I can reboot the Internet and so can you ... its easy...

http://www.caver.net/reboot.html

LOL
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Louise Power 
  To: Off-Topic Texas Cavers ; Rich Hanson 
  Sent: Friday, June 18, 2010 10:28 AM
  Subject: [ot_caving] Internet kill switch proposed for president


  Is this a little like 1984?
  Internet Kill Switch Proposed For President

  The days of freedom on the Internet, even during a time of national crisis, 
may be coming to an under a new U.S. Senate bill. The legislation would grant 
the president emergency powers to seize control of or even shut down portions 
of the Internet during times of national emergency.

  It's been dubbed as an Internet "kill switch" the president could flip. 
However, the idea behind it is not new. A draft Senate proposal that CNET 
obtained in August allowed the White House to "declare a cybersecurity 
emergency," and another from Sens. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.V.) and Olympia Snowe 
(R-Maine) would have explicitly given the government the power to "order the 
disconnection" of certain networks or Web sites.

  The legislation announced Thursday says that companies such as broadband 
providers, search engines, or software firms that the government selects "shall 
immediately comply with any emergency measure or action developed" by the 
Department of Homeland Security. Anyone failing to comply would be fined.

  That emergency authority would allow the federal government to "preserve 
those networks and assets and our country and protect our people," Joe 
Lieberman, the primary sponsor of the measure and the chairman of the Homeland 
Security committee, told reporters on Thursday. Lieberman is an independent 
senator from Connecticut who caucuses with the Democrats.

  Lieberman's bill is formally titled the Protecting Cyberspace as a National 
Asset Act, or PCNAA. Under PCNAA, the federal government's power to force 
private companies to comply with emergency decrees would become unusually broad.

  Any company on a list created by Homeland Security that also "relies on" the 
Internet, the telephone system, or any other component of the U.S. "information 
infrastructure" would be subject to command by a new National Center for 
Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC) that would be created inside Homeland 
Security.

  The only obvious limitation on the NCCC's emergency power is one paragraph in 
the Lieberman bill that appears to have grown out of the Bush-era flap over 
warrantless wiretapping. That limitation says that the NCCC cannot order 
broadband providers or other companies to "conduct surveillance" of Americans 
unless it's otherwise legally authorized.

  Lieberman said Thursday that enactment of his bill needed to be a top 
congressional priority. "For all of its 'user-friendly' allure, the Internet 
can also be a dangerous place with electronic pipelines that run directly into 
everything from our personal bank accounts to key infrastructure to government 
and industrial secrets," he said. "Our economic security, national security and 
public safety are now all at risk from new kinds of enemies--cyber-warriors, 
cyber-spies, cyber-terrorists and cyber-criminals."

  Lieberman's proposal would form a powerful and extensive new Homeland 
Security bureaucracy around the NCCC, including "no less" than two deputy 
directors, and liaison officers to the Defense Department, Justice Department, 
Commerce Department, and the Director of National Intelligence. (How much the 
NCCC director's duties would overlap with those of the existing assistant 
secretary for infrastructure protection is not clear.)

  The NCCC also would be granted the power to monitor the "security status" of 
private sector Web sites, broadband providers, and other Internet components. 
Lieberman's legislation requires the NCCC to provide "situational awareness of 
the security status" of the portions of the Internet that are inside the United 
States -- and also those portions in other countries that, if disrupted, could 
cause significant harm.

  Selected private companies would be required to participate in "information 
sharing" with the Feds. They must "certify in writing to the director" of the 
NCCC whether they have "developed and implemented" federally approved security 
measures, which could be anything from encryption to physical security 
mechanisms, or programming techniques that have been "approved by the 
director." The NCCC director can "issue an order" in cases of noncompliance.

  To sweeten the deal for industry groups, Lieberman has included a tantalizing 
offer absent from earlier drafts: immunity from civil lawsuits. If a software 
company's programming error costs customers billions, or a broadband provider 
intentionally cuts off its customers in response to a federal command, neither 
would be liable.

  If there's an "incident related to a cyber vulnerability" after the president 
has declared an emergency and the affected company has followed federal 
standards, plaintiffs' lawyers cannot collect damages for economic harm. And if 
the harm is caused by an emergency order from the Feds, not only does the 
possibility of damages virtually disappear, but the U.S. Treasury will even 
pick up the private company's tab.

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