SOPA Vs NSA Protests, In Pictures

Today, a coalition of websites promised an Internet-wide protest against the National Security Agency, similar to the mass blackouts that rose up against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). Every major Internet company has come out forcefully against the bulk collection of Internet and phone data, so how did today’s protest stack up against SOPA? Here it is, in images of front pages (SOPA on top, NSA on bottom in each comparison):

Reddit, popular content aggregator

SOPA protest

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 10.44.55 AM

NSA protest

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 10.43.33 AM

Wikipedia, crowdsourced encyclopedia

SOPA protest

History_Wikipedia_English_SOPA_2012_Blackout2

NSA protest

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 10.46.32 AM

Boing Boing, Blog of Internet news and culture

SOPA protest

Boing_Boing_SOPA_02_620x402

NSA protest

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 10.49.17 AM

Google, search engine and lots of other stuff

SOPA protest

google-blackout

NSA protest (Google did put up a blog post explaining their position)

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 11.11.24 AM

XKCD, super-awesome web comic

SOPA protest

blackout-xkcd

NSA protest (link to today’s comic on updating software)

Screen Shot 2014-02-11 at 11.19.40 AM

Mostly Subdued, Slightly Different

The NSA protests are strategically different than SOPA. During SOPA, major websites completely took their sites offline or blacked out their front pages. Today’s protests put an easier call to action in the bottom half of the screen, such as a way to contact one’s Congressional representative.

But, anyway you slice the strategy, today is far more subdued. To be sure, this isn’t the first time a civil liberties-related protest has failed to capture the same SOPA outrage, either from profit or nonprofit websites.

During the last attempt against a failed cyber security bill, Reddit Co-Founder, Alexis Ohanian, explained to me: “The big reason is the imminent threat of shutting down things we love (like reddit, all of social media etc) that sopa/pipa provided. Whereas the obliteration of 4th amendment rights to privacy online isn’t as blatant, sadly, so it’s harder to rally around.”