Is a tweet apology, the social media mea culpa, a suitable response to public gaffs and inappropriate comments?
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Is a tweet apology, the social media mea culpa, a suitable response to public gaffs and inappropriate comments?
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Turns out both liberals and conservatives have issues with Internet censorship, and 10 members of Congress have now proposed a new approach to online piracy. Oh, and they want feedback before they write the bill.
The two-page draft of the plan is being issued so that "the public can provide us with feedback and counsel before the proposal is formally introduced in the House and the Senate." And clearly, feedback would be useful. Can such a "follow the money" plan do anything about noncommercial piracy, for instance? Should it try to do so? But the whole shift in tone marked by the new approach looks far more promising than anything likely to come out of the mess that is SOPA.
Who's behind all of this sweet sanity? Senators Wyden (D-OR), Cantwell (D-WA), Moran (R-KS), and Warner (D-VA); Reps. Chaffetz (R-UT), Campbell (R-CA), Doggett (D-TX), Eshoo (D-CA), Issa (R-CA), and Lofgren (D-CA). Delete the scoop?
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