I don't think TC understands what SOPA will do. Blocking US IPs might be a political statement, but it won't have any affect on whether your site is vulnerable to a SOPA attack.
The core of SOPA is the fact that the root nameservers for the .com and .net top-level domains (TLDs) are under the control of Verisign, which is an American company subject to American law. Which means when you register a domain in .com or .net, you're at risk. (Possibly .org, too, I can't remember who runs the root for that these days). It's not a block. There's not going to be any "Great firewall of the USA" like China has. What they're planning to do is seize the domain itself, so that "TheBuccaneerCove.com" no longer points to a torrent search site, but to a big nastygram reminding everyone who goes there that they are all USGov's bitches.
If you're outside the US, you've got to do two things:
1. Make sure your domains are in your own country's TLD (just about every country has one) instead of .com, .net, etc...
2. Pray to whatever god you might worship that your own government has the balls to stand up to USGov and not implement the same sort of mess. (I wouldn't count on it)
The core of SOPA is the fact that the root nameservers for the .com and .net top-level domains (TLDs) are under the control of Verisign, which is an American company subject to American law. Which means when you register a domain in .com or .net, you're at risk. (Possibly .org, too, I can't remember who runs the root for that these days). It's not a block. There's not going to be any "Great firewall of the USA" like China has. What they're planning to do is seize the domain itself, so that "TheBuccaneerCove.com" no longer points to a torrent search site, but to a big nastygram reminding everyone who goes there that they are all USGov's bitches.
If you're outside the US, you've got to do two things:
1. Make sure your domains are in your own country's TLD (just about every country has one) instead of .com, .net, etc...
2. Pray to whatever god