[Chapter-delegates] ISOC Statement on CISPA
Markus Kummer
kummer at isoc.org
Fri May 4 08:39:07 PDT 2012
Dear colleagues,
My apologies: I sent at the wrong version: the corrected version should read as follows (replacing Congress with the House of Representatives).
Markus
Quote: The Internet Society (ISOC) is concerned about legislation currently under consideration in the United States. The proposed Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) was passed last week by the House of Representatives and is now before the Senate. The bill aims to provide more effective channels of communication across different federal agencies and private entities in relation to online threats. While the Internet Society recognizes the need for national security, it is concerned about the potentially broad scope of CISPA and the consequent impact this legislation might have on users' rights, especially in relation to online privacy. We are also concerned that the draft bill might bypass existing legal and private contractual obligations to protect Internet users' privacy, and lacks judicial oversight. Furthermore, placing burdensome security roles on intermediaries may also, as an unintended consequence, have a negative impact on innovation, service delivery, and, ultimately, future investment and economic growth.
The Internet Society expresses its hope that the U.S. Senate will revise the current text and work to address privacy considerations and protect citizens' rights and civil liberties in any future cybersecurity legislation. Unquote.
On May 4, 2012, at 5:26 PM, Markus Kummer wrote:
> Dear colleagues,
>
> We are planning to issue the statement below on CISPA,. It is our intention to post it on Monday.
>
> Please let us know should you have any comments.
>
> Best regards
> Markus
>
>
> Quote: The Internet Society (ISOC) is concerned about legislation currently under consideration in the United States. The proposed Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) was passed last week by the United States Congress and is now before the Senate.. The Bill aims to provide more effective channels of communication across different federal agencies and private entities in relation to online threats. While the Internet Society recognizes the need for national security, it is concerned about the potentially broad scope of CISPA and the consequent impact this legislation might have on users' rights, especially in relation to online privacy. We are also concerned that the draft Bill might bypass existing legal and private contractual obligations to protect Internet users' privacy, and lacks judicial oversight. Furthermore, placing burdensome security roles on intermediaries may, as an unintended consequence, have a a negative impact on innovation, service deliv
> ery, and, ultimately, future investment and economic growth.
>
> The Internet Society expresses its hope that the Senate will revise the current text and work to address privacy considerations and protect citizens' rights and civil liberties in any future cybersecurity legislation. Unquote.
>
>
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