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The USA, Not Dictatorships the Internet’s Biggest Enemy
more from Hrafnkell Haraldsson
What a frightening thought: save the Internet from the U.S. Yet that is the message of AVAAZ.org (AVAAZ, the group tells us, means “voice” in several European, Middle Eastern and Asian languages). How did a country that enshrines ideals of privacy and freedom of speech come to be the big bad bully with regards to the Internet?
You remember SOPA, of course. That’s been defeated though not dead. Undead might be a better word, given that it hasn’t quite stopped moving. Look what Chris Dodd (former D-CT), now the CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has been up to lately, bragging to the Hollywood Reporter that he’s working on an insider deal to push through SOPA-like legislation.
You might remember PIPA, once called “the new SOPA”. The PROTECT IP Act (Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act, or PIPA) was introduced on May 12, 2011, by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT). But PIPA was only another try at 2010’s COICA, and, of course, 2011’s SOPA. In all these pieces of legislation a glaring problem has been their “broad language.”
Now comes the U.S. House of Representatives and its Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011 (CISPA), otherwise known as H.R. 3523, backed by over 100 members of Congress (twice SOPA’s support). And don’t just blame the Republicans. The bill, unveiled by Reps. Mike Rogers (R-MI) and C.A. “Dutch” Ruppersberger (D-MD), the Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Intelligence Committee says that it is written “To provide for the sharing of certain cyber threat intelligence and cyber threat information between the intelligence community and cybersecurity entities, and for other purposes.”
Some are calling it the new SOPA (shouldn’t it be new new SOPA?) though the European Union Times calls it “worse than SOPA”. CISPA, which, as AVAAZ says, “would give private companies and the US government the right to spy on any of us at any time for as long as they want without a warrant,” is certainly something to be afraid of.
Nice. They can already strip-search us for violating the leash law. I’m afraid to ask what’s next. But this certainly doesn’t sound like the United States I grew up in. In the U.S. of A I grew up in, authorities needed a warrant. They couldn’t just treat everyone like they were a criminal without due cause (or at least, they weren’t supposed to).
AVAAZ urges us not to take this latest attack lying down: “This is the third time the US Congress has tried to attack our Internet freedom. But we helped beat SOPA, and PIPA — and now we can beat this new Big Brother law.”
CISPA amends the National Security Act of 1947. The result? The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) puts it quite bluntly and chillingly: “It effectively creates a ‘cybersecurity’ exemption to all existing laws.”
If that isn’t enough to scare you, perhaps this will. According to EFF:
There are almost no restrictions on what can be collected and how it can be used, provided a company can claim it was motivated by “cybersecurity purposes.” That means a company like Google, Facebook, Twitter, or AT&T could intercept your emails and text messages, send copies to one another and to the government, and modify those communications or prevent them from reaching their destination if it fits into their plan to stop cybersecurity threats.
As EFF puts it, “the stated definition of “cybersecurity” is so broad, it leaves the door open to censor any speech that a company believes would ‘degrade the network.’” CISPA makes it pretty easy to designate you personally a security threat:
(2) CYBER THREAT INTELLIGENCE- The term `cyber threat intelligence’ means information in the possession of an element of the intelligence community directly pertaining to a vulnerability of, or threat to, a system or network of a government or private entity, including information pertaining to the protection of a system or network from–
`(A) efforts to degrade, disrupt, or destroy such system or network; or
`(B) theft or misappropriation of private or government information, intellectual property, or personally identifiable information.
Kiss goodbye to anonymous activism. George Orwell in his worst nightmares did not imagine such sweeping ability to access our every private thought and word. Perversely, technology gives us ever greater means of expression our freedom of speech but also gives the government ever greater means of taking those freedoms away.
The Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT) points out four “main concerns” with the bill:
Needless to say, CDT opposes the legislation.
Digital Trends provides some helpful information: See the full list of CISPA co-sponsors here. See a complete list of companies and groups that support CISPA here.
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Reynardine
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 8:08 am
They don’t effing quit, do they?…
David29073
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 8:35 am
And so it begins. George Orwell’s 1984, only 24 years late, but it’s getting there. Big Brother, on this Big Brother is so much more intrusive and powerful.
Bush was the one who started this whole monitering of our lives without “due process” of going to court for a warrant, no need for “probable cause” anymore. Stack the Supreme Court with a bunch of Right Wing goons, and start presenting “Stop and Frisk” laws and make them legal with the BS argument of the (NYPD) of preventing crime BEFORE
David29073
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 8:46 am
(opps, hit the wrong button) it happens in the name of security.
Our rights to privacy are being attacked on every level by this government now in power, believe it or not. Obama, to my very great disappointment, has allowed the intrusive security measures instituted by Bush to CONTINUE, and has strengthen them!!!
The internet has opened up a can of worms, and there needs to be some form of legislation in place that can attempt to stop some of the more egregious forms of theft from happening. I speak of the underground forums in Eastern Europe and Russia that trade stolen credit card numbers, as an example of what should be stopped…but, a free forum like this one can, under the law proposed, be shut down, or monitored by a government agency because of radicals like myself expression our disgust at how our government conducts it’s insidious and intrusive business.
What can happen next can only be imagined, but think of the arrests that Bush made of some of our American Citizens and labeled them “Enemy Combatants”. Under that particularly insidious designation, we could be held INDEFINELY, without access to counsel or communications of any sort, and the government does not have to tell our family that we are being held, or what charges I am facing. No court warrant, no due process, NOTHING. But I am imprisoned without formal access to our court system or its protections. That is the next provision that will be instituted by our government as part of the Internet Security attack on our very freedoms. It’s comin people, it’s comin, and the GOP is leading the charge, with the Democratics following because the have not backbone to stop it. Our Founding Forefathers are not rolling in their graves, they are crying in their graves.
A Walkaway
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 9:46 am
With the Republicans controlling so much, how can the Democrats stop it? That’s an insult to Democrats who are fighting all the time against the overthrow of our government. (Slow overthrow in this case, and I suspect now planned for decades – since the civil rights era if not earlier.)
In this state, the Democrats have been doing everything they can, but since the “Good Christians” elected so many of their people to power, they’ve been powerless to stop it except through the courts. The really aggravating thing is that even though they’re almost sure to loose in court, the Tea Party/Republicans are still pursuing these repressive and evil laws.
I would also say that I bet that 99% of Americans don’t know these laws are being passed or even put forward. However, I used to have a copy of a bill from the early 90s which was just as bad… if someone was labeled a “potential terrorist threat”, it gave the government the right to confiscate weapons and resources… they could without a warrant or your knowledge access your bank account and all of your private information and take whatever they wanted. Just because of a label – “Potential Terrorist Threat”.
All it took was for some politician or group to not like you or your group, they proclaim you to be a “potential terrorist threat” (with some sort of reason) – and there went your rights.
Just before this bill was put forward, my tribe had that label laid on it. Their stated reason? We’d been treated so bad that it would be natural for us to want to retaliate (or something like that) – ignoring our nature, as we’ve always been called the “Friendly Creeks”.
Like many other things that were important or had value, when someone torched my electronics workshop because I’d written a letter to the editor denouncing creationism and supporting the teaching of evolution, it was burned up too. (I’m adding this because people still don’t think they’re willing to use physical violence – which I’m expecting any time now, and if we DO win, I fully expect a violent uprising from the Dominionists.)
Reynardine
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 9:56 am
I have suspected as much. Indeed, I was surprised when Barack Obama’s inauguration was successfully completed.
Mark Bousquet
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 3:18 pm
If you check the roll calls I think you will find that Democrats are going along with Republicans in voting for all these new totalitarian laws.
527 out of a possible total of 535 members of both the house and senate voted FOR outlawing peaceful protest.
Boscoe
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 4:17 pm
Just two side of the same turd, only the wind determining which one we smell at any given moment.
SinghX
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 10:25 am
My gut reaction is, the only good defense is a good offense. Where to I sign up to learn how to “defend” my internet security? Where is the “school” where I can learn a sort of “one-on-one” mortal-combat-keyboard-martial-arts to fend off the bad guys? How do I get my hands on the software that will wipe clean your activity page after page, every time you click on a new page?
If I had that knowledge, and I don’t, I would teach what I learned to one other person locally, one other person out of my area or state…and, then, I would have them do the same so that there are triads of people connected “randomly” via triads…food for thought.
A Walkaway
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 11:36 am
Not that hard to do, although it can be quite irritating.
Set your browser to deny cookies. Erase your “history” and cache on a daily basis, give as little information as possible when asked (or just leave the site). Use an ad blocker and good anti-virus/anti-spyware. They can still get your IP address, but that doesn’t tell them anything unless it’s registered somehow (if you visit again they might use that to ‘recognize’ your computer and associate their record of your previous activity on their site). Very important – keep your computers updated!
What you’re asking is already available and many of us practice it (or to a degree – I allow cookies – to a certain point and don’t clear my history or cache as often).
If you’re really against that stuff, then it can get more difficult – abandon Microsoft and it becomes far harder for them to gather information. Most especially, don’t use Internet Explorer – I’d suggest Firefox with a few add-ons like Ad Blocker and Noscript. That combined with some somewhat specialized software (such as I’ve got access to under Linux) and to the corporations, you’re pretty much a blank wall except for your IP address.
The only problem is, some websites won’t allow you on unless you accept cookies or allow scripts to run. It’s also a hassle if you’ve got sites that you use which change the cookies on a regular basis.
If companies start sharing IP addresses and visit information, that’s another story (they could build a profile of you based on your IP address). There is little you can do about that (except maybe getting a law passed against it). I COULD suggest a couple of other things that I know, but have good reason not to mention them in public (the mods probably know what I’m hinting at).
harris stein
Apr. 6th, 2012 at 12:24 pm
The corporate state is relentless in it’s push to control our lives with their hypocritical Ayn Rand nonsense that in reality is nothing more than a nightmarish dystopia.
This is obviously being pushed by extreme hard right entities like ALEC and the CATO institute that appear as think tanks but are in reality behind the scenes groups funneling money and ideas to politicians beholden to the corporate state.
You don't need this information
Apr. 7th, 2012 at 9:19 pm
Embrace the internet! Don’t kill it!
Yes, there are people breaking laws on the internet and cannot be caught.
But people are using the public roads for illegal activities and it will never stop.
Crime will always exist. It cannot be stopped and if you treat everyone like suspects, it will backfire. I just hope when push comes to shove the military will protect the 99%, not the 1%.