- SOPA visual petition riles up the ‘geek lobby’ (Maura Judkis, The Washington Post, 13 December 2011)
- Opinion – What SOPA Means for a Non-US Citizen (Drew Wilson, ZeroPaid, 14 December 2011)
- GoDaddy Supports SOPA–Learn How to Transfer Your Domain and Save the Internet (Vanessa Howell, Technology Poet, 22 December 2011)
- GoDaddy No Longer Supports SOPA (Greg Kumparak, TechCrunch, 23 December 2011)
- 검열과 반대의 제도들: 미국의 사례 [인주찾기 제4회 컨퍼런스: 심의를 심의한다] (@capcold, 15 January 2012)
- SOPA/Blackout – Wikimedia Foundation (18 January 2012)
- Why SOPA is a bad idea: Clay Shirky on TED.com (18 January 2012)
- SOPA and PIPA (Salman Khan, The Khan Academy, 18 January 2012)
- What’s the difference between SOPA and PIPA? (Alice Marwick, 17 January 2012, Social Media Collective)
- The Berkman Community Responds to SOPA/PIPA (18 January 2012)
- The False Ideals of the Web (Jaron Lanier, The New York Times, 18 January 2012)
- Artists: SOPA Would Hurt More Than Help (Peter Pachal, Mashable, 18 January 2012)
- Archive: The Web against SOPA (PJ Rey, Cyborglogy, 19 January 2012)
- The SOPA Blackout and Three Channels of Influence (David Karpf, Shouting Loudly, 19 January 2012)
- Sopa and Pipa protests not over, says Wikipedia (Dave Lee, BBC News, 19 January 2012)
- The Chinese View of SOPA (Evan Osnos, The New Yorker, 19 January 2012)
- SOPA Explodes on Twitter, Generates 2.4 Million Tweets (Mashable, 19 January 2012)
- RT @vagabondjack #SOPA: The penalty for pirating Michael Jackson’s music is five years in prison. The penalty for *killing* Michael Jackson is just four. (20 January 2012)
- SOPA bill shelved after global protests from Google, Wikipedia and others (The Washington Post, 20 January 2012)
- Rick Falkvinge: the Swedish radical leading the fight over web freedoms (Carole Cadwalladr, The Guardian, 22 January 2012) “Where are we going?” Falkvinge asks rhetorically. “I think we are the next Greens.”