Let's
Not Sacrifice Our Privacy on the Altar of Cyber Security
By Steve Macek in American Forum
In the
name of protecting us from hackers, computer viruses and cyber-terrorists, the
House of Representatives has passed a bill that would make it easier for sites
like Facebook and Twitter and Internet service providers like Comcast and
Time-Warner to share users' private messages and files with government
agencies.
The
House on April 25 passed the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or
CISPA. The act aims to make it easier for the government and online businesses
to exchange information about computer and network security risks so they can
more effectively respond to hackers, digital espionage and computer viruses.
That
means a company like Google could legally give the government a user's search
history, emails, files stored on cloud service, even videos uploaded to the
company's YouTube site, if that material is shared for cyber security purposes.
The
bill does specify that the government must reject any inappropriate personal
information it receives from a business. But if this happens, the user whose
privacy is violated is never directly notified -- only the company is.
Moreover,
under the terms of the bill, once a user's private data are in the government's
hands, there is no way for that person to know who is using it or if in fact it
is being used properly because the information the government obtains from the
private sector would not be subject to transparency laws like the Freedom of
Information Act.
Also
worth noting is the fact that CISPA sets no limits to how long the government
may retain the personal information it is given. So, theoretically, the CIA or
FBI could keep a users private data forever.
While
advocates insist this sort of sweeping government surveillance is needed to
keep us safe online, critics correctly point out that CISPA would essentially
negate all existing state and federal privacy laws, including laws originally
created to prevent invasive wiretaps. The ACLU calls the bill "a privacy
disaster." Tim Berners-Lee, the man credited with inventing the World Wide
Web, said the cyber security act "is threatening the rights of people in
America, and effectively rights everywhere, because what happens in America
tends to affect people all over the world."
Fortunately,
the bill appears to have run into a wall of opposition. President Obama has
threatened to veto the legislation unless it is amended to require companies to
take reasonable steps to remove irrelevant personal information when sending
data to the government. After the House vote, a coalition of 34 civil liberties
groups and high-tech companies vowed to redouble its fight against CISPAs
attack on online privacy.
No
doubt because of this resistance, the Senate will reportedly shelve CISPA and
work on its own alternative cyber security legislation instead. Still, there is
a possibility that the bill ultimately drafted by the Senate will incorporate
some of CISPA's objectionable provisions. And whatever the Senate comes up with
would have to be reconciled with CISPA in conference committee.
Internet
security threats are a growing concern in the computer-mediated world we live
in. But CISPA as written would undermine our Fourth Amendment protections
against unreasonable government search and seizure. The Senate is right to
scrap it and start over.
Any new
bill offered in its place should define with precision what constitutes a
"cyber threat," should only permit companies to report "threat
data" to civilian agencies -- as proposed in an amendment to CISPA
authored by Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) -- and should require companies to
remove identifying personal information from any data they pass along. But just
as important, any new bill ought to preserve the individual's right to sue for
damages when businesses give authorities their personal online information
without just cause.
Whatever
form the legislation ultimately takes, it should not sacrifice our privacy on
the altar of cyber security.
Macek is an Associate Professor
of Speech Communication at North Central College in Naperville, IL and a
founding member of Chicago Media Action.