others to block access.Under the proposed House bill, the burden of punishment for uploading copyrighted material to web sites would be shifted from the user to the site owners. Any site that unknowingly hosted such material could be shut down entirely, critics say.
During the House Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill, Rep. Mel Watt (D-NC) said critics were overreacting.
"[It's] beyond troubling to hear hyperbolic charges that this bill will open the floodgates to government censorship," Watt, a SOPA sponsor, said. "[Comparing the bill to the actions of] a repressive regime belittles the circumstances under which true victims of tyrannical governments actually live."
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