March’s Letter from OTI Director Kevin Bankston
Dateline: Austin, Texas, March 14, 2017
As DC digs out from the last snow of winter storm Stella, I must say it鈥檚 been a turbulent winter鈥攁nd I鈥檓 not just talking about the weather. 聽Over the past month, the attacks on internet openness and security that we have been聽聽for since the election finally began in earnest.听补苍诲听聽are under siege at the FCC and in Congress. FBI Director Comey聽in a new speech last week, making clear that we鈥檙e not yet done with that fight. Lawmakers in the House held their, kicking off the latest battle over that controversial mass surveillance law set to expire at the end of the year. And last week鈥檚 massive leak of information about the CIA鈥檚 cache of hacking tools highlighted just how far we have to go in our fight to regulate government hacking and strengthen the rules around government disclosure of software vulnerabilities鈥攁 fact that OTIers highlighted in聽and the, as well as on.
I鈥檓 writing this letter in Austin on my final day at the SXSW Interactive conference, where last week鈥檚 CIA leaks served as a timely albeit worrisome lead-in to our panel on government hacking and vulnerability disclosure,. And even here in Texas in mid-March, when the weather is supposed to be sunny and spring-like, this year鈥檚 conference weekend was cold, dark, and wet. That foreboding weather mirrored the tone of much of the, where聽hung over the proceedings like a dark cloud. 鈥淚鈥檝e never seen in my lifetime an atmosphere of fear as I鈥檝e seen now,鈥 said Senator Cory Booker in his, while OTI friend and ally Kate Crawford鈥攊n what was for me the highlight of the conference鈥斅爐hat emerging AI technologies may ultimately become tools of fascism unless we act now to thoughtfully guide how they are designed and deployed.
Kate rightfully warned of聽in the title of her keynote. The past few have been dark indeed. But as I sit here on a patio in Austin at one of the coffee shops that I haunted as a University of Texas student two decades ago, when I was聽to pursue a career fighting for digital rights, the sun has finally come back from behind the clouds. Here, feeling renewed purpose, surrounded by the best and brightest minds that tech has to offer, and thinking back to the team back at OTI HQ and how hard they鈥檝e been preparing for the fights to come, I can only think of two words:
That鈥檚 how OTI policy counsel Robyn Greene responded earlier this month when the House held its surveillance hearing, and that鈥檚 how we all need to respond as we enter what is sure to be an embattled spring: Game on. Bring it. We鈥檙e not afraid. We鈥檙e ready for the fights ahead. 聽And we have countless allies鈥攁llies like you. So, thank you for your continuing support of OTI and its mission, and I hope you too are feeling as inspired and renewed as we are by the coming spring. I also hope you鈥檒l continue to keep an eye out for new allies that we can add to our team, as we are still looking to fill a number of聽.