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posted by takyon on Thursday July 30 2015, @11:20PM   Printer-friendly
from the talking-about-it dept.

The Hill reports:

[...] Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, or CISA, is an out and out surveillance bill masquerading as a cybersecurity bill. It won't stop hackers. Instead, it essentially legalizes all forms of government and corporate spying.

Here's how it works. Companies would be given new authority to monitor their users -- on their own systems as well as those of any other entity -- and then, in order to get immunity from virtually all existing surveillance laws, they would be encouraged to share vaguely defined "cyber threat indicators" with the government. This could be anything from email content, to passwords, IP addresses, or personal information associated with an account. The language of the bill is written to encourage companies to share liberally and include as many personal details as possible.

That information could then be used to further exploit a loophole in surveillance laws that gives the government legal authority for their holy grail -- "upstream" collection of domestic data directly from the cables and switches that make up the Internet.

[...] CISA would create a huge expansion of the "backdoor" search capabilities that the government uses to skirt the 4th Amendment and spy on Internet users without warrants and with virtually no oversight.

All of this information can be passed around the government and handed down to local law enforcement to be used in investigations that have nothing to do with cyber crime, without requiring them to ever pull a warrant. So CISA would give law enforcement a ton of new data with which to prosecute you for virtually any crime while simultaneously protecting the corporations that share the data from prosecution for any crimes possibly related to it.

Will CISA be used against the guilty, or the innocent?


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by stormwyrm on Thursday July 30 2015, @11:55PM

    by stormwyrm (717) on Thursday July 30 2015, @11:55PM (#216079) Journal
    In a surveillance society anyone can be made to look guilty of something. Once again, my sig quote, for the French-challenged, reads: "Give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, and I will find something in them that will hang him." The experience of COINTELPRO should remind everyone of what the government does when it gets that kind of power, and it is disturbing how many people in the United States seem to have bought the propaganda that this surveillance apparatus is being created to protect them, not control them.
    --
    Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate.
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