Senators Burr and McConnell Try to Ram Through CISA Without Regard to Process or Privacy Concerns
WASHINGTON, DC 鈥 Tonight, Senator Burr, with Senator McConnell鈥檚 support, introduced the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 () as an amendment to this year鈥檚 National Defense Authorization Act.
国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute (OTI) strongly opposes CISA because it would:
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Increase government access to innocent Americans鈥 personal data;
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Enhance the NSA鈥檚 access to Americans鈥 private information and undermine civilian control of domestic cybersecurity;
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Undermine Americans鈥 rights to privacy and due process;
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Permit companies to monitor all of Americans鈥 online communications and activities; and
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Authorize companies to retaliate against suspected
threats, even if such action would violate the anti-hacking statute, the
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
An in-depth analysis of CISA is available , and a one-page backgrounder is available .
Additionally, a coalition letter led by OTI and signed by 55 civil
society groups and security experts opposing CISA is available .
The following statement can be attributed to OTI Policy Counsel, Robyn Greene:
“Last week, the Senate made history when it passed
the USA FREEDOM Act, taking a major step forward for Americans’
privacy. Passing CISA would be like taking two steps back. CISA is
essentially a cyber-surveillance bill that would empower the NSA and FBI
by giving them access to vast new troves of Americans鈥 information, and
let them use that information for investigations that have nothing at
all to do with cybersecurity.”
鈥淚n addition to our serious substantive concerns –
there are some pretty big procedural concerns here too. Senator
McConnell has clearly forgotten his promise to run the Senate in a way
that encourages debate and reasonable process. For the second time in a
month he is trying to ram through a controversial bill – and just like
his attempts at a straight Patriot Act reauthorization, this will fail
迟辞辞.鈥