Posted on 09/19/2013 8:05:20 AM PDT by Alex Murphy
Last week Russia introduced its brand new anti-piracy law that will see sites blocked at the ISP level if they fail to respond swiftly to copyright complaints.
The law, which critics say is overbroad and likely to cause collateral damage, is opposed by big companies such as Google, local search engine Yandex, Internet resources such as Wikipedia and thousands of website operators and users.
But just as protests including last weeks blackout by 1,700 sites subside, a more unconventional front is opening up.
Later today pirate activists in five regions Moscow, St. Petersburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Kazan and Khabarovsk will submit documents to begin the process of having their church officially recognized by the authorities.
If that all goes to plan in a few years time Russia will have its own Church Kopimizma, but for the faithful there are important issues to be dealt with right now.
As soon as the papers are filed the churchs founders will file a lawsuit against the anti-piracy legislation that came into force August 1. They will do this on the basis that the law, which restricts copying and sharing, is an insult to Kopimists.
But according to lawyer Victor Naumov, separation of religion and state in Russia means that its unlikely that the complaint will achieve much, although an appeal could be made to the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation.
Nevertheless, the movements early followers are already showing commitment. Izvestia reports that a Kopimist-inspired wedding between Olga Koroleva and Vladislav Petrushenka took place yesterday but instead of the traditional exchange of rings, the pair exchanged microchips which they plan to have embedded in their bodies.
However, Church Kopimizma announced on Facebook that the pirate wedding was actually the outcome of a collaboration between Pastafarians and the Russian Pirate Church.
The new Russian Kopimist church will closely follow the values pioneered by Swedens Church of Kopimism, a religion that was formally recognized by the authorities there in 2012.
This means that its likely that CTRL+C and CTRL+V will likely be held as sacred symbols, and the acts of sharing and copying will be viewed as the most beautiful things in the world. The church also believes that the value of information increases the more its spread and that while confidentiality is sacred, listening in to other peoples conversations is the greatest sin.
....As soon as the papers are filed the churchs founders will file a lawsuit against the anti-piracy legislation that came into force August 1. They will do this on the basis that the law, which restricts copying and sharing, is an insult to Kopimists. But according to lawyer Victor Naumov, separation of religion and state in Russia means that its unlikely that the complaint will achieve much, although an appeal could be made to the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation.
Aaaarrggghhh ... Yar, avast matey!
I thought this was about Somalians. What IS it about?
Holy forbidden fruit, Batman! Someone took a bite from the sacred Apple in the garden of copyrights. A damnable sin!
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