Wow, just when you though big government was someone else's problem

John Schnizlein schnizlein at isoc.org
Sun Apr 5 15:58:50 UTC 2009


Maybe.  There was enough scary stuff in a draft of S.778, and its  
title in some of the worry on the Web that both probably need to be  
watched.  Having one bill referred to Commerce... and one to Homeland  
Security ... does entail a two-front war.

John

On 2009Apr4, at 10:57 PM, Marcus H. Sachs wrote:

> Wrong bill.  You want S.773, not S.778.  There were two bills  
> introduced
> concerning cyber security.  The one that has everybody talking is S. 
> 773.
> S.778 concerns the creation of the Office of National Cybersecurity  
> Advisor
> within the Executive Office of the President.
>
> S.773
> Title: A bill to ensure the continued free flow of commerce within the
> United States and with its global trading partners through secure  
> cyber
> communications, to provide for the continued development and  
> exploitation of
> the Internet and intranet communications for such purposes, to  
> provide for
> the development of a cadre of information technology specialists to  
> improve
> and maintain effective cybersecurity defenses against disruption,  
> and for
> other purposes.
> Sponsor: Sen Rockefeller, John D., IV [WV] (introduced 4/1/2009)
> Cosponsors (3)
> Latest Major Action: 4/1/2009 Referred to Senate committee. Status:  
> Read
> twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
> Transportation.
>
> S.778
> Title: A bill to establish, within the Executive Office of the  
> President,
> the Office of National Cybersecurity Advisor.
> Sponsor: Sen Rockefeller, John D., IV [WV] (introduced 4/1/2009)
> Cosponsors (3)
> Latest Major Action: 4/1/2009 Referred to Senate committee. Status:  
> Read
> twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and  
> Governmental
> Affairs.
>
>
> Marc
>
> --   
> Marc Sachs <marc at sans.org>
> Director, SANS ISC
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: John Schnizlein [mailto:schnizlein at isoc.org]
> Sent: Saturday, April 04, 2009 8:20 PM
> To: Suresh Ramasubramanian
> Cc: nanog at nanog.org; Jeff Young
> Subject: Re: Wow, just when you though big government was someone  
> else's
> problem
>
> I suggest that we wait until the actual text of S.778 actually shows
> up at http://thomas.loc.gov before reacting to hyperbolic analysis of
> drafts not actually assigned to the Committee on Homeland Security and
> Governmental Affairs.  Although I am concerned with what has been
> attributed to this bill, not all drafts seem to contain the worst
> text.  Once the Committee takes up the bill, the most effective way to
> fix or kill it is for the constituents of the members of that
> Committee to call or write them:
> http://hsgac.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?Fuseaction=About.Membership
>
> John
>
> On 2009Apr4, at 6:46 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Apr 4, 2009 at 2:33 PM, Jeff Young <young at jsyoung.net> wrote:
>>> This comes from Lauren Weinstein's list and it's worth a read.
>>> It's a bill introduced into legislation, who knows where and when
>>> and if it will become law but, wow.
>>>
>>> http://lauren.vortex.com/Cyber-S-2009.pdf
>>
>> Relying on Lauren to hear about cybersecurity related news is like
>> relying on Fox News for an accurate picture of what Obama is doing.
>> Ignore.
>>
>>> I'll just give you a teaser:
>>>
>>> SEC. 9. SECURE DOMAIN NAME ADDRESSING SYSTEM.
>>
>> There's more than enough government supported work going on that
>> promotes DNSSEC, in case you're not aware?
>>
>>> Other pearls of wisdom:  the government will license all "cyber"
>>> security
>>> folks and you don't work on government or "any network deemed by
>>> the president to be critical infrastructure" without one.
>>
>> Do you by any chance get to go work on sensitive government networks
>> without, say, a security clearance?
>>
>> --srs
>>
>
>
>
>





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