A US Senate panel has approved the Cyber-security Act, which aims to give the Federal government tighter security measures and address the nation’s well-documented flagging cyber-security efforts.
“The legislation is the culmination of a year’s worth of consultation and input from cyber-security experts in the private sector, government and civil liberties community,” said the US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation in a news release 17 March. The legislation now moves to the Senate floor for a full vote.
The legislation “provides a framework for engagement and collaboration between the private sector and government on cyber-security, while protecting civil liberties, proprietary rights, and confidential and classified information,” the committee said. The bill does not criminalise any conduct, contain any criminal law provisions or provide any resources for law enforcement agencies.
It does require a report and aims to “promote cyber-security public awareness, education, and research and development.”
Bill co-sponsor Sen. Olympia Snowe said, “It is simply undeniable that cyber-intrusions and attacks represent both a potential national security and economic catastrophe as our vital information infrastructure – nearly 90 percent of it – is owned and operated by the private sector. Without adequate cooperation between the public and private sectors to protect our critical infrastructure information systems – our strategic national assets – we risk a cyber-calamity of epic proportions with devastating implications for our nation.”
The bill “requires the president to collaborate with owners and operators of critical infrastructure IT systems, through the existing sector coordinating councils, to develop and rehearse detailed cyber-security emergency response and restoration plans. The explicit purpose of this section is to clarify roles, responsibilities and authorities of government and private-sector actors in the event of a cyber-security emergency that threatens strategic national interests. … The president’s declaration of a cyber-security emergency would trigger the implementation of the collaborative emergency response and restoration plans.”
There is nothing, however, in the bill authorising “new or expanded presidential authorities. … To establish greater accountability for the president’s actions during a declared emergency, the [bill] also requires the president to report to Congress in writing within 48 hours of the declaration regarding the circumstances necessitating the declaration, and the estimated scope and duration of the emergency.”
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