White House Delivers Cybersecurity Plan To Hill
By Jennifer Martinez and Mike Allen
Politico
May 12, 2011 at 09:20 GMT-4 (EDT)

The White House will formally deliver a cybersecurity legislative proposal to 
Congress on Thursday morning, including recommended updates to current U.S. 
cybersecurity laws, a senior administration official told POLITICO. "The 
administration has taken significant steps to better protect America against 
cyberthreats, but it has become clear that our nation cannot fully defend 
against these threats unless certain parts of cybersecurity law are updated," 
the official said.
The White House will formally deliver a cybersecurity legislative proposal to 
Congress on Thursday morning, including recommended updates to current U.S. 
cybersecurity laws, a senior administration official told POLITICO.

"The administration has taken significant steps to better protect America 
against cyberthreats, but it has become clear that our nation cannot fully 
defend against these threats unless certain parts of cybersecurity law are 
updated," the official said.

The Obama administration is eager to work with Congress to enact cybersecurity 
legislation this year. The White House has been working on its plan for more 
than two years now.

The White House's legislative proposal recommends improvements to the country's 
"critical infrastructure" and the federal government's networks and computers, 
according to the official.

Suggested improvements to cybersecurity law often raise concerns from advocacy 
groups about civil liberties and privacy.

The official said the White House is eager to hold broad discussions with 
industry, privacy advocates and the wider community. The White House proposal 
"strikes a critical balance between strengthening security and preserving 
privacy and civil liberties protections," the official said.

The proposal marks the first major cybersecurity proposal from any 
administration and, the official told POLITICO, “we are we are demonstrating 
President Obama's commitment to addressing complex and systemic national 
vulnerabilities that place the American people and economy at risk.”

The Senate hasn't put forward a cybersecurity bill yet, but Commerce and 
Homeland Security committee aides have spent more than a year working on a 
compromise between cyber reform bills introduced last session, including those 
introduced by Commerce Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Homeland Security 
Chairman Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.).

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), a member of the Homeland Security panel, told 
POLITICO earlier this month that part of "the holdup has been that the 
administration has yet to present its plan."

Cybersecurity has also captured the attention of Congress after hackers 
recently breached the systems of both Epsilon and Sony, gaining access to 
consumers' personal information. The House recently held a hearing on the data 
breaches. Rockefeller sent a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission 
on Wednesday asking that it direct companies to report when hackers may have 
breached their systems or when their networks have undergone an attack, which 
his office made public Thursday.

On Monday afternoon, the White House plans to hold an event where it will 
release the administration's international cybersecurity strategy, POLITICO has 
learned. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, 
Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke and Secretary of Homeland Security Janet 
Napolitano are expected to attend. The event will be hosted by the 
administration's Cybersecurity Coordinator Howard Schmidt and Deputy National 
Security Advisor John Brennan.

Source: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0511/54826.html
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