Reintroduced CISPA bill threatens Internet privacy
The sharing Act and the Cyber Intelligence protection (CISPA) has been reintroduced on Wednesday by the House Intelligence Committee. Bill is a controversial security law cyber-based information sharing that emerged in 2012. House Committee Chairman Mike Rogers (R-Mich) wrote the bill with the Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md .) in an effort to facilitate the sharing of real-time data between government and the private sector. As a way to better defend against cyber attacks.
Last year, the bill died in the Senate when done in the House, despite strong opposition from the Obama administration and civil liberties groups. While most of Washington feels there is a need to share information, others thought the bill would give government too easy access to private information of Americans.
So it will succeed this time? According www.politico.com, "The American Civil Liberties Union and others have taken their sound alarms about the bill because it still lacks the language explicitly require companies to rob personally identifiable information from data exchanged through the program. "
spokesman for the White House, Caitlin Hayden told Politico, "Our conviction remains that the information sharing improvements are essential to the legislation, but must include the protection of privacy and appropriate civil liberties, strengthen the appropriate roles of civilian and intelligence agencies, and protections of responsibility
backers of CISPA are ready to defend their bill and will continue to visit the white House, the protecting groups personal information and others as they feel that their job is to educate people on what the bill. [1945006comprennentciblée"]
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