Showing posts with label homeland security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeland security. Show all posts

GCIS CYBER-SECURITY BRIEFING: New Cybersecurity Bill Not A Hit With Civil Liberties Groups

 

ISSUED BY: GCIS Communications Command Center

SOURCE: HS Today

25February2011 8:00pmEST

GCIS CYBER-SECURITY UPDATE: The Cybersecurity and Internet Freedom Act, introduced February 17 by Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman, Sen. Joe Lieberman, (I-Conn.) ranking member Sen. Susan Collins, (R-Maine), and Federal Financial Management Subcommittee Chairman Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), is meeting with a chilly reception by civil liberties groups.
 
The bill is a revision of legislation originally proposed last year, Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act of 2010, that was updated to counter fears that the law, if enacted, could allow a president Cybersecurity billto shut down or otherwise take control of the Internet in an emergency via a “kill switch."
 
The  new bill explicitly states that “neither the President, the Director of the National Center for Cybersecurity and Communications or any officer or employee of the United States Government shall have the authority to shut down the Internet.” It also provides an opportunity for judicial review of designations of our most sensitive systems and assets as “covered critical infrastructure.”
 
“We want to clear the air once and for all,” Libermann said when reintroducing the bill. “There is no so-called ‘kill switch’ in our legislation because the very notion is antithetical to our goal of providing precise and targeted authorities to the President.”
 
Civil liberties groups including  the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), voiced concerns over the new bill, insisting that that powers granted to the federal government in the bill remain potentially excessive.
 
“The president would have essentially unchecked power to determine what services can be connected to the Internet or even what content can pass over the Internet in a cybersecurity emergency,” EFF Senior Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston said in a statement Friday. “Our concerns have not changed.” (read full report)

"GCIS INTELLIGENCE UPDATE" is an intelligence briefing presented by Griffith Colson Intelligence Service, and provided to the public for informative purposes only. All subject matter is credited to it's source of origin, and is not intended to represent original content authored by GCIS, it's partners or affiliates. All opinions presented are those of the author, and not necessarily those of GCIS or it's partners.

GCIS INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING: Color-Coded Terror Warnings to Be Gone by April 27

ISSUED BY: GCIS Communications Command Center

SOURCE: ABC News

27January2011 12:43pmEST

GCIS INTELLIGENCE UPDATE:  By the end of April, terror threats to the U.S. will no longer be described in shades of green, blue, yellow, orange and red, The Associated Press has learned.

Advisory level to be phased out April 27The nation's color-coded terror warning system will be phased out beginning this week, according to government officials familiar with the plan. The officials requested anonymity to speak ahead of an announcement scheduled Thursday by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

The Homeland Security Department and other government agencies have been reviewing the Homeland Security Advisory System's usefulness for more than a year. One of the most notable changes to come: The public will no longer hear automated recordings at U.S. airports stating that the threat level is orange.

The Obama administration will take the next three months to roll out a replacement, which will be called the National Terrorism Advisory System. The new plan calls for notifying specific audiences about specific threats. In some cases, it might be a one-page threat description sent to law enforcement officials describing the threat, what law enforcement needs to do about it and what the federal government is doing, one of the officials said.  (read full report)