What Happened This Week – The Internet is Safe… For Now
Hey-hey! Are you all excited? I know I am, because a Giants-Patriots rematch in the Super Bowl means we’ll get more of this classy gentleman. Seriously, Carl’s locks make the NFL worth watching long after your team has washed out because you didn’t have a backup quarterback.
Me? Bitter? Pshaw. Anyway, here’s the latest:
- SOPA and PIPA have been shelved in response to public outcry and prolonged protest. Major backers withdrawing their support might’ve had something to do with that, too.
- And yet despite the bills not passing, the FBI and DoJ had no trouble shutting down Megaupload and arresting people in New Zealand. Why, it’s almost like Washington already has broad powers to pursue people in other countries.
- Commentary: despite the bills being on hold for now, expect this issue to resurface at some point. Google “Congress riders” for just one worrying example.
- All this begs the question of what can be done going forward, both about piracy and the clumsy responses to it. Ars Technica offers in-depth solutions. I would start with “try treating your customers like people for a change.”
- Meanwhile at BioWare, The Old Republic suffers an unfortunate PvP issue right when it can least afford one. This wouldn’t be quite such a problem if the game weren’t so expensive to produce.
- Mass Effect 3 aims to ditch the mission-based structure of Mass Effect 2, going for something more fluid and constant. You mean like Mass Effect 1, right?
- Zynga buys more mobile game studios. Yes, Zynga, because that’s what you were doing wrong: not buying enough smaller companies.
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