New Cyber Security Bills Open Door To Gov't, Corporate Abuse 93
Gunkerty Jeb writes with a selection from Threatpost about upcoming legislation to watch out for: "EFF looked at two bills making their way through Congress: The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 (S. 2105), sponsored by Senator Joseph Lieberman (I-CT) of Connecticut and the Secure IT Act (S. 2151), sponsored by Senator John McCain (R-AZ). The digital rights group claims that the quality of both bills ranges from 'downright terrible' to 'appropriately intentioned.' Each, however, is conceptually similar and flawed, EFF said."
Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:4, Insightful)
Something's wrong here... we're getting far to many new copyright powers laws being proposed in Congress, and this sort of nonsense is supposed to be dead in committee and not brought to the floors. Is Hollywood sending too much money to Congress and we're not sending enough?
Re:Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Could you explain which provisions of these laws would "silence critical voices"?
From what I've just read, it looks pretty much like a bunch of laws protecting specific corporate interests and giving too much power to police to protect specific corporate interests.
Maybe you're seeing an aspect to these bills that I'm missing, so I'm hoping you can explain specifica
Re:Explain which Provisions (Score:4, Informative)
Try these excerpts from the article:
"In an e-mail conversation with Threatpost, Auerbach of EFF characterized the bills as âoealarming.â Of particular concern: a section in both the Lieberman bill and the McCain bills that authorizes monitoring by private firms of any traffic that transits their networks. Ostensibly intended to facilitate private-public information sharing, the passage would grant complete private sector immunity for data monitoring and sharing practices. Private entities would be unbound from the Wiretap Act and other legal limits and immunized against a swath of questionable monitoring practices, EFF claims.
Furthermore, Auerbach and Tien worry that the bills' definition of a "cyber security threat" is too broad, and could cover everything from stealing passwords from a secure government server to scanning a network for software vulnerabilities. Similarly, the bills calls for more ISP traffic analysis and monitoring could bring about more civil liberties violations. For example, ISPs could simply block Tor, cryptographic protocols, or traffic on certain ports under the guise of defensive countermeasures, the EFF speculated."
So given our new over-reaching governments, it's not hard to see how those kinds of measures then later get warped out of control even more than they already are.
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For example, ISPs could simply block ... cryptographic protocols... under the guise of defensive countermeasures ...
In simpler words, they want to block our use of encrypted login names, account numbers and passwords.
It might be interesting to know how the major banks are lobbying in this case. If the public comes to understand that their account information can be harvested by their ISP and other companies that provide the "wires", smart people will simply stop using electronic banking.
The companies pushing for such clauses certainly understand what clauses like the above mean, and they've included it so that they
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Sure, that would hurt all sorts of online commerce. And since, in their view, the entire purpose of the Internet is commerce, it's going to be a big problem.
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I get it. Once you take away the ability to encrypt, you take away the ability to be anonymous, too. That would certainly kill a lot of speech.
It would also kill a lot of commerce though. Once again, it sounds like legislation that has not been well thought out.
Re:ability to encrypt (Score:2)
That's one reason I keep calling this stuff "Social Division by Zero". They can just keep carving out slices of the pie to "allow encryption for commercial details but outlaw encryption for free speech". Once you get swindled by the "Fridge Logic" (see TV Tropes) then free speech law will start to be like the US Tax Code. (Which, while nasty, makes its own scary brand of internally consistent sense.)
And better bet that the big corps will just buy "Speech Licenses" to be exempt anyway.
Re:Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:5, Funny)
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Anything that goes mainstream gets regulated to death
Internet is the new casualtiy
Re:Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:5, Informative)
ObamaRomney's Top Donators:. They are just paying back the media companies to say "thank you". Oh and "Here's your copyright law to protect your old-fashioned cable or media business."
A bunch of banks plus:
University of California $1,648,685
Harvard University $878,164
Microsoft Corp $852,167
Google Inc $814,540
---> Time Warner $624,618
Sidley Austin LLP $600,298
Stanford University $595,716
---> National Amusements Inc $563,798
WilmerHale LLP $550,668
Columbia University $547,852
--> Skadden, Arps et al $543,539
UBS AG $532,674
IBM Corp $532,372
---> General Electric $529,855
US Government $513,308
Morgan Stanley $512,232
Latham & Watkins $503,295
If this list was longer we'd probably see donations from Verizon, Comcast, Sony, MGM, RIAA, and MPAA.
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I think this is it right here:
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/contrib.php?cycle=2012&id=N00009638 [opensecrets.org]
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Okay... that's freakishly too consistent.
So Obama's contributors seem to be mostly intellectual-type organisations. Universities, tech companies, law firms.
Romney's contributors are all banksters.
Maybe I'm being too rational here, but it seems to me that such a drastically obvious divide should be ground for both candidates being disqualified/removed from the race. I thought the whole point was to have one leader for the whole country, not just half of the country - or significantly less, if you subscribe
Re:Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:5, Interesting)
Obama has raised around $750M over the course of his political career, primarily from small (less than $4000) donations. Only about 0.3% of that came from those companies you highlighted, which, I might add, aren't all media companies. Skadden et al is a law firm that specializes in mergers and acquisitions... they may do some copyright law for all I know, but it's hardly a major business for them. GE sold NBC to Comcast a while back, so they aren't a media company anymore.
Furthermore, I don't think you understand what those numbers (which I assume you got from Open Secrets) mean. If you were to pick up the phone right now and call the DNC and give them a donation for $300, a few things would happen. First, they would take your name, number, and address, so that they could ask for more donations in the future. Second, they would take your job title and employer, so it could be reported on their financial disclosure forms. So let's say that you end up giving $600 a year for four years, and that you work for Widgets, Inc. That would mean that sites like Open Secrets would now show "Widgets, Inc" as having donated an additional $2400 to the DNC. If a hundred of your coworkers (out of the thousands that the company employs) do the same, it will look like Widgets, Inc has paid $240,000 to the DNC, and people would get on Slashdot demanding to know what widget-favoring laws are being passed in response.
But even setting that aside, even if we assume that all these donations are coordinated by the business in exchange for favors, do you really think that providing 0.3% of the presidents's money is enough to buy him off? Sorry to be so blunt, but that's stupid.
These laws are happening because politicians don't have a good understanding of the issues. Or maybe they're happening because the politicians legitimately disagree with you. But they are NOT being bought, and you do a disservice to our democracy when you throw that accusation around so loosely.
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The media companies need not pay the politicians, they are ones controlling, well, the media. They get to control public opinion of these politicians, which more than enough to get politicians to pass laws they like.
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Wow. Somebody who's been dupped into believing the Republican and Democrat presidents are good.
Why don't we ask the 1 million+ innocent men, women, and children that Bush and Obama have killed, and see what they think? You DO realize that Obamacare is just a giant gift to the insurance companies, giving them ~40 million new customers by mandating those uninsured persons MUST buy insurance (no wonder insurance stocks went UP after obamacare passed). Yeah he's in the pocket of the corporations. There's no
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Oh yeah. McCain is sure the first one to call for a bill that panders to those that sponsored Obama. I guess the message is "No hard feelings, even though you pumped your money into my opponent instead of me".
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US Government $513,308
That's a little ... freakish. My tax dollars hard at work!
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When they can come up with reasonably priced ticket sales, DVD/BD and CD media sales and streaming, they will thrive. As it is, they are seemingly only trying to make more and more money by suing individuals, who can't pay it anyhow, to try and recoup their ridiculous legal costs. They are a cancer unto themselves.
So, let the beast
Re:Is Congress mad at Slashdot/The Web? (Score:5, Interesting)
With all of this going on, you thought that you would be allowed to keep you free press, right to assembly, free speech and communications on the internet?
That's pretty fucking naive. Slaves don't get to have these freedoms. Only societies that treasure and fight for freedom have them. In these societies everyone is an individual and individual freedoms, regardless of race, religion, wealth or social status are all equal.
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Here's something to get you started. It took me a long time to find these and that is why I rarely take the time to search for things for people who really should be making the effort to inform themselves.
Protesting is now a felony
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SGWH3kirzg [youtube.com]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_SXcch1nw0 [youtube.com]
Martial law is both sort of here and can be declared without any emergency
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=myPENDAJdE0 [youtube.com]
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/03/16/executive-order-nat [whitehouse.gov]
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Well, we are in a state of war.
And will be forevermore.
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Note that it's LIEberman and McCain sponsoring these... and here I thought that the Democrats were supposed to be the pawns of Hollywood.
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Lieberman IS a Democrat. He switched to "independent" so he could still run after someone beat him in the Democrat Primary for his seat.
And McCain is, to put it politely, a slime mold....
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If one defines a Democrat as standing with a Democratic administration or speaking, voting, and in alignment with the Democratic platform ideals, then he is not.
If one defines a democrat as somebody from Connecticut who needs to be somewhat affiliated with the Democratic Party, then sure, he's a Democrat.
Of course, I'd say that calling Lieberman a Democrat about as honest as saying that Ted Nugent is a vegetarian...
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I'm sure Ted has put ketchup on his burgers before. That puts him squarely in the vegetable loving category.
Lieberman, however, is just a rutabaga.
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On behalf of every slime mold on this planet I do expect an apology for that unfounded, uncalled for comparison!
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Is Hollywood sending too much money to Congress and we're not sending enough?
No, the problem is that money is how voting gets done these days. Those that have more money get more voting power.
Rather than allowing voices to actually be heard, bank accounts now speak loudest. Until that is changed, democracy in the United States is dead. People advocating funds for lobbyists to stand in opposition to this (and any other proposed laws) are just as guilty as companies funding Congressmen/women.
There isn't any way to "fix" this problem. This has gone far beyond the point of no return
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What about box #5: the detonator box ?
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What about box #5: the detonator box ?
As I recall, the four boxes were:
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The idea that the MPAA and the RIAA are heading these efforts is really just a distraction. Total revenues of the entire global music industry is somewhere around $30 billion. The total movie industry revenue is higher, at about $87 billion. It's a lot of money, but look at what these bills are doing in detail. Every single one is also designed to limit the consumer market for generic medications and especially to limit (that is, abolish) the ability of US consumers to obtain prescription drugs from non
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You forget the MPAA and RIAA companies have many things in abundance and these things are more likely to drive egoistic psychopaths and narcissistic politicians.
Things like pseudo celebrity parties on mega-yachts, island resorts and hotel like mansions. Lots of drugs, including a full range of addictive pharmaceuticals (those plastic surgeons will sign off on any prescription) as well as illegal drugs, I'm talking lots and lots and lots of drugs. Ready to be abused music, movie and TV industry hopefuls,
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Obviously, you're not familiar with the pharma industry, and have never been visited by a pharma rep or attended any of their hot mess parties.
Of course lets not forget advertising as news, pure propaganda players like Fox not-News that continually run pretend interviews that are actually political adds for favoured politicians or conversely attack pieces that are even more blatant political adds.
That's not isolated - it's 99% of all media. Even MacNeil/Lehrer has been 100% scripted for years.
McCain and Lieberman? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, at least the lobbyists bought the sharpest tools in the tool chest.
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An old prophecy comes true (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything must be owned. It is the mantra of capitalism. The first peoples of the internet; the hackers, the academics, the non-profits, are now being rounded up, jailed, or forcibly deported from their homes and off their property to make way for The Man. All of this has happened before. All of this will happen again. Your days of "free" code and believing nobody can own [the internet] are coming to an end. They have guns, they have the support of the government, and this time they won't bother with that non-sense about signing treaties. And future generations will never know a world where ideas couldn't be owned, where knowledge was free, and where anonymity from corporations and governments provided fertile ground for social change.
Re:An old prophecy comes true (Score:5, Insightful)
the key to our future, as always, is the youth.
the old guys (my age) are too stuck in their ways and they'll never give up their idea of 'ownership' of internet things.
what I do worry about is the total lack of CARING on the part of the young people, today.
they happily sign away their privacy in failbook, give away their emails when any stranger asks and will parade in cow costumes in a mall just to get a 'free' lunch. they do not care! they only see the 'gimme!' side of things. quite blind, actually.
the culture is at fault. we lead our kids to 'buy buy buy!' and if the retailer offers a tiny discount in exchange for their privacy, they don't care! they saved a whole dollar!
the blame is on both sides. corp greed AND the consumer who does not see what is being done to them.
I have zero hope of things improving. but please prove me wrong! I beg you to prove me wrong.
Re:An old prophecy comes true (Score:5, Informative)
>>>what I do worry about is the total lack of CARING on the part of the young people, today.
That's what I used to think until I started visiting the Ron Paul page and talking to them (almost all 39 and younger). They are not going to let go of "their" internet. They consider it their property and their voice, and the way to fight back against the Corporate-owned NBC, FOX, CNN channels.
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I suspect that they are able to overlook the "bat shit crazy" parts just as I and many others were able to overlook the right-of-center Republican that was using the campaign slogan of "Hope And Change" not so long ago...
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Ron Paul is not bat-shit crazy. Or "racist".
YOU are the perfect example of an individual who just blindly believes whatever NBC, FOX, CNN feeds you. They TELL you that Paul is racist and you swallow it like an American swallowing Bush's propaganda that Iraq had WMDs. "I saw it on the news; it must be true." If you'd bother to do even a little bit of research, you'd discover the evidence shows the exact opposite.
Don't be such a dupe. You're allowing the Cable News channels to brainwash you Mr. Anon.
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Ron Paul was busy delivering babies during the early 90s. The letters were written by some other guy who, admittedly, Paul should have been reviewing and rejecting but he was busy being a doctor.
As for his favored support among white supremacist organizations, so what? Congressman Paul also has wide-ranging support among prostitutes and black people. Does that mean Dr. Paul is a pimp to the whores, and does ghetto-rapping on the weekends? C'mon! You fail at logic Mr. AC.
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I suspect that before things change, our generation will have to be vilified as having promoted wasteful values in a resource starved environment and allowing power to become so concentrated in the hands of our corporate masters that the people have lost their voice.
What scares me most, though, is the fact that we are so dependent on our technology and interdependent systems of manufacturing, transportation, food production and all the other bits that go to make up the systems that sustain humanity that if
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At some point in time people will look back at this time and age and wonder how we let it come to this, how we could be so blind and not see where it is heading. I guess I now understand how my grandparents didn't stand up against Hitler when there was still enough time to.
I'm in no way better.
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the old guys (my age) are too stuck in their ways and they'll never give up their idea of 'ownership' of internet things.
Sorry, but those old guys are the very ones who came up with the idea that "internet things" couldn't be owned. And they have given up that idea. Not all of the old guys, of course, just the ones in power, and that's not coincidence. And guess what? I'd lay good money that a whole pile of the idealistic "information has to be free" youth will give give up those ideals too, and that the ones who end up in power will be the ones who gave up those ideals, and that won't be coincidence either.
Re:An old prophecy comes true (Score:4, Interesting)
Our youth is already lost to Facebook, being filed and dissected for their consumerist value, lost in a world where you are what you consume, and you are if you consume, where you do not exist if you do not, or if you cannot. The value of a person is his purchasing power and his willingness to consume.
I weep for humanity.
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Was it ever different? Sure, in the 40's. but in the 50's, teens were using the hula hoop and cruising around drive-thrus, drinking and drag-racing. In the 60's they hung out at parties smoking pot, went to concerts and learned to tie-dye, read the Tarot and Mad magazine. They said that changes were coming, but when they grew up, they became the same businessmen and golf-players that their fathers were. The once-promised ideals in their hearts grew into a giant wave, but eventually that wave crested and fel
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In the same boat as you are, at a very similar age. But I dare to disagree. I see it as a culture-counter culture swing between generations, and that kinda broke down.
Every generation of youths tried to defy their parent generation. So you got to see a swing in the youth culture every 20-25 years. A war generation of the 40s with conformity, strife and sacrifice was countered by a peace, love and equality movement mixed with quite a bit of hedonism of the 60s, which in turn was countered by a dog-eat-dog ca
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Re:An old prophecy comes true (Score:4, Insightful)
The hardware of the internet was always owned by someone, of course. What changed is the culture. It used to be a culture of production, now it's a culture of consumption.
The internet of the good ol' days consisted of many people who offered ideas, opinions, guides, information, they exchanged them and built on each other, with impunity and gladly. Sure, a lot was trash and even more very specific and only interesting for a minority. But there was room for those thinkers and dreamers. It changed. Today, we have a culture where people don't create, they only want to consume. They want to take, but giving has become anathema to the Internet where you don't give. You sell. And what you don't sell, you patent. And THEN sell it.
A culture of freedom is traded for a culture of commercialism. If you don't consider this a problem, then I guess you're part of the problem.
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P.S. attributing personal characteristics to people solely by race is...what exactly? I forgot what that's called.
Culture. Saying we French Quebecers are all alcoholic cousin-fucking hippies may be offensive, but it is often accurate (just not ALL of us). Have you seen our step-cousins ? You'd hit that too!
Discriminating based on race is racism. Saying all black people should be shot/deported/launched into space because they're not white, well that's just racist.
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It's a matter of balance.
And note that part of this ingrained tendency is to destroy those few who take too much and leave everyone else with insufficient resources. We call it revolution. And in this day and age, when everything is so interdependent on everything else, from transportation to energy to food production to manufacturing to clothing and basic necessities, revolution would not be pretty at all.
Every federal bill is invasive (Score:1)
Every thing the feds do can be used nefariously, and in time regardless of its original intentions, will be.
its the nature of a federal government who ignores its rules. ( ie, the Constitution here in the US ), or has none in the first place ( like in several other countries )
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It's a sad time when you look at countries that have a mostly defunct parliament that cannot get majorities for any new laws, and you envy them.
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What the...!? (Score:1)
Well, that's just abused.
the gov is not evil, that othe guy is! (Score:5, Insightful)
quoting:
Of particular concern: a section in both the Lieberman bill and the McCain bills that authorizes monitoring by private firms of any traffic that transits their networks. Ostensibly intended to facilitate private-public information sharing, the passage would grant complete private sector immunity for data monitoring and sharing practices. Private entities would be unbound from the Wiretap Act and other legal limits and immunized against a swath of questionable monitoring practices, EFF claims.
emph mine.
THIS is what's going on. and end-run around US laws. since the US has been repeatedly caught with its hands in the cookie jar, it now tries to get some other kid to take the cookies and shift the blame to them.
sleazy and, yes, fully expected in today's 'government ethics'. ;(
the government learned it can employ corporations to do its black work.
nice, huh?
Re:the gov is not evil, that othe guy is! (Score:5, Interesting)
Also the government doesn't need a warrant to access the information & data the ISP has obtained. They conveniently skirt-around the 4th amendment by letting the corporation do the spying.
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This gets even more interesting when one considers that the government has become the tool of the corporations; that the center of power is in the boardroom, not in the halls of congress nor in the White House.
Really, the corporations are allowing themselves to spy for themselves so that the corporation's tools can have the information to impose corporate will and power.
(No, I don't hate all corporations; what scares me is the concentration of power in the hands of a very few who are not elected. Good thin
New Bills Open Doors to Abuse? (Score:2)
New Cyber Security Bills Open Door To Gov't, Corporate Abuse
Sorry, but that door you speak of has been broken down, smashed, and burned for a long time.
Nobody in power gives a shit anymore, or they're completely ignorant (and, quite possibly, mentally handicapped).
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This opens new opportunities for abuse. The language is so broad nobody can know whether what they are doing may be construed as illegal.
John McCain AGAIN?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:John McCain AGAIN?? (Score:4, Insightful)
No, stop staring at the sky, and get off your ass and do something about it.
At least make a donation to the EFF.
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Good intent, execution could use work. Try it this way next time:
At least make a donation to the EFF. [eff.org] (And consider checking the box to make a monthly donation.)
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didn't anyone get the memo (Score:2)
That stuff like this is obsolete now that nsa and the cia outsourced themselves to facebook?
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They've got the data, yes.
But they want to be able to use it openly now.
it'll at least wipe out cybercrime, right? (Score:2)
New Government Bill Aimed At Vague Threat Turns Out To Benefit Government, Corporations More Than It Actually Protects You Or Me From Vague Threat
Hey! I feel cheated! (Score:2)
I was told during the last election that McCain is rather ill and would probably not survive the term, so I shouldn't vote for him or the dud bombshell gets to be prez. I guess that's another election promise going unfulfilled.
(just in case you wondered how on earth this could be blamed on Obama)
The ThreatPost Artcle Seems to Be In Error (Score:2)
With public awareness about cyber legislation high after the dramatic failure of Stop Online PRIVACY Act (SOPA), interest in- and skepticism of new cybersecurity legislation is on the rise.
Mistaken or on purpose, it is apt.
don't you know (Score:1)