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CISPA New online piracy bill
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sivispacem  |
Posted: Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 09:39
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Wilderness of Mirrors

Group: The Connection
Joined: Feb 14, 2011



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| QUOTE (Toup @ Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:00) | | Same sh*t, different name. |
Really sort of not. I find it difficult to disagree with CISPA in principal and scope. It doesn't propose any measures which decrease internet freedoms or limit public use of the internet; as far as I can tell, it's additional intelligence-gathering powers which would operate inside a framework which already exists (National Security Act 1947). In fact, most of the discussion I've seen on the issue is related to the gathering of intelligence on individuals who are involved in illegal hacking or targeted attacks on companies and nations, both internally and externally. Yes, Avaaz and the like have some fears that the same powers could be used to target people involved in piracy, but the issue with legislation like this is that it must be quite broad to encompass a massive spectrum of potential threats. I'm sure more can be done to demonstrate that people who file share illegally are not the primary target of this legislation, though much has already been done to show that. I mean, it's proposed as an alteration to the National Security Act and seeks to bring responding to cyber threats onto the statute books- which, legally in the US, there's no collective inter-agency response to as of yet. Lets have a look at what it determines a "threat" | QUOTE (CISPA) | | ...efforts to degrade, disrupt, or destroy such system or network...theft or misappropriation of private or government information, intellectual property, or personally identifiable information. |
Most rational people would struggle to see and issue there. Just look at the advocate groups involved in supporting this bill in comparison to SOPA. It's not big copyright-dependent media conglomerates, it's technology providers, security companies and the financial services industry. They've been the targets of active cyber attack, not mass scale copyright fraud. So explain exactly what incentive they would have in implementing a law dedicated to counter-piracy intelligence gathering when that's not the biggest threat to these companies and their data?
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Toup  |
Posted: Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:31
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Group: Cheesedicks

Group: Members
Joined: Jul 20, 2010


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| QUOTE (sivispacem @ Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:39) | | QUOTE (Toup @ Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:00) | | Same sh*t, different name. |
Really sort of not.
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Okay, but what I meant was that I do not really care about this since my brain was bombarded for 1 month about SOPA ACTA and PIPA. It is funny that everyone goes apesh*t when the government messes with the internet, but when there is actually a serious problem an or injustice, almost everybody ignores it. This post has been edited by Toup on Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:34
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acmilano  |
Posted: Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 15:59
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Li'l G Loc

Group: Members
Joined: Oct 26, 2011

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http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2012/0...tutional-rights| QUOTE | "It's a completely different issue [than SOPA]," says Jim Dempsey, vice president for public policy at the Center for Democracy and Technology. "This is about government monitoring. [SOPA] is about the First amendment, [CISPA] is about the Fourth, but they both take a legitimate problem and try to tackle it with an overbroad solution."
CISPA's main goal, according to sponsoring Reps. Mike Rogers and Dutch Ruppersberger, is as follows: Foreign governments and independent hackers are stealing information from American corporations all the time, costing the companies billions of dollars. The government knows how to stop these attacks and wants to help out private companies, but the current law doesn't allow them to share classified information with private companies. CISPA would open that pipeline, but it would be a two way street—the way the bill is written, companies can share users' information with the government if they sense a "cyber threat."
In a conference call with reporters Tuesday, Rogers and Ruppersberger repeatedly said that companies wouldn't be required to share information with the federal government.
"The government cannot require companies to give the government E-mails and that type of information, and it is voluntary," Ruppersberger said. "This is not surveillance. Companies can give back information about an attack as it pertains to a threat or vulnerability of a system or a network, but only as it relates to national security."
[Four Things Americans Have Learned From the SOPA Fight]
That gives some experts pause—it's overly broad, according to Dempsey.
The bill doesn't technically require companies to share data with the government, but it also doesn't require the government to share cybersecurity secrets with the companies.
"The government can say 'You want our secret sauce, give us all your data, if you play ball with us, we'll play ball with you,'" Dempsey says, although an amendment to the bill is meant to discourage required data trades. "Once [CISPA] removes the legal barriers, it becomes harder for companies to resist those inducements, which can lead them to do things they're uncomfortable with [like sharing data.]" |
So its a different than SOPA and ACTA,but this one is more about government of USA giving backdoor to justify datasearch to their citizens.This would probably fail in Congress if there is enough voices against this,still,it gave bad taste in mouth how much everybody is trying to put more control on regular citizens.
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Irviding  |
Posted: Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 23:08
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I love UAVs

Group: Andolini Mafia Family
Joined: Nov 6, 2008


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| QUOTE (sivispacem @ Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 05:16) | | QUOTE (GTAvanja @ Saturday, Apr 14 2012, 10:52) | | And who's gonna decide what exactly effort to degrade and disrupt means? |
I'm short on time and will add to this, but I just wanted to point out that these are technical terms (part of the D5E group of attack vectors) and not subject to interpretation. They have accepted meanings and scope- "degradation" is the intentional damaging and/or destruction of data on a network or system an individual is not legally permitted to access, and "disruption" is a direct attack on a network or system designed to prevent it from effectively performing it's assigned role. For instance, a DDoS attack by Anonymous is an example of "disruption" whereas the destruction of data on a company's main server by a disgruntled employee is "degradation". In addition to this, there are three other D's (denial and deceit/deception depending on who you ask) and E (exploitation)- and these different attack vectors cover all potential cyber attacks by all actors. | I think it's also important to mention that Russia Today is really opposed to this thing. I'm sure those assholes would be happy to continue with no government protection over our cyber-infrastructure
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Irviding  |
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I love UAVs

Group: Andolini Mafia Family
Joined: Nov 6, 2008


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