DEMAND PROGRESS

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    You've Been Owned: Tell Obama To Stop Siding With Copyright Trolls

    UPDATE: The mainstream media is starting to catch on, with the Wall Street Journal just running an article headlined, "YOUR RIGHT TO RESELL YOUR OWN STUFF IS IN PERIL".  

    You can still be the first to let your friends know about this critical issue before it gets HUGE in a few weeks.  

    Please use these links, or link your website or blog back go this contact-Congress page:

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    ORIGINAL:
    We need your help: Once again, the film studios and record companies that tried to censor the Internet are up to no good. The same business lobbyists who backed SOPA are trying to stop you from reselling most of the things that you own -- and President Obama has taken their side.

    Arguments before the Supreme Court take place later this month: Please add your name at right to tell Obama to stand with consumers and Internet users.

    A few months ago Demand Progress -- joined by over 100,000 Internet users and a coalition of public interest groups -- asked President Obama to take action and protect consumers' rights to resell their own things. The Supreme Court is currently hearing a case (Kirstaeng v. Wiley) that will decide whether you have the right to sell your iPod, books, and other goods on eBay and Craigslist -- or even at your own yard sale.

    But the entertainment industry lobbyists at the MPAA and RIAA have filed a brief in the Supreme Court mocking consumers' concerns -- just like they did during the SOPA Fight.  These special interests admit that they want the Supreme Court to decide against the interests of ordinary Americans and protect the music and film industries' "ability to control entry into distinct markets."

    You heard that right -- Hollywood thinks that controlling their CD and DVD markets is more important than consumer rights.

    Amazingly, the Obama administration agrees and has rejected the pleas of thousands of ordinary consumers: The White House's solicitor general filed a legal brief rejecting our arguments and allowing big businesses to sue people for reselling their things online.

    Just sign on at right to email President Obama and your lawmakers.

    The Supreme Court will hear this case in a couple of weeks, so please get your friends involved right away:

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