Letter from 48 Advocacy Organizations, Security Experts, and Academics: New Cybersecurity Bill is a Threat To Privacy and Internet Security
WASHINGTON, DC&苍产蝉辫;鈥 Today, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute along with 25 other advocacy organizations and 22 security experts and academics sent a to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence strongly opposing the latest version of the Cyber Information Sharing Act (CISA), which the committee is expected to vote on in a closed session sometime this month. A markup of the bill was originally scheduled for tomorrow but was postponed.
The , which was leaked online last month, raises serious privacy and Internet security concerns. As the letter states:
鈥淐ISA disregards the fact that information sharing can 鈥 and to be truly effective, must 鈥 offer both security and robust privacy protections. The legislation fails to achieve these critical objectives by including:
- Automatic NSA access to personal information shared with a governmental entity
- Inadequate protections prior to sharing
- Dangerous authorization for countermeasures
- Overbroad authorization for law enforcement use
OTI published an of these and other concerns that CISA raises.
鈥淭his letter shows that four dozen leading privacy and security experts and organizations agree: CISA is the perfect example of what not to do when drafting cybersecurity information sharing legislation,鈥 says Robyn Greene, Policy Counsel with 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute. 鈥淐ongress has been pursuing deeply flawed info-sharing bills like CISA for nearly half a decade, and each bill has stalled because of serious concerns raised by the privacy community. Now that security experts are joining our opposition, and telling them that CISA isn鈥檛 just bad for privacy but bad for cybersecurity itself, perhaps Congress will finally reassess its approach.鈥
鈥淐ongress鈥 approach to cybersecurity policy has been broken for years. It鈥檚 time for a new approach that doesn鈥檛 treat indiscriminate information sharing like it鈥檚 a silver bullet that will solve all of our problems,鈥 said Kevin Bankston, Policy Director at 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute. 鈥淲hen nearly two dozen leading Internet security experts tell Congress that it鈥檚 going in the wrong direction on cybersecurity, maybe it鈥檚 time for policymakers to go back to the drawing board and try something new.鈥