So, as you may have heard, GoDaddy took its name off a list of companies that support the Stop Online Piracy Act. But did it actually stop supporting it?
TechCrunch has a pretty revealing interview with new GoDaddy CEO Warren Adelman that basically boils down to “we’re just going to be very, very quiet about this issue and pray to God this revolt doesn’t turn into a mass exodus.” But they’re not actually doing things like “removing their support for the bill from the public record” or “actually really speaking out against it.”
…on the subject of the company’s rather vague promise that “Go Daddy will support it when and if the Internet community supports it,” I said it seemed unlikely that the internet community would ever support a bill of this type, and certainly not SOPA in any shape or form – so the statement is difficult to interpret. Adelman said “There has to be concensus about the leadership of the internet community. It’s a large community and a global one.”
The statements made by GoDaddy and its new CEO are far from strong, but they may solidify with time. “Not supporting” is not the same as opposing, and on an issue like this the internet, by their own admission the source of their reversal, will demand opposition. They can’t avoid the fact that they were a strong, on-the-record supporter of the bill, however, and that may be something of an albatross for them for some time.
Meanwhile, their competitors are accusing them of trying to stall domain transfers while their customer service reps spent Christmas trying to win back irate clients.
It tells you how explosive this has been that making your employees work over the holidays is a step up in the public relations department.



It’s crazy how far this has gone and I’ve yet to meet a person who can nail down the actual problem with this legislation, especially after the markup.
People complain about it being too broad or somehow destroying Youtube, which is just asinine given the incredibly narrow definition of “infringing site.” The only remotely coherent criticism I’ve heard comes from the usual suspect law professors who raise hell anytime anything even remotely related to expression comes under regulation, and the old guard of economists who hate self-regulation in any form. The rest is all internet people who either didn’t read or didn’t understand the legislation, and clueless, attention-seeking amatuers who just want something to bitch about.
I think this is probably the biggest sign that the end of the United States is near. We’re just too stupid and apathetic to function anymore, but our egos and our empowerment are at an all-time high. That’s a very bad combination for long-term social stability.