Deeplinks Blog posts about Cyber Security Legislation
Today, House leadership released text of the 2016 "Omnibus package." The legislative package is supposed to deal exclusively with funding the federal government through 2016; however, leadership also managed to include a dangerous cybersecurity "information sharing" bill. The cybersecurity bill is a combination of three bad cybersecurity bills passed by Congress this year: two pieces of legislation in the House and another--called the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA)--in the Senate.
Update: The final text of CISA is being negotiated right now. Take action here.
CISA passed out of the Senate by a disappointing vote of 74-21 last week. The bill has already passed out of the House, and now it goes to a conference committee to work out any differences between the House and Senate version, back to both houses for an up or down vote without any amendments, and then to the President’s desk. Unlike previous years, we haven’t heard any veto threats for CISA, so it’s clear some version of the fundamentally flawed bill will become law.
CISA passed the Senate today in a 74-21 vote. The bill is fundamentally flawed due to its broad immunity clauses, vague definitions, and aggressive spying authorities. The bill now moves to a conference committee despite its inability to address problems that caused recent highly publicized computer data breaches, like unencrypted files, poor computer architecture, un-updated servers, and employees (or contractors) clicking malware links.
CISA, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, advanced in a procedural vote last week and will have its final vote today, Tuesday. EFF continues to strongly oppose the bill.
Today, the bill's sponsors released an amendment previewing the final version of the bill. It's the second time in as many days and it should be a sign to Senators that more debate is needed on CISA.
The edits fix routine spelling errors, but also delete important reports about cybersecurity—one report on the risks to critical infrastructure and another on the government's adoption of security software. If CISA is really about protecting computer security, then the deletion of these reports is uncalled for.
Update: The Senate advanced CISA 85-14. You can see how your Senator voted here. Amendments to CISA will be voted on Monday. After a final vote early next week in the Senate, CISA will move to a conference committee where House and Senate leaders will resolve differences between the House-passed and Senate-passed bills. The final text will then be presented to Congress for a final vote in both chambers.
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