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Submission + - New Legislation Would Crack Down on Hacker Havens 1

Hugh Pickens writes: "The Hill reports that Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) have introduced a bill that would penalize foreign countries that fail to crack down on cyber criminals operating within their borders. Under the bill the White House would have the responsibility of identifying countries that pose cyber threats and the president would have to present to Congress in an annual report. Countries identified as "hacker havens" would then have to develop plans of action to combat cybercrimes or risk cuts to their US export dollars, foreign-direct investment funds and trade assistance grants. “Cybercrime must be a top priority for our national security,” said Gillibrand in a joint statement with Hatch. “If we’re going to protect our networks, our infrastructure, our economy and our families, we have to go after cyber criminals wherever they may be — and it must be an international effort." Numerous American employers, including Cisco, HP, Microsoft, Symantec, PayPal, eBay, McAfee, American Express, Mastercard and Visa, as well as Facebook, are supporting the Senators’ legislation. “Microsoft strongly supports the International Cybercrime Reporting and Cooperation Act and applauds Senators Gillibrand and Hatch for their leadership in this area,” said Fred Humphries, Microsoft's Managing Director of US Government Affairs. “This legislation is a great step forward toward accessing the technology capabilities and judicial remedies of foreign countries to combat cybercrime and provide a safer, more trusted and secure Internet.”"

Comment What needs to be done... (Score 0) 891

Something very recently I have personally discovered... Use the system against itself.

Something like this bill that is so obviously tainted by corporate greed and manipulation needs to be quashed. Issues like legitamate creation of products, backing up of software YOU OWN, mixing CDs from your own CDs; these are all things that very well could happen. However, the largest atrocity of all of this is the fact that eventually places like /. will no longer exist. Public forum will be banned because we are copying their IP. What about competition? If I create a Word Processor, and it is better than M$'s Word, with this law they could swoop in and say I stole their IP, without regard to the fact that I created it on my own merits.

The end result here is the fact that this has much greater complications and consequences than what we are all coming up with. This could be very far-reaching to where we live in a very GATTACA-like country. This must not happen.

Things to do:

  • Contact your Represenatives. John McCain is one of mine, and he will be getting a very strong letter about this
  • Contact the Media. Usually they have some sort of viewer call in spot.

Something has to be done. Although my voice may not be loud, if you gather enough voices, we will all be very loud.

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