Thursday, March 18, 2010
CoOlDiGgY tech & media
Sen. Jay Rockefeller alarmed technology and telecommunications firms last year when he announced a plan for the president to seize "emergency" control of the Internet. Now the West Virginia Democrat is trying again with a new version that aides hope will be seen as less extreme.
During a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill on Wednesday attended by about a dozen industry representatives, CNET has learned, Rockefeller's staff pitched a revised version of his controversial cybersecurity legislation.
It says that after the president chooses to "declare a cybersecurity emergency," he can activate a "response and restoration plan" involving networks owned and operated by the private sector. In an attempt to limit criticism, instead of spelling out the plan's details, the latest draft simply says that it must be developed by the White House in advance.
There is no requirement that the emergency response plan be made public, meaning it could still include a forcible disconnection of critical Web sites from the Internet--which is what the March 2009 version of the legislation had proposed.
Read more...
*Condom requirement for porn film actors to be voted on in California
update: California's worker safety board votes for further study on porn condom use
*Google Is Taking Over Your TV Too
*Huffington Post's Ventura Censorship Backfires
*March18.org: Let the first blogger to die in prison be the last
*Facebook Users Targeted in Massive Spam Run
*Viacom-YouTube Secrets To Be Exposed In Lawsuit
*FTC Member Rips into Google's Privacy Efforts
*Fox Puts Pressure on Stations Over Conan
Labels:
Censorship,
Emergency Internet Control Bill,
Fox,
FTC,
Google,
lawsuit,
porn,
privacy,
Viacom,
YouTube Conan O'Brien
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment