
	by Hayley Tsukayama
	
	April 27, 2012
	from 
	TheWashingtonPost Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	The House passed the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) 
	Thursday night, despite some controversy over how the bill addresses privacy 
	and a threat of a veto from the White House.
	
	The measure, designed to make it easier for the federal government and 
	private sector to share cyber threat data with each other, was approved by a 
	248-168 vote.
	
	Its supporters and opponents were quick to issue statements following 
	passage of the bill, which now moves to the Senate.
	
	The Obama administration had issued a veto threat against CISPA earlier this 
	week. The White House has previously endorsed a bill from Sens. Joseph 
	Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), which would put 
	cybersecurity oversight and private sector coordination in the hands of the 
	Department of Homeland Security.
	
	
	Some business interests have opposed this proposal, saying it would add 
	unnecessarily regulation. Business groups hailed the CISPA’s passage, saying 
	that it will make it much easier for the private sector to share possible 
	cyber threat information without additional regulatory burden.
	
	Robert Holleyman, president and chief executive of the Business Software 
	Alliance, said in a statement that the act is,
	
		
		“critical because it unties 
	the hands of companies on the front lines of the digital economy.”
	
	
	Other business leaders urged the Senate to pass the bill quickly. 
	
		
		“We 
	strongly urge the Senate to swiftly take up this issue because the United 
	States cannot afford to wait to improve our nation’s cybersecurity posture,” 
	said TechAmerica President and chief executive Shawn Osborne. 
		 
		
		“Standing pat 
	will only further risk our national security.”
	
	
	Privacy advocates, however, remained concerned that the measure will violate 
	basic civil liberties.
	
	The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), which withdrew its support for the 
	bill on Wednesday, said it was,
	
		
		“disappointed that CISPA passed the House in 
	such flawed form and under such a flawed process.” 
	
	
	While the group was 
	pleased with some of the amendments, which tried to narrow the scope and 
	language of the bill, the group is still concerned that CISPA allows 
	information to move,
	
		
		“from the private sector directly to the NSA.” 
		
	
	
	They also 
	said that the bill inappropriately allows for data to be applied to national 
	security issues other than cybersecurity.
	
	In a statement, the American Civil Liberties Union said that it is 
	concerned. 
	
		
		“CISPA goes too far for little reason,” said Michelle Richardson, 
	ACLU legislative counsel. 
		 
		
		“Cybersecurity does not have to mean abdication of 
	Americans’ online privacy. As we’ve seen repeatedly, once the government 
	gets expansive national security authorities, there’s no going back. We 
	encourage the Senate to let this horrible bill fade into obscurity.”
	
	
	Shortly after the the House passed CISPA, it also unanimously approved 
	another cybersecurity measure: 
	
		
		amendments to the Federal Information 
	Security Management Act (FISMA) proposed by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), 
	which address security on the government federal computer systems. 
		
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	CISPA
	
	-  
	
	Four Viewpoints You Should Hear   
	-
	by Christina DesMarais
	
	April 28, 2012
	from 
	PCWorld Website
	
	 
	
	
	
	Citing its effort to better protect American infrastructure from foreign 
	attacks, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Cyber Information and 
	Security Protection Act April 26 in spite of worries that consumer data 
	privacy will be compromised if the bill eventually becomes law.
	
	In an interesting and informative debate hosted by KQED public radio Joshua 
	Johnson in San Francisco yesterday, several parties with strong opinions 
	weighed in on the matter - one that stirs up a plethora of questions.
	
	For instance, can CISPA really protect America from hackers who could do 
	nefarious things such as shut down or blow up power plants? 
	
	 
	
	While the answer 
	isn’t cut and dried, certainly cyber terrorists could feasibly do a lot of 
	harm. In fact, as Johnson pointed out, just this week Iran took several of 
	its oil terminals offline due to fears hackers would program the machinery 
	to self-destruct.
	
	And will fears about terrorism ultimately trump the popular desire to keep 
	regular people’s data private? As we become more entrenched in all things 
	online and the social data revolution continues to unfold, is 
	a society 
	reminiscent of Orwell’s Big Brother or - to use a more modern prophecy from 
	popular culture - the movie Minority Report inescapable in years to come?
	
	These questions have no easy answers. The good news is that dialogue on the 
	policy front and in the tech media is earnest and unrelenting. 
	
	 
	
	Here are what 
	several experts had to say during yesterday’s debate:
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Against CISPA - EFF
	
	
	Rainey Reitman, activism director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, is 
	an outspoken contributor to the CISPA debate. 
	
	 
	
	Reitman said that while CISPA 
	proponents employ rhetoric that the bill will “fend off a cyber Pearl 
	Harbor,” what they’re really doing is inciting fears of security threats 
	when, in fact, such concerns have existed for years. 
	
		
		“I do think there is a 
	need for companies to get more information from the government in a timely 
	fashion. The problem that arises with CISPA is that it does so much more 
	than that,” she says.
	
	
	Like what?
	
		
		“It also opens the floodgates for companies to intercept communications of 
	everyday Internet users and pass unredacted personal information to the 
	governments,” she says, adding that several amendments to the bill would 
	have addressed such concerns but they never made it to the House floor for a 
	vote.
	
	
	Reitman says civil liberties groups like the EFF don’t want cyber security 
	programs to be a method by which intelligence agencies or the military can 
	garner information about American citizens.
	
	As for why many companies such as Facebook support CISPA, Reitman says the 
	companies understandably want to be better informed about security 
	vulnerabilities and promise not to spy on users or hand unredacted 
	information over to the government. 
	
	 
	
	On the other hand, she says CISPA as it 
	stands now lets companies bypass all existing privacy law and pass citizens’ 
	personal data to the government even if there’s a weak excuse that the 
	information is related to cyber security purposes.
	
		
		“The government in return has said that if they get information that’s 
	unrelated to cyber security they “may” - don’t have to, but may choose to - remove some of the implications toward civil liberties. But they don’t 
	have to and there’s no real guidelines on what they would have to do about 
	it,” she says. 
		 
		
		“What we want[are] actual laws in place that make that 
	impossible or difficult. In the very least that if the government wants 
	personal information about users of services including the content of 
	e-mails they [have to ] go to a judge and get a warrant.”
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	For CISPA - Information Technology Industry Council
	
	
	Dean Garfield, president and CEO of the Information Technology Industry 
	Council, has also weighed in on behalf of that industry organization. 
	
	
	 
	
	Garfield said 95 percent of the data breaches that take place on the 
	Internet are breaches of people’s personal information - things like social 
	security numbers and credit card numbers. 
	
		
		“This is really about protecting 
	the people who are a part of the Internet ecosystem on an everyday basis and 
	that’s why it’s so critically important,” he says.
	
	
	He also makes the point that CISPA doesn’t mandate that companies give the 
	government information, but that doing so is voluntary.
	
	As for why cyber security is so important now, Garfield says it’s a problem 
	that just keeps getting worse and he points to data that said between 2009 
	and 2010 there was an increase of 93 percent in cyber security breaches.
	
		
		“Most of us spend seven-plus hours a day in a network environment in front 
	of our computer and so we make all sorts of information available on the 
	Internet. It’s an integral part of our everyday life. And of the information 
	that’s being compromised, 95 percent of it is our personal information and 
	it’s important that we take steps to protect that. 
		 
		
		And there are simple 
	straightforward ways to do that which from our perspective and from the 
	majority of the Congress’ perspective CISPA was a vehicle for doing just 
	that.”
	
	
	One fly in CISPA’s pie has been that the White House staff says it will 
	recommend to President Obama that he veto the bill if it makes it to his 
	desk.
	
	 
	
	However, Garfield asserts that the recommendation was made regarding a 
	prior version of the bill and not the amended version that was passed by the 
	House of Representatives.
	
	As for concerns about the bill giving the government free reign to get its 
	hands on whatever data it convinces companies to give it, Garfield says 
	that’s not a concern.
	
		
		“In fact, there was an amendment in the bill that passed that makes clear 
	that CISPA doesn’t enhance the power of the NSA or any other government 
	agency to engage in the kinds of activity that Rainey’s talking about…For 
	example, the bill sunsets in five years. 
		 
		
		It has a FOIA (Freedom of 
	Information Act clause) so that those who want to find out the types of 
	information that’s being shared can do so. It sets up the process which I 
	don’t think has existed anywhere else where if the government misuses 
	private information, it’s subject to liability for that misuse of 
	information. “
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	A Tech Entrepreneur Speaks Out
	
	
	A caller into KQED's show identified as “Bruce in Los Gatos” said he is a 
	long-time serial entrepreneur in Silicon Valley who, along with other tech 
	innovators, has invested heavily to develop services, social media, GPS, and 
	mobile apps that give him insight into the behavior and habits of consumers. 
	
	
		
		“We take pride for the most part in doing the best job we can to use the 
	data responsibly and give consumers value around that,” he says.
	
	
	What concerns him about CISPA and other previous bills that have been under 
	consideration is that the government seems to want to get at that data. 
	
		
		“And 
	the courts thus far haven’t been very tough on the government in preventing 
	them from accessing it.”
	
	
	He also points out that modern technology and services companies 
	legitimately know where and when people travel and with whom they 
	communicate.
	
		
		“But if the government should choose to start to aggregate and track that 
	data, it’s very concerning. And I would be concerned as a consumer that 
	there aren’t more safeguards in place to prevent the government from just 
	grabbing that data or forcing the companies to turn it over in secret,” he 
	said.
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	What Will Happen to CISPA in the Senate?
	
	
	Garfield says he’s still hopeful about the bill’s future and Reitman says 
	the EFF’s goal is to have a voice in whatever bill the Senate considers.
	
	That said, Jennifer Martinez, technology policy reporter for Politico, says 
	Democratic sources told her that CISPA is “basically dead on arrival” 
	because of the privacy concerns associated with it. 
	
	 
	
	She also says that 
	nothing will happen with CISPA at least for the next week because the Senate 
	is currently in recess and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has said the 
	issue will get picked up sometime in May.
	
	What’s most likely to get attention first, Martinez says, is a bill by 
	Senator Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) that supports a different method of 
	evading and mitigating cyber threats.
	
		
		“The main difference is that the core component [of Lieberman’s bill] puts 
	new security mandates on operators of critical infrastructures [such as] 
	utilities companies, [and] possibly water plants [whereas] CISPA is focused 
	on improving information sharing about cyber threats between the government 
	and industries so it doesn’t have that piece that addresses security gaps in 
	critical infrastructures,” she says.
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	How You Can Hear and Be Heard
	
	To listen to the entire radio interview for yourself:
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	And regardless of which side of the fence you’re on, the 
	
	EFF has posted an 
	online tool that makes it easy for you to send a tweet to your U.S. senators 
	cyber security and privacy. 
	
	 
	
	If legislators perk up when a few dozen phone 
	calls come into their offices, imagine the effect of hundreds or thousands 
	of Twitter interactions on the matter.
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	-  
	
	Why You Should Care   -
	
	
	
	CISPA
	
	by 
	
	RussiaToday 
	April 30, 2012 
	from 
	YouTube Website
	 
	
	 
	
	
	SOPA didn't die. It transformed into CISPA and again Internet privacy is 
	under attack. Tim's robot doesn't give a darn about privacy but will 
	revealing his dark online secrets change his mind? 
	
	 
	
	Find out right now!