Revealed: CISPA -- Internet Spying Law -- Pushed by For-Profit Spy Lobby
Defense industry contractors are lobbying for the cyber security bill in
Congress that would expand the government's ability to access
information about online activity.
By Lee Fang, Republic Report
Posted on April 13, 2012, Printed on April 14, 2012
A cyber security bill moving
swiftly through Congress would give government intelligence agencies
broad powers to work with private companies to share information about
Internet users. While some critics are beginning to organize online
against the legislation, defense contractors, many already working with
the National Security Agency on related data-mining projects, are
lobbying to press forward. Like many bad policy ideas, entrenched
government contractors seem to be using taxpayer money to lobby for even
more power and profit.
The proposal, H.R.3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection
Act of 2011, introduced by Congressmen Mike Rogers (R-MI) and Dutch
Ruppersberger (D-MD), provides companies
and the government “free rein to bypass existing laws in order to
monitor communications, filter content, or potentially even shut down
access to online services for ‘cybersecurity purposes.’” Though the bill
has been compared to
SOPA given its potential to smother free speech on the Internet, the
ill-fated copyright legislation that inspired an intense lobbying battle
earlier this year, much of the tech community has has joined with
copyright interests to support CISPA.
Saturday, April 14, 2012
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