The Administration Unveils Its Cybersecurity Legislative Proposal
By Howard A. Schmidt
White House
May 12, 2011 at 14:00 GMT-4 (EDT)

Today I am happy to announce that the Administration has transmitted a 
cybersecurity legislative proposal to Capitol Hill in response to Congress’ 
call for assistance on how best to address the cybersecurity needs of our 
Nation. This is a milestone in our national effort to ensure secure and 
reliable networks for Americans, businesses, and government; fundamentally, 
this proposal strikes a critical balance between maintaining the government’s 
role and providing industry with the capacity to innovatively tackle threats to 
national cybersecurity. Just as importantly, it does so while providing a 
robust framework to protect civil liberties and privacy.
Today I am happy to announce that the Administration has transmitted a 
cybersecurity legislative proposal to Capitol Hill in response to Congress’ 
call for assistance on how best to address the cybersecurity needs of our 
Nation. This is a milestone in our national effort to ensure secure and 
reliable networks for Americans, businesses, and government; fundamentally, 
this proposal strikes a critical balance between maintaining the government’s 
role and providing industry with the capacity to innovatively tackle threats to 
national cybersecurity. Just as importantly, it does so while providing a 
robust framework to protect civil liberties and privacy.

When the President released his Cyberspace Policy Review (pdf) almost two years 
ago, he declared cyberspace as a key strategic asset for the United States and 
its security just as vital. This legislative proposal is the latest achievement 
in the steady stream of progress we are making in securing cyberspace and 
completes another near-term action item identified in the CPR.

The Administration proposal helps safeguard your personal data and enhances 
your right to know when it has been compromised. In addition to educating you 
on how to protect yourself from cyber threats with the Stop. Think. Connect. 
campaign, we believe organizations should inform you when your sensitive 
personal information may have been compromised. This notice not only helps you 
to protect yourself against harms like identity theft, but also incentivizes 
organizations to have better data security in the first place. Today, our 
country has a patchwork of 47 state notification laws. Our proposal simplifies 
and strengthens this reporting requirement and reaches all Americans.

It helps protect our national security by addressing threats to our power 
grids, water systems, and other critical infrastructure. These systems are the 
backbone of our modern economy; many are privately owned, but all merit our 
support in protecting them. The Administration proposal advances the security 
of our increasingly “wired” critical infrastructure, strengthens the criminal 
penalties for hacking into the systems that control these vital resources, and 
clarifies the ability of companies and the government to voluntarily share 
information about cybersecurity threats and incidents in a privacy-protective 
manner. This is behavior we want and need to promote.

It helps the U.S. government protect our federal networks, while creating 
stronger privacy and civil liberties protections that keep pace with 
technology. Since our Federal systems are under constant pressure by hackers, 
criminals and other threats, the government needs better tools to detect and 
prevent those threats. Part of cybersecurity is about finding malicious 
programs, and stopping their spread before they have any impact. This proposal 
allows the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to implement intrusion 
detection and prevention systems that can help speed our response to these 
incidents. The Administration proposal also designs a framework for protecting 
privacy and civil liberties that includes new oversight, reporting 
requirements, and annual certification to ensure that cybersecurity 
technologies are used for their intended purpose and nothing more.

The Administration’s proposal is one of a number of important steps we are 
taking towards achieving better cybersecurity. We look forward to working with 
Congress as it moves forward on this issue. Together, with a shared 
responsibility to enhance online safety and security, we can ensure cyberspace 
continues to be an area defined by growth and innovation.

Source: 
http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/05/12/administration-unveils-its-cybersecurity-legislative-proposal
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to