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by tptacek
4811 days ago
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I feel like I'm being charitable by discussing CISPA as if it was somehow similar to SOPA or PIPA, because CISPA has nothing whatsoever to do with SOPA or PIPA. I do not have a problem with people who generally oppose Internet regulation of all sorts (I don't agree, but I don't make fun of them either). I do have a problem with "Internet Hate Machines" of all sorts. You are not entitled to invoke principles to deploy bad facts. Have you read the 2013 House CISPA amendments. I have. They're public. I'm guessing, no, right? Are you a gambling man? Would you like to bet me how agreeable they are relative to the text of the bill itself? The 2012 CISPA amendments tightened and restricted the act. What do you think the new 2013 amendments do? |
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The only amendments I've read about in 2013 are PII removal and removing the "national security" terms, both of which are civil liberties enhancements. (although I don't know where to find the actual text of the amendments). The 2012 amendments were improvements to baseline CISPA (especially the ToS vs. CTI clarification, which was my only real objection to CISPA originally). I do not think I'd take your bet; the probability of something bad being attached is low, but if something bad is attached, it's high severity, so moderate risk. You'd give odds based on probability and I'd want based on expected-harm.
Re: IHM. Reasonable people don't really win at politics. Look at how AARP/etc. essentially eviscerate anyone who thinks of touching Medicare or SS. Thus, horrible public policy (wealth transfers from the poor and young to the old and wealthy!) persists in the face of all logic. That it does shows how effective their lobbying/rabble-rousing strategy is.
Civil libertarians tend to err on the other side, for "what would be best for society", and end up with all kinds of bad stuff happening to them.
I'm ok with "ends justify means" in this case -- if "means" is "make everyone in Congress terrified of any cyber-laws which aren't explicitly and transparently improvements to individual privacy and freedom."