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Breaking: Reddit goes dark to protest SOPA

The social news site has led the charge against the Stop Online Piracy Act. Now the social news site is poised to take its most extreme step yet. 

 

Kevin Morris

Tech

Posted on Jan 10, 2012   Updated on Jun 2, 2021, 10:51 pm CDT

On January 18, Reddit goes dark.

Users of the social news site have spearheaded the online battle against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). Now the company will take the protest one step further.

“The freedom, innovation, and economic opportunity that the Internet enables is in jeopardy,” reads the staff post on the site’s official blog earlier today.

From 8am–8pm EST, the site’s admins will replace the Reddit homepage with a statement about how SOPA (and its equally reviled cousin, the Protect IP Act ) pose a serious threat to the Internet.

In many ways the move is an official endorsement of ideas already put forward by the community. Over the weekend, moderators of the site’s top sections discussed shuttering each for a day in protest; many others have since taken up the rallying cry.

And Reddit’s involvement goes deeper: Cofounder Alexis Ohanian will testify before congress about the dangers of SOPA.

It’s safe to say Reddit’s 34 million monthly visitors will have his back.

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*First Published: Jan 10, 2012, 8:30 pm CST