Reddit is a company no? This seems like a pretty good investment to me, regardless of their stance on the legislation.
They know they're not going to lose users due to a 12 hour outage and they could pretty much bet on a bit of (free) press. It would be interesting to see how much traffic this generates.
I just went through a handful of articles from google.com/news about the topic. I´m amazed how much coverage Reddit is getting in mainstream outlets like cnn, washington post etc. Lined up there with google and facebook.
Also, European here, the Fox "News" coverage was amusing...
HN has been receiving an influx of Reddit users for quite some time now. I do feel HN's quality has suffered as a result (not due to people coming from Reddit in particular, just the classic problem of quality reduction as communities grow)
The SNR in Reddit dropped when Digg destroyed what little community they had left. I hope HN dodge that particular bullet. I'm a temporary (UK-based) Reddit refugee but I'll be back on Reddit in a few hours. This is my methadone, Reddit is my smack.
One of the core issues here is the typical US-centric viewpoint that proposed a law affecting sites hosted in other nations. Which makes it annoying that the petition link requires a US zipcode. Just a little thing, but it irks me.
The petition goes to congress, you would need to be a constituent. That makes sense. For example, why would the German MP in the EU parliantment care what I have to think as an American?
Many people in the US have a chip on their shoulder about the US taking even a tiny bit of friendly advice from the rest of the world.
When John Kerry mentioned the need for global consensus in one of the presidential debates, George Bush pounced and Kerry immediately tried to back off.
That is the political reality in the states when it comes to outside influence. Even a hint of it, from the best of friends, is not tolerated.
Their governments could try (citizens likely wouldn't be able to), but we've seen how that's worked in the past. The only countries who can change US policy is China and Israel.
And then global productivity greatly increased as no one was browsing Reddit or getting lost in Wikipedia. Everyone then agreed that SOPA was a good thing and we all lived in productive ignorance forever. The End.
That is of not much use to the user. By blacking out the whole page, users are now forced to read about the Reddit's stand against SOPA and PIPA which people might miss if Reddit follows your suggestion. Even people ignorant about SOPA and PIPA will read this and get a clear understanding about it
As a side note, is Reddit directing to a 502 page for anyone else? I thought they were going to post streams, links, etc.
Maybe they're just not ready yet?
EDIT: It's up now.