I can only speak for myself, of course. At one point, though dlthomas asked:
You self-identify as tech-savvy? You will be mind-killed just as surely on an issue like this.
I never got around to posting it, but I could have truthfully said that that I no longer consider myself to be tech-savvy. I was at one point, but what I once knew is now either forgotten or obsolete.
However, on closer introspection, I’d have to admit that I still am a bit biased towards what may be a “tech-savvy” view of the world. I hadn’t thought of it (and still don’t think of it) as a major part of my identity, but it may be all the more insidious for being unseen. So I must correct for that.
Now, I tentatively think that SOPA is probably bad public policy. This tentative opinion is supported by the fact (and it is a fact) that it is opposed by a great many learned people in many fields, particularly experts in American law, as well as internet technology.
However, before I turn my tentative opinion into a firm opinion, I will have to do a little homework by learning just a bit more about the issues in general, noting particularly the arguments supporting the view I’m leaning against. I don’t have all the time in the world, and I’m not planning to become an expert in copyright law, first amendment law, and the foundational technology supporting the internet any time soon. I don’t even plan to read the full text of the proposed legislation. However, my ignorance is a reason to be cautious, not bold, in my opinions.
(Parenthetically, as a U.S. citizen, I’d really like to think that my representatives in Congress would take as least as much trouble simply to understand the laws they enact.)
I can only speak for myself, of course. At one point, though dlthomas asked:
I never got around to posting it, but I could have truthfully said that that I no longer consider myself to be tech-savvy. I was at one point, but what I once knew is now either forgotten or obsolete.
However, on closer introspection, I’d have to admit that I still am a bit biased towards what may be a “tech-savvy” view of the world. I hadn’t thought of it (and still don’t think of it) as a major part of my identity, but it may be all the more insidious for being unseen. So I must correct for that.
Now, I tentatively think that SOPA is probably bad public policy. This tentative opinion is supported by the fact (and it is a fact) that it is opposed by a great many learned people in many fields, particularly experts in American law, as well as internet technology.
However, before I turn my tentative opinion into a firm opinion, I will have to do a little homework by learning just a bit more about the issues in general, noting particularly the arguments supporting the view I’m leaning against. I don’t have all the time in the world, and I’m not planning to become an expert in copyright law, first amendment law, and the foundational technology supporting the internet any time soon. I don’t even plan to read the full text of the proposed legislation. However, my ignorance is a reason to be cautious, not bold, in my opinions.
(Parenthetically, as a U.S. citizen, I’d really like to think that my representatives in Congress would take as least as much trouble simply to understand the laws they enact.)