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Title: Netflix Could Be Classified As a 'Cybersecurity Threat' Under New CISPA Rules
Source: Motherboard
URL Source: http://motherboard.vice.com/read/ne ... y-threat-under-new-cispa-rules
Published: Jun 30, 2014
Author: Motherboard
Post Date: 2014-06-30 11:49:11 by Lorie Meacham
Keywords: None
Views: 122
Comments: 2

The cybersecurity bill making its way through the Senate right now is so broad that it could allow ISPs to classify Netflix as a "cyber threat," which would allow them to throttle the streaming service's delivery to customers.

It would be a backdoor way for ISPs to undermine net neutrality, and it's one of the reasons why the Cybersecurity Information Protection Act of 2014—modeled on the CISPA bill that the internet has rallied against twice already—is so terrible for consumers (the other is the unfettered ferry of information between companies and the federal government, but that's another story).

RELATED: The Senate's Cybersecurity Bill Threatens Net Neutrality Given how ISPs have fought to destroy the open internet, they'd likely jump at the chance to sidestep existing net neutrality rules without the Federal Communications Commission needing to do much of anything at all. The bill, as it's written, allows companies to employ "countermeasures" against "cybersecurity threats," but both terms are extremely broadly defined, and video streaming could easily fall within the purview of the latter.

"A 'threat,' according to the bill, is anything that makes information unavailable or less available. So, high-bandwidth uses of some types of information make other types of information that go along the same pipe less available," Greg Nojeim, a lawyer with the Center for Democracy and Technology, told me. "A company could, as a cybersecurity countermeasure, slow down Netflix in order to make other data going across its pipes more available to users."

That's a quick and easy way of setting up a two-tiered internet, with built-in Congressional approval, no FCC rules required. Nojeim was one of the authors of a strongly-worded statement of opposition sent to Dianne Feinstein, the bill's sponsor. In the letter, the CDT, Electronic Frontier Foundation, American Civil Liberties Union, and more than a dozen other civil liberties groups said that the bill "arbitrarily harms average internet users."

"Net neutrality is a complex topic and policy on this matter should not be set by cybersecurity legislation," they wrote.

RELATED: Hundreds of Cities Are Wired With Fiber—But Telecom Lobbying Keeps It Unused The group notes that previous cybersecurity legislation considered by the Senate (pre-CISPA—the Senate didn't take up that bill last year, letting it die instead) specifically included net neutrality protections. This one doesn't.

"I think they know it's a problem," Nojeim said.

Nojeim says the general uproar surrounding the bill could have led to the postponement of its markup—it was originally set to be discussed by Feinstein's Intelligence Committee last week, but was pushed back. No word on when it'll be taken up by the committee, but considering that the bill has been in the works behind closed doors for several months now, don't expect it to die without first getting some very serious consideration on Capitol Hill.

TOPICS: net neutrality, CISPA, CIPA, cybersecurity, politics, dianne feinstein, Senate, power

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#1. To: Lorie Meacham (#0)

I don't understand this whole net neutrality issue nor do I understand how it is the fault of streaming services like Netflix that there are traffic bottle necks within a telecom companies network.

Netflix pays for its bandwidth fair and square. Consumers pay for their bandwidth fair and square. Telecom companies need to quit whining and build out the networks to meet the demands of the customers they are selling their services to or reduce the number of people they service. Instead they want to continue selling to more and more customers and restrict data flow to everyone. Typical monopolistic behavior

Calling Ron Paul an isolationist is like calling your neighbor a hermit because he doesn't come over and break your window - unknown

I WITHDRAW MY CONSENT!
Any perceived compliance with unconstitutional “laws” or orders put forth by government employees is NOT recognition of their authority; it is simply the result of carefully calculated submission to an entity exhibiting superior firepower.

F.A. Hayek Fan  posted on  2014-06-30   17:20:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#1)

The cybersecurity bill making its way through the Senate right now is so broad that it could allow ISPs to classify Netflix as a "cyber threat,"

hmmmm...my antennae is going up. To whom is the successful Netflix most a threat? my bet is that there is someone(s) in the entertainment industry with big money backing this so called cybersecurity bill.

To question is to value the ideal of truth more highly than the loyalties to nation, religion, race, or ideology.

christine  posted on  2014-07-03   0:29:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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