CISPA… Is it dead?

Like the villain in bad horror movie, CISPA just won’t stay dead.
The privacy-killing zombie-bill is stalled in the Senate, and today the Whitehouse released their response to a petition against CISPA. Thanks in part to the massive public outcry (yes, you) they made some strong statements in support of users’ rights to privacy.
But given that corporate lobbyists have already spent $605 Million on buying support, we can expect that CISPA will be back in some form soon enough. It’s likely that the Senate will split the bill up into several smaller bills that will be harder to keep track of and rally around.

image

By Jason Bucky Roberts

CISPA… The never ending battle

image

Some people are saying CISPA is dead. It’s a little more complicated than that — the Senate will very likely break up CISPA into a few bills, and we’re not sure yet what that will look like.
The bad news: CNET has obtained 1,000 pages of government documents that reveal the Obama administration secretly authorized a backdoor for warrantless online wiretapping. Basically, the government promised not to prosecute companies for breaking privacy laws as long as they co-operated with government spying.

CISPA is just legislative backup for what the U.S. government has been already doing secretly (and possibly illegally) — violating our online privacy rights.
   
 There are some other CISPA related headlines we’ve been watching too:
Would you rather not hand over your Facebook password to your boss? Congress apparently doesn’t care.
Maybe you’ve heard that a lot of companies were paying big lobbying dollars to pass CISPA, but did you know it was THIS much?
And speaking of money, guess who’s wife has a $10 billion contract riding on CISPA’s passage?
Long story short, it’s becoming more and more apparent that CISPA has nothing to do with stopping cyber attacks and everything to do with the U.S. military and Federal government monitoring and surveilling the internet.
We’re up against big interests. Corporations want this bill to pass because they want the legal immunity it gives them.

Internet surveillance
April 24, 2013 | Declan McCullagh
Justice Department agreed to issue “2511 letters” immunizing AT&T and other companies participating in a cybersecurity program from criminal prosecution under the Wiretap Act, according to new documents obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center.

image

NSA director Keith Alexander, shown here in a file photo, who’s also the commander of the U.S. Cyber Command.
Getty Images
Senior Obama administration officials have secretly authorized the interception of communications carried on portions of networks operated by AT&T and other Internet service providers, a practice that might otherwise be illegal under federal wiretapping laws.

The secret legal authorization from the Justice Department originally applied to a cybersecurity pilot project in which the military monitored defense contractors’ Internet links. Since then, however, the program has been expanded by President Obama to cover all critical infrastructure sectors including energy, healthcare, and finance starting June 12.

“The Justice Department is helping private companies evade federal wiretap laws,” said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which obtained over 1,000 pages of internal government documents and provided them to CNET this week. “Alarm bells should be going off.”

Those documents show the National Security Agency and the Defense Department were deeply involved in pressing for the secret legal authorization, with NSA director Keith Alexander participating in some of the discussions personally. Despite initial reservations, including from industry participants, Justice Department attorneys eventually signed off on the project.

The Justice Department agreed to grant legal immunity to the participating network providers in the form of what participants in the confidential discussions refer to as “2511 letters,” a reference to the Wiretap Act codified at 18 USC 2511 in the federal statute books.

The Wiretap Act limits the ability of Internet providers to eavesdrop on network traffic except when monitoring is a “necessary incident” to providing the service or it takes place with a user’s “lawful consent.” An industry representative told CNET the 2511 letters provided legal immunity to the providers by agreeing not to prosecute for criminal violations of the Wiretap Act. It’s not clear how many 2511 letters were issued by the Justice Department.

In 2011, Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn publicly disclosed the existence of the original project, called the DIB Cyber Pilot, which used login banners to inform network users that monitoring was taking place. In May 2012, the pilot was turned into an ongoing program — broader but still voluntary — by the name of Joint Cybersecurity Services Pilot, with the Department of Homeland Security becoming involved for the first time. It was renamed again to Enhanced Cybersecurity Services program in January, and is currently being expanded to all types of companies operating critical infrastructure.

The NSA and DOJ declined to comment. Homeland Security spokesman Sy Lee sent CNET a statement saying:

DHS is committed to supporting the public’s privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. Accordingly, the department has implemented strong privacy and civil rights and civil liberties standards into all its cybersecurity programs and initiatives from the outset, including the Enhanced Cybersecurity Services program. In order to protect privacy while safeguarding and securing cyberspace, DHS institutes layered privacy responsibilities throughout the department, embeds fair practice principles into cybersecurity programs and privacy compliance efforts, and fosters collaboration with cybersecurity partners.
Paul Rosenzweig, a former Homeland Security official and founder of Red Branch Consulting, compared the NSA and DOD asking the Justice Department for 2511 letters to the CIA asking the Justice Department for the so-called torture memos a decade ago. (They were written by Justice Department official John Yoo, who reached the controversial conclusion that waterboarding was not torture.)

“If you think of it poorly, it’s a CYA function,” Rosenzweig says. “If you think well of it, it’s an effort to secure advance authorization for an action that may not be clearly legal.”

A report (PDF) published last month by the Congressional Research Service, a non-partisan arm of Congress, says the executive branch likely does not have the legal authority to authorize more widespread monitoring of communications unless Congress rewrites the law. “Such an executive action would contravene current federal laws protecting electronic communications,” the report says.

President Barack Obama leaving a National Security Agency Christmas party held across the street from the White House at the Blair House last December.
Getty Images
Because it overrides all federal and state privacy laws, including the Wiretap Act, legislation called CISPA would formally authorize the program without the government resorting to 2511 letters. In other words, if CISPA, which the U.S. House of Representatives approved last week, becomes law, any data-sharing program would be placed on a solid legal footing. AT&T, Verizon, and wireless and cable providers have all written letters endorsing CISPA.

Around the time that CISPA was originally introduced in late 2011, NSA, DOD, and DHS officials were actively meeting with the aides on the House Intelligence committee who drafted the legislation, the internal documents show. The purpose of the meeting, one e-mail shows, was to brief committee aides on “cyber defense efforts.” In addition, Ryan Gillis, a director in DHS’s Office of Legislative Affairs, sent an e-mail to Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence committee, discussing the pilot program around the same time.

AT&T and CenturyLink are currently the only two providers that have been publicly announced as participating in the program. Other companies have signed a memorandum of agreement with DHS to join, and are currently in the process of obtaining security certification, said a government official, who declined to name those companies or be identified by name.

Approval of the 2511 letters came after concerns from within the Justice Department and from industry. An internal e-mail thread among senior Defense Department, Homeland Security, and Justice Department officials in 2011, including associate deputy attorney general James Baker, outlines some of the obstacles:

[The program] has two key barriers to a start. First, the ISPs will likely request 2511 letters, so DoJ’s provision of 3 2511 letters (and the review of DIB company banners as part of that) is one time requirement. DoJ will provide a timeline for that. Second, all participating DIB companies would be required to change their banners to reference government monitoring. All have expressed serious reservations with doing so, including the three CEOs [the deputy secretary of defense] discussed this with. The companies have informally told us that changing the banners in this manner could take months.
Another e-mail message from a Justice Department attorney wondered: “Will the program cover all parts of the company network — including say day care centers (as mentioned as a question in a [deputies committee meeting]) and what are the policy implications of this?” The deputies committee includes the deputy secretary of defense, the deputy director of national intelligence, the deputy attorney general, and the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“These agencies are clearly seeking authority to receive a large amount of information, including personal information, from private Internet networks,” says EPIC staff attorney Amie Stepanovich, who filed a lawsuit against Homeland Security in March 2012 seeking documents relating to the program under the Freedom of Information Act. “If this program was broadly deployed, it would raise serious questions about government cybersecurity practices.”

In January, the Department of Homeland Security’s privacy office published a privacy analysis (PDF) of the program saying that users of the networks of companies participating in the program will see “an electronic login banner [saying] information and data on the network may be monitored or disclosed to third parties, and/or that the network users’ communications on the network are not private.”

An internal Defense Department presentation cites as possible legal authority a classified presidential directive called NSPD 54 that President Bush signed in January 2008. Obama’s own executive order, signed in February 2013, says Homeland Security must establish procedures to expand the data-sharing program “to all critical infrastructure sectors” by mid-June. Those are defined as any companies providing services that, if disrupted, would harm national economic security or “national public health or safety.”

Those could be very broad categories, says Rosenzweig, author of a new book called “Cyber War,” which discusses the legality of more widespread monitoring of Internet communications.

“I think there’s a great deal of discretion,” Rosenzweig says. “I could make a case for the criticality of several meat packing plants in Kansas. The disruption of the meat rendering facilities in Kansas would be very disruptive to the meat-eating habits of Americans.”

By Jason Bucky Roberts

Watch “A.I. : Artificial Idiot feat. Jack Douglass – Player Ones ep. 3″ on YouTube

Andy Rubin reveals Android was originally designed as a camera OS

image

Today Android sits as the most dominant mobile operating system on the planet, but would you believe that the platform’s original concept was aimed at cameras? Andy Rubin revealed the origins of Android as we know at an economic summit in Tokyo earlier this week, saying, “the exact same operating system we built for cameras…became Android for cellphones,” referencing the platforms humble beginnings in April of 2004.

At that time Rubin and company were presenting Android to investors as a smart camera platform that could connect to a home PC and then link up with an “Android Datacenter.” After realizing the opportunity in the camera industry was perhaps a bit small, the creators of Android turned to the growing field of smartphones to repurpose the operating system, keeping much of the Java-based core intact. In 2005 Android was acquired by Google and the rest is history.

Rubin said the goal was always to get Android out to as many people as possible, hence the decision to offer the platform to OEMs free of charge. It’s the reason Android currently
sees 1.5 million activations per day and is well on its way to 1 billion total.

As for Andy Rubin, who recently stepped down from his position as Android chief at Google, he still plans to develop products geared towards consumers. What exactly his new work will involve, that still remains a bit of a mystery.

Watch “GAMING NEWZ: Sims Suffer Injustice At XBox Art” on YouTube

Watch “Felicia’s Ark – Birds” on YouTube

Facebook Inc unveiled “Home” software for Android

image

Facebook Inc unveiled “Home” software on Thursday to place the world’s social network front and center on Android smartphones, a move that may divert users from Google Inc services and steal some of its rival’s momentum in the fast-growing mobile arena.

Its new family of apps will let users display mobile versions of their newsfeed and messages prominently on the home screens of a wide range of devices based on Google’s Android operating system, CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters.

“Home” software will be available for download from Google Play starting April 12. AT&T Inc has exclusive rights to sell for $100 the first phones, made by Taiwan’s HTC Corp, to come pre-installed with the software starting the same day. France Telecom’s Orange will be offering the software in Europe.

Shares in Facebook climbed more than 2 percent to $26.93 in the afternoon. Google stock was off 1.5 percent at $793.81.

“Why do we need to go into those apps in the first place to see what’s going on with those we care about?” Zuckerberg told the hundreds of reporters and industry executives gathered at Facebook’s Menlo Park campus.

“We want to bring all this content to the front.”

Facebook executives showed a new “chatheads” messaging service and “coverfeed” — both of which dominate users’ home screens and continuously feed messages, photos, status updates and other content from Facebook’s network.

“Home” brings the competition between the two Web superpowers to the mobile front, which is becoming many consumers’ primary conduit to the Internet. Facebook, the world’s largest social network, and Google, the dominant Internet search engine, are locked in battle for Internet users’ time online and for advertising dollars.

For Facebook, bolstering its mobile presence is critical. Nearly 70 percent of Facebook members used mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets to access its service at the end of 2012, and 157 million of Facebook’s roughly 1 billion users accessed the service solely on a mobile device.

The company has stepped up efforts to ensure that its revenue-generating ads can be viewed on mobile devices and Zuckerberg has said that the company’s engineers are now focused on creating “mobile-first experiences.”

Zuckerberg said features like coverfeed will be ad-free initially, but he envisioned advertising as another form of content that will eventually be integrated. Analysts say the company treads cautiously when introducing ads into any of its services, wary of infuriating users.

“This is about becoming more deeply embedded in the operating system on mobile devices, and creating a broader platform,” said Jan Dawson, chief telecoms analyst for the research firm Ovum. “It will allow Facebook to track more of a user’s behavior on devices, and present more opportunities to serve up advertising.”

But “that presents the biggest obstacle to success for this experiment: Facebook’s objectives and users’ are once again in conflict. Users don’t want more advertising or tracking, and Facebook wants to do more of both.”

FACEBOOK PHONE, FINALLY?

Reports that Facebook was developing its own smartphone have sporadically appeared for years though Zuckerberg has shot them one down, saying that building a Facebook phone would be “the wrong strategy.”

With specialized software that adds a layer on top of Android, Facebook may get many of the benefits of having its own phone without the costs and risks of actually building a hardware device.

“We’re soon going to be living in a world where the majority of people in the world…will have never seen in their lives what you and I call a computer,” Zuckerberg said.

Google’s five-year old Android has given the Internet search company a strong footing in a world in which consumers increasingly access the Web from mobile phones rather than from PCs. More than 750 million mobile devices featuring Android have been activated to date, according to Google, more than gadgets based on Apple Inc’s iOS, the runner-up.

But Facebook’s move complicates Google’s mobile efforts, by potentially diverting smartphone users from the panoply of services from search to email that generate advertising revenue for Google.

Google’s Android software, used by smartphone handset makers including Samsung, HTC and LG, is free. The open-source software allows companies to tinker with it, customize it and craft applications for the platform.

Industry analysts say Google risks losing control of the software as more and more companies like Amazon.com Inc, whose Kindle Fire tablets are based on a customized version of the Android operating system, increasingly tailor it to their needs.

“It’s much lower risk than developing a phone or an operating system of its own, and if it turns out not to be successful, there will be little risk or loss to Facebook,” Dawson said. “If it does turn out to be successful, Facebook can build on the model further and increase the value provided in the application over time.”

Watch “I’m not buying it – Leaving Feedback on Shopping Sites” on YouTube