The MPAA is looking to fight back against Wednesday's Internet protests over SOPA with an ad campaign aiming to address "misconceptions" about the bill.
"DNS filtering is really off the table," said Paul Brigner, the MPAA's tech policy chief, on Tuesday. His remarks came during a debate on SOPA at the State of the Net conference in Washington DC. The event was sponsored by the Congressional Internet
The Motion Picture Association of America cries foul, Grooveshark says goodbye to German customers, and U.S. Senator contact links experience technical difficulties.
Each of Anonymous' victims has been a fervent advocate of anti-piracy legislation, especially MPAA President Christopher Dodd who has sharply criticized those websites that went black. Related Articles: British Police Arrest 19-Year-Old Suspected of
"DNS filtering is really off the table," said Paul Brigner, the MPAA's tech policy chief, on Tuesday. His remarks came during a debate on SOPA at the State of the Net conference in Washington DC. The event was sponsored by the Congressional Internet
Related posts:
- Anonymous take down Department of Justice, RIAA, MPAA, Universal Music
- Anonymous says it takes down FBI, DOJ, entertainment sites
- Wikipedia Blackout: Websites Wikipedia, Reddit, Others Go Dark Wednesday to …
- Wikipedia, other websites go dark in anti-piracy bill protest
- SOPA, PIPA: What you need to know