F2C2012: Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA"
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0:01 - 0:07AARON SWARTZ: So, for me, it all started with
a phone call. It was September—not last -
0:07 - 0:12year, but the year before that, September
2010. And I got a phone call from my friend -
0:12 - 0:18Peter. "Aaron," he said, "there’s an amazing
bill that you have to take a look at." "What -
0:18 - 0:25is it?" I said. "It’s called COICA, the
Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeiting -
0:25 - 0:30Act." "But, Peter," I said, "I don’t care
about copyright law. Maybe you’re right. -
0:30 - 0:33Maybe Hollywood is right. But either way,
what’s the big deal? I’m not going to -
0:33 - 0:38waste my life fighting over a little issue
like copyright. Healthcare, financial reform—those -
0:38 - 0:44are the issues that I work on, not something
obscure like copyright law." I could hear -
0:44 - 0:49Peter grumbling in the background. "Look,
I don’t have time to argue with you," he -
0:49 - 0:53said, "but it doesn’t matter for right now,
because this isn’t a bill about copyright." -
0:53 - 1:00"It’s not?" "No," he said. "It’s a bill
about the freedom to connect." Now I was listening. -
1:02 - 1:05Peter explained what you’ve all probably
long since learned, that this bill would let -
1:05 - 1:10the government devise a list of websites that
Americans weren’t allowed to visit. On the -
1:10 - 1:15next day, I came up with lots of ways to try
to explain this to people. I said it was a -
1:15 - 1:20great firewall of America. I said it was an
Internet black list. I said it was online -
1:20 - 1:25censorship. But I think it’s worth taking
a step back, putting aside all the rhetoric -
1:25 - 1:30and just thinking for a moment about how radical
this bill really was. Sure, there are lots -
1:30 - 1:35of times when the government makes rules about
speech. If you slander a private figure, if -
1:35 - 1:40you buy a television ad that lies to people,
if you have a wild party that plays booming -
1:40 - 1:45music all night, in all these cases, the government
can come stop you. But this was something -
1:45 - 1:49radically different. It wasn’t the government
went to people and asked them to take down -
1:49 - 1:55particular material that was illegal; it shut
down whole websites. Essentially, it stopped -
1:55 - 2:00Americans from communicating entirely with
certain groups. There’s nothing really like -
2:00 - 2:04it in U.S. law. If you play loud music all
night, the government doesn’t slap you with -
2:04 - 2:09an order requiring you be mute for the next
couple weeks. They don’t say nobody can -
2:09 - 2:14make any more noise inside your house. There’s
a specific complaint, which they ask you to -
2:14 - 2:18specifically remedy, and then your life goes
on. -
2:18 - 2:22The closest example I could find was a case
where the government was at war with an adult -
2:22 - 2:26bookstore. The place kept selling pornography;
the government kept getting the porn declared -
2:26 - 2:31illegal. And then, frustrated, they decided
to shut the whole bookstore down. But even -
2:31 - 2:36that was eventually declared unconstitutional,
a violation of the First Amendment. -
2:36 - 2:42So, you might say, surely COICA would get
declared unconstitutional, as well. But I -
2:42 - 2:47knew that the Supreme Court had a blind spot
around the First Amendment, more than anything -
2:47 - 2:53else, more than slander or libel, more than
pornography, more even than child pornography. -
2:53 - 2:57Their blind spot was copyright. When it came
to copyright, it was like the part of the -
2:57 - 3:02justices’ brains shut off, and they just
totally forgot about the First Amendment. -
3:02 - 3:05You got the sense that, deep down, they didn’t
even think the First Amendment applied when -
3:05 - 3:10copyright was at issue, which means that if
you did want to censor the Internet, if you -
3:10 - 3:16wanted to come up with some way that the government
could shut down access to particular websites, -
3:16 - 3:21this bill might be the only way to do it.
If it was about pornography, it probably would -
3:21 - 3:25get overturned by courts, just like the adult
bookstore case. But if you claimed it was -
3:25 - 3:28about copyright, it might just sneak through.
-
3:28 - 3:32And that was especially terrifying, because,
as you know, because copyright is everywhere. -
3:32 - 3:35If you want to shut down WikiLeaks, it’s
a bit of a stretch to claim that you’re -
3:35 - 3:40doing it because they have too much pornography,
but it’s not hard at all to claim that WikiLeaks -
3:40 - 3:44is violating copyright, because everything
is copyrighted. This speech, you know, the -
3:44 - 3:49thing I’m giving right now, these words
are copyrighted. And it’s so easy to accidentally -
3:49 - 3:54copy something, so easy, in fact, that the
leading Republican supporter of COICA, Orrin -
3:54 - 4:01Hatch, had illegally copied a bunch of code
into his own Senate website. So if even Orrin -
4:01 - 4:06Hatch’s Senate website was found to be violating
copyright law, what’s the chance that they -
4:06 - 4:12wouldn’t find something they could pin on
any of us? -
4:12 - 4:18There’s a battle going on right now, a battle
to define everything that happens on the Internet -
4:18 - 4:23in terms of traditional things that the law
understands. Is sharing a video on BitTorrent -
4:23 - 4:28like shoplifting from a movie store? Or is
it like loaning a videotape to a friend? Is -
4:28 - 4:34reloading a webpage over and over again like
a peaceful virtual sit-in or a violent smashing -
4:34 - 4:40of shop windows? Is the freedom to connect
like freedom of speech or like the freedom -
4:40 - 4:42to murder?
-
4:42 - 4:47This bill would be a huge, potentially permanent,
loss. If we lost the ability to communicate -
4:47 - 4:53with each other over the Internet, it would
be a change to the Bill of Rights. The freedoms -
4:53 - 4:57guaranteed in our Constitution, the freedoms
our country had been built on, would be suddenly -
4:57 - 5:02deleted. New technology, instead of bringing
us greater freedom, would have snuffed out -
5:02 - 5:08fundamental rights we had always taken for
granted. And I realized that day, talking -
5:08 - 5:14to Peter, that I couldn’t let that happen.
-
5:14 - 5:20But it was going to happen. The bill, COICA,
was introduced on September 20th, 2010, a -
5:20 - 5:25Monday, and in the press release heralding
the introduction of this bill, way at the -
5:25 - 5:32bottom, it was scheduled for a vote on September
23rd, just three days later. And while, of -
5:32 - 5:36course, there had to be a vote—you can’t
pass a bill without a vote—the results of -
5:36 - 5:40that vote were already a foregone conclusion,
because if you looked at the introduction -
5:40 - 5:45of the law, it wasn’t just introduced by
one rogue eccentric member of Congress; it -
5:45 - 5:50was introduced by the chair of the Judiciary
Committee and co-sponsored by nearly all the -
5:50 - 5:55other members, Republicans and Democrats.
So, yes, there’d be a vote, but it wouldn’t -
5:55 - 6:00be much of a surprise, because nearly everyone
who was voting had signed their name to the -
6:00 - 6:02bill before it was even introduced.
-
6:02 - 6:07Now, I can’t stress how unusual this is.
This is emphatically not how Congress works. -
6:07 - 6:10I’m not talking about how Congress should
work, the way you see on Schoolhouse Rock. -
6:10 - 6:15I mean, this is not the way Congress actually
works. I mean, I think we all know Congress -
6:15 - 6:21is a dead zone of deadlock and dysfunction.
There are months of debates and horse trading -
6:21 - 6:24and hearings and stall tactics. I mean, you
know, first you’re supposed to announce -
6:24 - 6:28that you’re going to hold hearings on a
problem, and then days of experts talking -
6:28 - 6:32about the issue, and then you propose a possible
solution, you bring the experts back for their -
6:32 - 6:36thoughts on that, and then other members have
different solutions, and they propose those, -
6:36 - 6:39and you spend of bunch of time debating, and
there’s a bunch of trading, they get members -
6:39 - 6:43over to your cause. And finally, you spend
hours talking one on one with the different -
6:43 - 6:47people in the debate, try and come back with
some sort of compromise, which you hash out -
6:47 - 6:51in endless backroom meetings. And then, when
that’s all done, you take that, and you -
6:51 - 6:55go through it line by line in public to see
if anyone has any objections or wants to make -
6:55 - 7:01any changes. And then you have the vote. It’s
a painful, arduous process. You don’t just -
7:01 - 7:06introduce a bill on Monday and then pass it
unanimously a couple days later. That just -
7:06 - 7:08doesn’t happen in Congress.
-
7:08 - 7:13But this time, it was going to happen. And
it wasn’t because there were no disagreements -
7:13 - 7:17on the issue. There are always disagreements.
Some senators thought the bill was much too -
7:17 - 7:21weak and needed to be stronger: As it was
introduced, the bill only allowed the government -
7:21 - 7:24to shut down websites, and these senators,
they wanted any company in the world to have -
7:24 - 7:30the power to get a website shut down. Other
senators thought it was a drop too strong. -
7:30 - 7:33But somehow, in the kind of thing you never
see in Washington, they had all managed to -
7:33 - 7:39put their personal differences aside to come
together and support one bill they were persuaded -
7:39 - 7:45they could all live with: a bill that would
censor the Internet. And when I saw this, -
7:45 - 7:50I realized: Whoever was behind this was good.
-
7:50 - 7:56Now, the typical way you make good things
happen in Washington is you find a bunch of -
7:56 - 8:00wealthy companies who agree with you. Social
Security didn’t get passed because some -
8:00 - 8:04brave politicians decided their good conscience
couldn’t possibly let old people die starving -
8:04 - 8:09in the streets. I mean, are you kidding me?
Social Security got passed because John D. -
8:09 - 8:13Rockefeller was sick of having to take money
out of his profits to pay for his workers’ -
8:13 - 8:18pension funds. Why do that, when you can just
let the government take money from the workers? -
8:18 - 8:22Now, my point is not that Social Security
is a bad thing—I think it’s fantastic. -
8:22 - 8:27It’s just that the way you get the government
to do fantastic things is you find a big company -
8:27 - 8:33willing to back them. The problem is, of course,
that big companies aren’t really huge fans -
8:33 - 8:36of civil liberties. You know, it’s not that
they’re against them; it’s just there’s -
8:36 - 8:38not much money in it.
-
8:38 - 8:43Now, if you’ve been reading the press, you
probably didn’t hear this part of the story. -
8:43 - 8:46As Hollywood has been telling it, the great,
good copyright bill they were pushing was -
8:46 - 8:50stopped by the evil Internet companies who
make millions of dollars off of copyright -
8:50 - 8:55infringement. But it just—it really wasn’t
true. I mean, I was in there, in the meetings -
8:55 - 9:00with the Internet companies—actually probably
all here today. And, you know, if all their -
9:00 - 9:04profits depended on copyright infringement,
they would have put a lot more money into -
9:04 - 9:10changing copyright law. The fact is, the big
Internet companies, they would do just fine -
9:10 - 9:14if this bill passed. I mean, they wouldn’t
be thrilled about it, but I doubt they would -
9:14 - 9:19even have a noticeable dip in their stock
price. So they were against it, but they were -
9:19 - 9:24against it, like the rest of us, on grounds
primarily of principle. And principle doesn’t -
9:24 - 9:29have a lot of money in the budget to spend
on lobbyists. So they were practical about -
9:29 - 9:32it. "Look," they said, "this bill is going
to pass. In fact, it’s probably going to -
9:32 - 9:37pass unanimously. As much as we try, this
is not a train we’re going to be able to -
9:37 - 9:41stop. So, we’re not going to support it—we
couldn’t support it. But in opposition, -
9:41 - 9:45let’s just try and make it better." So that
was the strategy: lobby to make the bill better. -
9:45 - 9:49They had lists of changes that would make
the bill less obnoxious or less expensive -
9:49 - 9:53for them, or whatever. But the fact remained
at the end of the day, it was going to be -
9:53 - 9:57a bill that was going to censor the Internet,
and there was nothing we could do to stop -
9:57 - 9:59it.
-
9:59 - 10:04So I did what you always do when you’re
a little guy facing a terrible future with -
10:04 - 10:11long odds and little hope of success: I started
an online petition. I called all my friends, -
10:12 - 10:16and we stayed up all night setting up a website
for this new group, Demand Progress, with -
10:16 - 10:22an online petition opposing this noxious bill,
and I sent it to a few friends. Now, I’ve -
10:22 - 10:26done a few online petitions before. I’ve
worked at some of the biggest groups in the -
10:26 - 10:32world that do online petitions. I’ve written
a ton of them and read even more. But I’ve -
10:32 - 10:38never seen anything like this. Starting from
literally nothing, we went to 10,000 signers, -
10:38 - 10:45then 100,000 signers, and then 200,000 signers
and 300,000 signers, in just a couple of weeks. -
10:45 - 10:49And it wasn’t just signing a name. We asked
those people to call Congress, to call urgently. -
10:49 - 10:53There was a vote coming up this week, in just
a couple days, and we had to stop it. And -
10:53 - 10:57at the same time, we told the press about
it, about this incredible online petition -
10:57 - 11:01that was taking off. And we met with the staff
of members of Congress and pleaded with them -
11:01 - 11:05to withdraw their support for the bill. I
mean, it was amazing. It was huge. The power -
11:05 - 11:11of the Internet rose up in force against this
bill. And then it passed unanimously. -
11:11 - 11:17Now, to be fair, several of the members gave
nice speeches before casting their vote, and -
11:17 - 11:20in their speeches they said their office had
been overwhelmed with comments about the First -
11:20 - 11:25Amendment concerns behind this bill, comments
that had them very worried, so worried, in -
11:25 - 11:29fact, they weren’t sure that they still
supported the bill. But even though they didn’t -
11:29 - 11:32support it, they were going to vote for it
anyway, they said, because they needed to -
11:32 - 11:37keep the process moving, and they were sure
any problems that were had with it could be -
11:37 - 11:43fixed later. So, I’m going to ask you, does
this sound like Washington, D.C., to you? -
11:43 - 11:47Since when do members of Congress vote for
things that they oppose just to keep the process -
11:47 - 11:53moving? I mean, whoever was behind this was
good. -
11:53 - 11:59And then, suddenly, the process stopped. Senator
Ron Wyden, the Democrat from Oregon, put a -
11:59 - 12:04hold on the bill. Giving a speech in which
he called it a nuclear bunker-buster bomb -
12:04 - 12:08aimed at the Internet, he announced he would
not allow it to pass without changes. And -
12:08 - 12:14as you may know, a single senator can’t
actually stop a bill by themselves, but they -
12:14 - 12:19can delay it. By objecting to a bill, they
can demand Congress spend a bunch of time -
12:19 - 12:25debating it before getting it passed. And
Senator Wyden did. He bought us time—a lot -
12:25 - 12:28of time, as it turned out. His delay held
all the way through the end of that session -
12:28 - 12:32of Congress, so that when the bill came back,
it had to start all over again. And since -
12:32 - 12:36they were starting all over again, they figured,
why not give it a new name? And that’s when -
12:36 - 12:40it began being called PIPA, and eventually
SOPA. -
12:40 - 12:46So there was probably a year or two of delay
there. And in retrospect, we used that time -
12:46 - 12:51to lay the groundwork for what came later.
But that’s not what it felt like at the -
12:51 - 12:55time. At the time, it felt like we were going
around telling people that these bills were -
12:55 - 13:01awful, and in return, they told us that they
thought we were crazy. I mean, we were kids -
13:01 - 13:05wandering around waving our arms about how
the government was going to censor the Internet. -
13:05 - 13:09It does sound a little crazy. You can ask
Larry tomorrow. I was constantly telling him -
13:09 - 13:13what was going on, trying to get him involved,
and I’m pretty sure he just thought I was -
13:13 - 13:20exaggerating. Even I began to doubt myself.
It was a rough period. But when the bill came -
13:21 - 13:24back and started moving again, suddenly all
the work we had done started coming together. -
13:24 - 13:28All the folks we talked to about it suddenly
began getting really involved and getting -
13:28 - 13:32others involved. Everything started snowballing.
It happened so fast. -
13:32 - 13:37I remember there was one week where I was
having dinner with a friend in the technology -
13:37 - 13:42industry, and he asked what I worked on, and
I told him about this bill. And he said, "Wow! -
13:42 - 13:49You need to tell people about that." And I
just groaned. And then, just a few weeks later, -
13:50 - 13:53I remember I was chatting with this cute girl
on the subway, and she wasn’t in technology -
13:53 - 13:58at all, but when she heard that I was, she
turned to me very seriously and said, "You -
13:58 - 14:05know, we have to stop 'SOAP.'" So, progress,
right? -
14:06 - 14:13But, you know, I think that story illustrates
what happened during those couple weeks, because -
14:13 - 14:18the reason we won wasn’t because I was working
on it or Reddit was working on it or Google -
14:18 - 14:23was working on it or Tumblr or any other particular
person. It was because there was this enormous -
14:23 - 14:29mental shift in our industry. Everyone was
thinking of ways they could help, often really -
14:29 - 14:33clever, ingenious ways. People made videos.
They made infographics. They started PACs. -
14:33 - 14:38They designed ads. They bought billboards.
They wrote news stories. They held meetings. -
14:38 - 14:44Everybody saw it as their responsibility to
help. I remember at one point during this -
14:44 - 14:47period I held a meeting with a bunch of startups
in New York, trying to encourage everyone -
14:47 - 14:51to get involved, and I felt a bit like I was
hosting one of these Clinton Global Initiative -
14:51 - 14:55meetings, where I got to turn to every startup
in the—every startup founder in the room -
14:55 - 14:58and be like, "What are you going to do? And
what are you going to do?" And everyone was -
14:58 - 15:00trying to one-up each other.
-
15:00 - 15:05If there was one day the shift crystallized,
I think it was the day of the hearings on -
15:05 - 15:10SOPA in the House, the day we got that phrase,
"It’s no longer OK not to understand how -
15:10 - 15:15the Internet works." There was just something
about watching those clueless members of Congress -
15:15 - 15:19debate the bill, watching them insist they
could regulate the Internet and a bunch of -
15:19 - 15:24nerds couldn’t possibly stop them. They
really brought it home for people that this -
15:24 - 15:30was happening, that Congress was going to
break the Internet, and it just didn’t care. -
15:30 - 15:36I remember when this moment first hit me.
I was at an event, and I was talking, and -
15:36 - 15:40I got introduced to a U.S. senator, one of
the strongest proponents of the original COICA -
15:40 - 15:45bill, in fact. And I asked him why, despite
being such a progressive, despite giving a -
15:45 - 15:50speech in favor of civil liberties, why he
was supporting a bill that would censor the -
15:50 - 15:56Internet. And, you know, that typical politician
smile he had suddenly faded from his face, -
15:56 - 16:01and his eyes started burning this fiery red.
And he started shouting at me, said, "Those -
16:01 - 16:05people on the Internet, they think they can
get away with anything! They think they can -
16:05 - 16:10just put anything up there, and there’s
nothing we can do to stop them! They put up -
16:10 - 16:14everything! They put up our nuclear missiles,
and they just laugh at us! Well, we’re going -
16:14 - 16:18to show them! There’s got to be laws on
the Internet! It’s got to be under control!" -
16:18 - 16:24Now, as far as I know, nobody has ever put
up the U.S.'s nuclear missiles on the Internet. -
16:24 - 16:30I mean, it's not something I’ve heard about.
But that’s sort of the point. He wasn’t -
16:30 - 16:35having a rational concern, right? It was this
irrational fear that things were out of control. -
16:35 - 16:40Here was this man, a United States senator,
and those people on the Internet, they were -
16:40 - 16:47just mocking him. They had to be brought under
control. Things had to be under control. And -
16:47 - 16:52I think that was the attitude of Congress.
And just as seeing that fire in that senator’s -
16:52 - 16:58eyes scared me, I think those hearings scared
a lot of people. They saw this wasn’t the -
16:58 - 17:02attitude of a thoughtful government trying
to resolve trade-offs in order to best represent -
17:02 - 17:09its citizens. This was more like the attitude
of a tyrant. And so the citizens fought back. -
17:12 - 17:17The wheels came off the bus pretty quickly
after that hearing. First the Republican senators -
17:17 - 17:22pulled out, and then the White House issued
a statement opposing the bill, and then the -
17:22 - 17:26Democrats, left all alone out there, announced
they were putting the bill on hold so they -
17:26 - 17:32could have a few further discussions before
the official vote. And that was when, as hard -
17:32 - 17:38as it was for me to believe, after all this,
we had won. The thing that everyone said was -
17:38 - 17:42impossible, that some of the biggest companies
in the world had written off as kind of a -
17:42 - 17:49pipe dream, had happened. We did it. We won.
-
17:51 - 17:57And then we started rubbing it in. You all
know what happened next. Wikipedia went black. -
17:57 - 18:03Reddit went black. Craigslist went black.
The phone lines on Capitol Hill flat-out melted. -
18:03 - 18:07Members of Congress started rushing to issue
statements retracting their support for the -
18:07 - 18:12bill that they were promoting just a couple
days ago. And it was just ridiculous. I mean, -
18:12 - 18:17there’s a chart from the time that captures
it pretty well. It says something like "January -
18:17 - 18:2114th" on one side and has this big, long list
of names supporting the bill, and then just -
18:21 - 18:27a few lonely people opposing it; and on the
other side, it says "January 15th," and now -
18:27 - 18:32it’s totally reversed—everyone is opposing
it, just a few lonely names still hanging -
18:32 - 18:33on in support.
-
18:33 - 18:40I mean, this really was unprecedented. Don’t
take my word for it, but ask former Senator -
18:41 - 18:48Chris Dodd, now the chief lobbyist for Hollywood.
He admitted, after he lost, that he had masterminded -
18:48 - 18:53the whole evil plan. And he told The New York
Times he had never seen anything like it during -
18:53 - 18:59his many years in Congress. And everyone I’ve
spoken to agrees. The people rose up, and -
18:59 - 19:04they caused a sea change in Washington—not
the press, which refused to cover the story—just -
19:04 - 19:09coincidentally, their parent companies all
happened to be lobbying for the bill; not -
19:09 - 19:14the politicians, who were pretty much unanimously
in favor of it; and not the companies, who -
19:14 - 19:19had all but given up trying to stop it and
decided it was inevitable. It was really stopped -
19:19 - 19:26by the people, the people themselves. They
killed the bill dead, so dead that when members -
19:29 - 19:34of Congress propose something now that even
touches the Internet, they have to give a -
19:34 - 19:41long speech beforehand about how it is definitely
not like SOPA; so dead that when you ask congressional -
19:41 - 19:47staffers about it, they groan and shake their
heads like it’s all a bad dream they’re -
19:47 - 19:54trying really hard to forget; so dead that
it’s kind of hard to believe this story, -
19:55 - 20:02hard to remember how close it all came to
actually passing, hard to remember how this -
20:02 - 20:09could have gone any other way. But it wasn’t
a dream or a nightmare; it was all very real. -
20:09 - 20:16And it will happen again. Sure, it will have
yet another name, and maybe a different excuse, -
20:16 - 20:21and probably do its damage in a different
way. But make no mistake: The enemies of the -
20:21 - 20:27freedom to connect have not disappeared. The
fire in those politicians’ eyes hasn’t -
20:27 - 20:32been put out. There are a lot of people, a
lot of powerful people, who want to clamp -
20:32 - 20:37down on the Internet. And to be honest, there
aren’t a whole lot who have a vested interest -
20:37 - 20:43in protecting it from all of that. Even some
of the biggest companies, some of the biggest -
20:43 - 20:47Internet companies, to put it frankly, would
benefit from a world in which their little -
20:47 - 20:52competitors could get censored. We can’t
let that happen. -
20:52 - 20:57Now, I’ve told this as a personal story,
partly because I think big stories like this -
20:57 - 21:02one are just more interesting at human scale.
The director J.D. Walsh says good stories -
21:02 - 21:07should be like the poster for Transformers.
There’s a huge evil robot on the left side -
21:07 - 21:12of the poster and a huge, big army on the
right side of the poster. And in the middle, -
21:12 - 21:18at the bottom, there’s just a small family
trapped in the middle. Big stories need human -
21:18 - 21:23stakes. But mostly, it’s a personal story,
because I didn’t have time to research any -
21:23 - 21:29of the other part of it. But that’s kind
of the point. We won this fight because everyone -
21:29 - 21:36made themselves the hero of their own story.
Everyone took it as their job to save this -
21:36 - 21:40crucial freedom. They threw themselves into
it. They did whatever they could think of -
21:40 - 21:46to do. They didn’t stop to ask anyone for
permission. You remember how Hacker News readers -
21:46 - 21:53spontaneously organized this boycott of GoDaddy
over their support of SOPA? Nobody told them -
21:53 - 21:58they could do that. A few people even thought
it was a bad idea. It didn’t matter. The -
21:58 - 22:05senators were right: The Internet really is
out of control. But if we forget that, if -
22:06 - 22:11we let Hollywood rewrite the story so it was
just big company Google who stopped the bill, -
22:11 - 22:15if we let them persuade us we didn’t actually
make a difference, if we start seeing it as -
22:15 - 22:19someone else’s responsibility to do this
work and it’s our job just to go home and -
22:19 - 22:26pop some popcorn and curl up on the couch
to watch Transformers, well, then next time -
22:26 - 22:33they might just win. Let’s not let that
happen.
- Title:
- F2C2012: Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA"
- Description:
-
Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA" at F2C:Freedom to Connect 2012, Washington DC on May 21 2012.
http://freedom-to-connect.net/
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- Captions Requested
- Duration:
- 22:52
ISOC-NY edited English subtitles for F2C2012: Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA" | ||
ISOC-NY edited English subtitles for F2C2012: Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA" | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for F2C2012: Aaron Swartz keynote - "How we stopped SOPA" | ||
Claude Almansi added a translation |