President Obama Should Stick to His Principles and Veto CISA
Congress has
been trying to pass cybersecurity information sharing legislation for years. All
of these bills have failed to become law because they universally unnecessarily
undermined privacy and civil liberties and simultaneously empowered law
enforcement and intelligence community agencies like the National Security
Agency (NSA).
The
President made clear from the beginning of this debate that addressing privacy
concerns in legislation was essential, and threatened to veto the House
Intelligence Committee鈥檚 bill, (), twice. Now more than
ever, he should stand firm to those priorities.
CISPA first debuted
in 2011 and privacy groups immediately cried foul, arguing that it would 鈥渘eedlessly
impinge on Americans鈥 privacy鈥 because it would 鈥渁llow[] the transfer of vast
amounts of data, including sensitive information like internet use history or
the content of emails, to any agency in the government including鈥he National
Security Agency,鈥 and it lacked 鈥渕eaningful use restrictions鈥 for the
information once in the government鈥檚 hands. The President heard the privacy
community鈥檚 concerns and agreed. He because it failed to 鈥減reserve[] Americans鈥
privacy, data confidentiality, and civil liberties and recognize[] the civilian
nature of cyberspace.鈥
颁滨厂笔础鈥檚
proponents reintroduced the failed bill in 2013, and were met with the same and from the Administration. This time, the
White House set forth that information sharing legislation must
meet in order for the President to sign it into law:
(1)
carefully safeguard privacy and civil liberties; (2) preserve the
long-standing, respective roles and missions of civilian and intelligence
agencies; and (3) provide for appropriate sharing with targeted liability
protections.
Congress has
moved on from CISPA, but a new and equally concerning bill has taken its place:
CISA ().
This Senate Intelligence Committee bill is poised for a vote as soon as next
week. The President should again threaten a veto, as CISA suffers from many
same fatal flaws that caused him to oppose CISPA.
The President Has Demanded Adequate Privacy
Protections
The
President has stated that information sharing legislation must provide 鈥溾
and require companies to 鈥溾 it.
CISA fails to put in place that reasonable privacy protection. It would
increase government access to innocent Americans鈥 personal data by authorizing
companies to share vaguely-defined 鈥渃yber threat indicators鈥 that could include
private communications content and sensitive, personally identifiable
information, even when that data is unnecessary to identify or protect against
to a threat.
The President Has Demanded Narrow Use
Restrictions
The
President has also stated that information 鈥渟haring must be consistent with , the cybersecurity responsibilities of the
agencies involved, as well as privacy and civil liberties protections and
transparent oversight.鈥 CISA does not put in place meaningful use restrictions
that would be adequate to protect civil liberties. Instead, CISA would allow the FBI and other
federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies to use information they
receive for investigations that have nothing to do with cybersecurity, such as
investigations into garden variety violent crimes, drug crimes, arson,
carjacking, and extortion.
The President Has Demanded Civilian Control
of Domestic Cybersecurity
Finally, the
President has consistently advocated for 鈥渢he longstanding tradition to treat
the 鈥 and
opposed CISPA because it 鈥渆ffectively 鈥 by
allowing companies to share information directly with the NSA and failing to
place reasonable restrictions on the government鈥檚 use of that information.
CISA, like CISPA, empowers the NSA and fails to establish civilian
control. It would allow companies to
share information directly with the NSA. If a company shares with a civilian
agency instead, that agency would be required to automatically disseminate it
to the NSA, and would even be prohibited from scrubbing the information to
remove unnecessary personal information.
These are
just a few of the many flaws that have caused
to strongly oppose CISA. Yesterday, a coalition of over
and urged him to issue a veto threat. It
does not meet the bare minimum requirements for information sharing legislation
that the President has laid out. Now is
not the time for the him to back away from the principles he set forth,
requiring adequate protections for privacy and civil liberties, and civilian
control, by allowing CISA to become law.
President Obama should defend those principles and threaten to veto
CISA.