Armchair activists now have a tool that can
transport their SOPA protestations into the real world: Boycott SOPA, an
Android app that scans barcodes and tells you whether an object’s
manufacturer/publisher is a supporter of the much maligned Stop Online Piracy Act.
If
you’ve ever scanned a barcode on your Android phone to look up a book
or CD on Amazon, Boycott SOPA works in exactly the same way: First you
have to install the ZXing Barcode Scanner app, but then you simply go
around pointing your phone’s camera at product barcodes. Boycott SOPA
gives you a big red cross if the product is distributed by a SOPA
supporter, or a green tick if it’s “clean.” Much to my chagrin,
Coca-Cola supports SOPA — but Smirnoff, on the other hand, does not. If
you ever needed a sign from Above that you ought to drink more, there it
is.
Scanning food isn’t really where Boycott SOPA is at, though:
Really, it’s all about scanning books, CDs, movies, and games — products
that are protected by massively militant groups like the MPAA, RIAA,
and BSA who are spending millions on buying off Representatives to shoehorn SOPA through Congress.
If you scan a random selection of media in your DVD rack or bookcase,
you’ll be unsurprised to see that almost every object is produced by a
company that supports SOPA. It’s worth noting that the app isn’t
perfect, though: It relies on a user-curated list of SOPA supporters — a
list that isn’t complete nor publicly visible. The app developer claims
that the list will be regularly updated.
Technicalities
aside, though, the ultimate goal of Boycott SOPA is to change your
shopping habits. The idea is that you should scan everything that you
buy at the supermarket, and refuse to put any SOPA-backed products into
your basket. It’s a very grandiose idea, and in a day and age where
shoppers regularly eschew a selection of products on principle (“damn
baby-killing multinationals!”), or buy entirely local produce, Boycott
SOPA fits right in.
Inadvertently, though, the developers of
Boycott SOPA have given us a tantalizing hint of how technology empowers
consumers. Imagine for a second if you chopped “SOPA” from the name of
the app and simply called it “Boycott.” Imagine if there was an Android
app that let you boycott whatever you wanted. If you had a
personal beef with Coca-Cola — which has very long tendrils indeed — you
could program the app to pick up anything produced by Coca-Cola and its
manifold subsidiaries. Likewise, if you want to stick it to publishers
or artists that refuse to make their songs available on Spotify, you
could tell Boycott to block them.
You could even take it one step
further and make Boycott the one-stop-shop for all of your political
needs. Imagine if you could scan a cereal box and find out that the
company’s CEO likes to hunt rhinos, ride elephants, and eat shark fin
soup — at the same time. Imagine if you could scan a video game box and
immediately see all of the active legislation, the Representative
sponsors and supporters, and how much money they’ve received from
industry lobbying. You could even go as far as equipping the app with
facial recognition, so that you can point your phone at a Senator’s face
on the TV and quickly find out whether what he’s saying actually jibes
with his real world behavior and voting record. This isn’t a futuristic
concept; we could do this right now with the tech we have.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Boycott SOPA: An Android app that terrifies publishers and politicians
Posted by Unknown on 5:01 AM
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