Tillis, who serves as the chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property, first discussed the bill to be introduced with the
CASE Act and the Trademark Modernization Act as part of a package to be included with the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 on December 4, 2020, according to congressional aides that had spoken to the website
Protocol. The text of Tillis' bill had not be available, but according to
Protocol, it "would provide the DOJ with the authority to charge commercial enterprises that are streaming certain kinds of works with felony copyright infringement". Similar concerns were raised by an article in
The American Prospect. The bill's intent raised concerns from tech companies and free speech advocates as it was not clear if this would also target individual users, including
online streamers. Tillis assured those concerned that the bill was narrowly tailored towards commercial sites and would not criminalize individual users. He specifically stated that information in
The American Prospect article was "false and inaccurate", and the bill was "drafted to not sweep in normal practices by online service providers and good faith business disputes".
Public Knowledge, who had raised concerns prior to this, said that after reviewing the bill's language that they consider the bill to be narrowly tailored and thanked Tillis for "working to prevent risk to end users and legitimate streamers and streaming platforms". The bill, along with the CASE Act and Trademark Modernization Act, were incorporated into the text of the December 21, 2020, version of the Consolidated Appropriations Act. Trump stated opposition to the combined bill and did not immediately sign it but ultimately signed it into law on December 27, 2020. ==See also==