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posted by janrinok on Saturday November 16 2019, @07:16AM   Printer-friendly
from the SawStop dept.

Submitted via IRC for soylent_fuschia

Vendor wants Congress to mandate something that only they can provide. Interesting business model.

Brave Urges Congress to Require Ad Blocking Browsers for Govt Employees

In a letter to the U.S. Congress, Brave urged Homeland Security Committee members to make it mandatory for all federal employees to use a browser that blocks advertising by default.

Brave states that without a browser that blocks ads by default, federal employees would be vulnerable to malvertising, which could allow foreign and domestic threat actors to gain access to government devices or a foothold in sensitive networks.

"I represent Brave, a rapidly growing Internet browser based in San Francisco. Brave’s CEO, Brendan Eich, is the inventor of JavaScript, and co-founded Mozilla/Firefox. Brave is headquartered in San Francisco. I write to urge action to protect federal agency and employee computers and devices from cyberattacks by foreign state actors and criminals through “malvertising”."

Brave's letter also includes letters from U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, who since 2017 has been urging the federal government to take a stronger stance regarding the blocking of malicious advertisements.

One year ago, on November 16, 2017, I wrote to then-White House Cybersecurity Coordinator, Rob Joyce, regarding the threat posed by foreign government hackers using online advertisements to deliver malware to the computers of federal workers. In that letter, I urged the administration to direct DHS to require federal agencies to block delivery of all internet ads containing executable computer code to employees computers. In its response on April 20, 2018, DHS stated that it was continuing to investigate these risks and working with representatives from the online advertising industry to address this threat.

In June 2018, the National Security Agency (NSA) issued public guidance related to the threat posed by malicious advertisements. In the attached document, which NSA published on its website, the agency observed that advertising has been a known malware distribution vector for over a decade and as such, the agency recommends that organizations address this risk by blocking potentially malicious, internet-based advertisements.

As Brave sent this letter on the same day they officially released Brave Browser 1.0, this can be seen as a clever marketing ploy by the browser developers.


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by Runaway1956 on Saturday November 16 2019, @09:36AM (1 child)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday November 16 2019, @09:36AM (#920938) Journal

    Even before the idea gets any serious consideration, advertising shills will beat a path to every congress critter's office and residence, bearing gifts tailored to that congress critter's proclivities. Cocaine by the truck load, hookers by the dozen, child porn actors by the van, money by the satchel - if a congress critter likes it, it will be made available. The major advertisers have money to blow, by the planeload!

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 16 2019, @10:26PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 16 2019, @10:26PM (#921091)

    Even before the idea gets any serious consideration

    Right, ads coming through Brave (the company) [wikipedia.org] is so much better.
    And the Silly Valley as the bearer of gift is a major advantage.

    Additionally, they received at least US$7 million in angel investments from venture capital firms, including Peter Thiel's Founders Fund, Propel Venture Partners, Pantera Capital, Foundation Capital, and the Digital Currency Group.

    In early December 2017, the development team disbursed the first round of its user growth pool grants. A total of 300,000 BAT was distributed to new users on a first come first served basis.

    Suck it in, sucker