This will hugely effect how we educate the masses! 
Including how I will be able to share info on my blog!
At midnight tonight, Wikipedia will go black  in protest of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and Protect IP Act  (PIPA), two anti-piracy bills that have Internet companies up in arms  over the future of the medium.
The bills, meant to chasten overseas torrent sites like The Pirate  Bay into compliance, have many concerned that it might open the door to future Internet censorship and abuse.  Last month, founders at top tech firms like Google, Twitter, Yahoo, and  eBay joined together to express their misgivings about the broadly  written legislation.
Wikipedia is the largest site yet to take part in the January 18 protest, joining Reddit and the popular Cheezburger network in the plan to go off-line.
"We've all had the good  fortune to found Internet companies and nonprofits in a regulatory  climate that promotes entrepreneurship, innovation, the creation of  content and free expression online," they wrote in an open letter of opposition.  "However, we're worried that the PROTECT IP Act and the Stop Online  Piracy Act—which started out as well-meaning efforts to control piracy  online—will undermine that framework."
Wikipedia is the largest site yet to take part in the January 18  protest, joining Reddit and the popular Cheezburger network in the plan  to go off-line. Mozilla, maker of popular Internet browser Firefox,  launched their own campaign in the fall, and nonprofit Fight for the Future has an online petition that supporters can sign and send to their congressperson.
 Although microblogging site  Twitter signed last month's letter of opposition, CEO Dick Costolo said  over the weekend that the site would not be joining the blackout. "That's just silly. Closing a global business in reaction to single-issue national politics is foolish," tweeted Costolo after a journalist asked whether Twitter, Facebook, or Google would have the "cojones" to go dark tomorrow.