Categories: Web

GoDaddy “no longer supports sopa” after Cheezburger, Wikipedia, & others threaten boycott

GoDaddy has dramatically reversed its support for The Stop Online Piracy Act, the controversial US legislation currently being debated in Congress which would allow for greater controls over what websites US citizens could access.

Credit: WarX, edited by Manuel Strehl

A massive backlash on Twitter and Reddit over the past day saw thousands of GoDaddy customers threatening to move their websites away from the company; several stated that they had already.

GoDaddy was faced with the threat of losing thousands of customers in the boycott movement.  Most prominently the CEO of the Cheezburger network of sites, Ben Huh (@benhuh), yesterday threatened to move the network’s 1,000 domains from the company while today Wikipedia’s CEO, Jimmy Wales (@jimmy_wales), tweeted that the online encyclopedia will move its domains from GoDaddy; stating GoDaddy’s “position on SOPA was unacceptable to us.

https://twitter.com/benhuh/status/149965881479397376″ data-datetime=”2011-12-22T21:33:47+00:00

https://twitter.com/jimmy_wales/status/150287579642740736″ data-datetime=”2011-12-23T18:52:05+00:00

GoDaddy made the announcement in a statement today, simply saying “Go Daddy is no longer supporting SOPA, the ‘Stop Online Piracy Act’.”  The company goes on to say that it has “worked with federal lawmakers for months to help craft revisions to legislation [and to] express the concerns of the entire Internet community and to improve the bill by proposing changes to key defined terms, limitations on DNS filtering to ensure the integrity of the Internet, more significant consequences for frivolous claims, and specific provisions to protect free speech.”

The company’s CEO Warren Adelman also said, “Go Daddy is rooted in the idea of First Amendment Rights and believes 100 percent that the Internet is a key engine for our new economy.”

GoDaddy was one of a number of organisations to support the bill, including Sony, Microsoft, Dell, and MacAfee.  But the bill faces strong opposition from Facebook, Google, Yahoo!, Mozilla, LinkedIn, Twitter, eBay, AOL, and Zynga.

Speaking in The Netherlands earlier this month Google’s  director of public policy said YouTube “would go dark” under such laws.

In an odd move GoDaddy said it will remove blog posts it had written which outlined its support for sections of SOPA.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

View Comments

Recent Posts

Why these 10 digital engineering providers are leaders in the enterprise

In 2026, while many areas of the economy are contracting, the tech industry continues to…

17 hours ago

The nostalgia wave of the 2020s revived the heritage debate 

In the archives of nearly every major heritage brand – Louis Vuitton, Mercedes-Benz, Coca-Cola or…

2 days ago

Imagine Your Life as a Game Controlled by Someone Else

You woke up this morning, made a series of choices, and ended up here reading…

3 days ago

The Internet’s Writing Problem Is No Longer Easy to Ignore

Writing sucked long before LLMs showed up. Sure, today's doomsayers love pointing at ChatGPT as…

3 days ago

DARPA O-Circuit program wants drones that can smell danger with ‘a new class of biologically inspired computer’

DARPA's O-Circuit program looks to build a new class of biologically inspired computer equipped with…

1 week ago

How a ten-day bootcamp is helping students at Delhi Public School hone their AI skills 

As AI races into classrooms worldwide, Google is finding that the toughest lessons on how…

1 week ago