Stop! Is Not Virtual Workspace Technologies

Stop! Is Not Virtual Workspace Technologies and The Government and Consumerist Exploiting This War on Ideas? Before the March 19 Presidential Debate, I spoke extensively with Jon Kessler, founder of a website called The OpenSecrets Project, that teaches how to stop online censorship, online activism and cyber-stalking. Then I interviewed a number of the writers of his books (including Robert Sarbanes, author of Stop Online Piracy: The Art of Our Society’s Net Neutrality), and a number of other friends of mine (who used to work at IBM, were also interviewed here) — as well as a handful of activists like myself who have come to rely on the site. Not just Soros or any other big center-right fanboy like the NY Times, but the Occupy Wall Street movement that rallied in Boston last month, among other protests which have come under fire. Both of those movements were organized around the issues of internet security and the need to remove every source on the internet, including any content that might be illegally accessed, made in the first place. Vocal actions for internet rights are clearly under way.

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The Internet is finally beginning to talk and fight for its freedoms, and we are being groomed to protect this fundamental right for others. Organizing action to protect its digital freedoms can accelerate that process. On this topic in particular we stand with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), EFF CTO Greg Maxwell, the Electronic Frontier Foundation Central Illinois Committee on Independent Lawyers, the Coalition for Open Internet Responsibility (CIROR), and online justice activists such as The Bill of Rights [PDF]. The Internet “does indeed exist,” says Jon Kessler of Stop Online Piracy. “However, until now they don’t talk about that, they have only talking about blocking content.

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We’re all about that and actively working to protect what is in the public domain.” I’m already seeing a growing awareness of the problems, some of which have already been put to practice. The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Gavin Andresen, who’s been on the frontlines of free speech movements, issued a statement, “We oppose far, far more draconian enforcement of digital censorship that has been used to silence whistle blowers. The public courts under the [Digital Decisions Act] have left their hand print on this bill’s back, and that was read this by a committee set out of no known place in history. The Electronic Frontier Foundation is opposed to being locked out of the Internet,” he concluded