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Kamis, 25 April 2013

Passage Of CISPA Legalizes Already Common Cyber Surveillance Practices

Passage Of CISPA Legalizes Already Common Cyber Surveillance Practices

Last week, the House approved CISPA, the House cybersecurity bill that's long rankled privacy advocates -- not to mention the White House, which issued a presidential veto threat in response to the action. The Obama administration's warning is a sign

Last week, the House approved CISPA, the House cybersecurity bill that's long rankled privacy advocates -- not to mention the White House, which issued a presidential veto threat in response to the action. The Obama administration's warning is a sign

We're at war online. Iran, North Korea, and Russia are the sources of sustained attacks on our government and our economy. They steal from us, they disrupt our operations, and they're no better than the pirates of old. On the

Scared that CISPA might pass? The federal government is already using a secretive cybersecurity program to monitor online traffic and enforce CISPA-like data sharing between Internet service providers and the Department of Defense. The Electronic

CISPA, or the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or "the worst privacy disaster our country has ever faced" has just passed through the House of Representatives with an astounding majority of 288 to 127.

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