Jimmy Wales: It was Wikipedia that ended the evil of SOPA
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales said the site's blackout played a key part in defeating the USA's controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). The English version of Wikipedia, Reddit and hundreds of other smaller websites coordinated a notional service blackout for a day in mid-January to raise awareness of SOPA. Wales described …
... wait a minute
The Communications Data Bill, should it become law, would make it somewhat more feasible for government agencies to monitor traffic via Facebook, Skype and Twitter private messages. Only the parties involved in messages and not the content of messages would be recorded.
Isn't that exactly the reason they decided to create teh cokie law? To prevent people from doing this?
Jimbo Wales...
... seems to be making a surprising amount of sense!
Jimface taking credit for everyone else's work? Crikey whatever next?
Re: whatever next
I'm guessing the sun rising in the east. (is it a slow news day?)
Whilst we're on the subject of the snooper's charter...
http://blogs.computerworlduk.com/open-enterprise/2012/10/uk-snoopers-charter-19000-emails-against-0-in-favour/index.htm
Jimmy Wales, getting it regualrly must be affecting his brain
The guy's full of effluent. It was a multisite team effort.
Back to bed, Wales.
Pants on fire
And Wales sees no problem with his encyclopedia being used as a political campaign tool.
The Wikipedia entries for anything related to IP read like mad ranting from Reddit kiddies. NPOV goes out of the window.
All SOPA did was send Wikipedia's reputation as a source down the toilet.
(Anon, obviously)
Anything related to IP?
Dunno, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipv6 is better written than RFC 2460 and more accurate than the descriptions at microsoft.com.
Wait... what were you going on about?
Sellout
Wales was against it because it threatened his profit stream.
If they could have made an exception for Wikipodia I'm sure he and the secret circle that runs the thing would have come around.
the problem I see here
Is that "Wales" is already part of The Register's table of standard measurements, for area. Adding it as a measure of self-importance will lead to confusion
