Even worse than SOPA: New CISPA cybersecurity bill will censor the Web — RT
H.R. 3523, a piece of legislation dubbed the Cyber Intelligence Sharing
and Protection Act (or CISPA for short), has been created under the
guise of being a necessary implement in America’s war against
cyberattacks. But the vague verbiage contained within the pages of the
paper could allow Congress to circumvent existing exemptions to online
privacy laws and essentially monitor, censor and stop any online
communication that it considers disruptive to the government or private
parties. Critics have already come after CISPA for the capabilities that
it will give to seemingly any federal entity that claims it is
threatened by online interactions, but unlike the Stop Online Privacy
Act and the Protect IP Acts that were discarded on the Capitol Building
floor after incredibly successful online campaigns to crush them,
widespread recognition of what the latest would-be law will do has yet
to surface to the same degree.