San Francisco Examiner  circulation | classifieds | autos | real estate | jobs | advertise
   
Monster
View today's E-Dition

Saturday, July 31, 2010 | Last Update 11:29 PDT
click for forecast
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Buy, Sell & More Jobs Homes Cars
Nation World Under the Dome Ken Garcia Beltway Confidential Weather Mobile Site Contact
Under the Dome California Nation World
Under the Dome California Beltway Confidential White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York
Under the Dome Ken Garcia Melissa Griffin Gavin Newsom City Hall People Real Estate Events Calendar
Editorials Nate Beeler's Toons Blogs Michael Barone Byron York
Economy Page Real Estate Technology
49ers/Raiders/NFL Warriors/NBA Sharks/NHL Giants/A's/MLB Soccer Colleges Golf
Movies Television Health Events Calendar Birth of Impressionism
Classifieds Stuff for Sale Post Free Ad
Find a Job Post a Job Career Tools
For Sale For Rent
New Used Certified Pre-Owned

Opinion
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Examiner Editorial: Don’t let a president turn off the Internet


Examiner Editorial
September 1, 2009

Sen. Jay Rockefeller’s revised Cybersecurity Act of 2009 is worse than the original version he unveiled in April. That one drew well-deserved derision from civil liberties advocates left and right, along with Silicon Valley executives fearful that their company assets would be confiscated by government fiat. The West Virginia Democrat’s new version is full of vague legislative language that’s the public policy equivalent of throwing the barn door open to horse thieves.

As the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Lee Thien told CNET: “The language has changed, but it doesn’t contain any real additional limits. It simply switches the more direct and obvious language they had originally to the more ambiguous.” Thien added that the bill contains no administrative or appeals process to limit what he describes as the “amorphous” powers granted to the president.

Just how amorphous is seen in the bill’s grant of presidential authority to “declare a cybersecurity emergency” and then shut down privately owned computer networks (i.e., the Internet) without defining what computer networks are critical to national security or what defines an emergency of sufficient seriousness.

That means the job of defining those critical elements is left to the first president who wants to be the digital age’s Harry Truman. Under the pretext of a national security emergency during the Korean War, Truman seized the nation’s steel mills in 1952 while planning to force U.S. Steel and nine other steelmakers to accept union wage and pension demands that the companies claimed would put them out of business. But the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer that the chief executive lacked the authority to seize private property on the grounds of national security.

With no clear definitions of these factors, nothing would stand in the way of an ambitious chief executive — likely egged on by a Rahm Emanuel-esque adviser sensing opportunity in a crisis — willing to act and then say, in effect, “So sue me.” Considering the thousands of cyberattacks already being mounted against U.S. defense networks from China, Russia and elsewhere, the day for such action might be closer than anybody realizes.

Note also that the Rockefeller bill does not say whether these cybersecurity threats must come only from overseas sources or might also encompass domestic threats. Given the Department of Homeland Security’s report branding those against abortion, military veterans and advocates of stronger immigration laws as potentially violent “right-wing extremists,” what’s to prevent a presidential seizure of the Internet to stop their digital communication? This is a bad bill that ought to be withdrawn.



under the dome
New Department of the Environment chief agrees to lower salary

Mayor Gavin Newsom’s new director of the Department of the Environment, Melanie Nutter, is eligible to receive  a salary of $148,000. But in the spirit of giving back pay to...

—Joshua Sabatini

Newsom selects new Department of the Environment head

Mayor Gavin Newsom announced Friday morning that he has picked Melanie Nutter as the new director of the Department of the Environment. Nutter has served since 2005 as deputy...

—Joshua Sabatini

Jobs a casualty in SFFD takeover of the Presidio; Alioto-Pier's office responds

Negotiations between The City and the federal government for the Fire Department to take over the duty of dousing fires in the Presidio have all but ended, with the Board of...

—Brent Begin

Advertisements could be coming to five city-run garages

Instead of the drab concrete that’s the normal décor, motorists could see splashy new advertisements in city garages. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, which...

—Will Reisman

More Under the Dome posts...

beltway confidential
Eight congressmen now calling for Rangel to give up his seat

The Hill: The tally of House Democrats calling on Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) to resign his seat in Congress stood at eight as members adjourned for the August recess late...

—Mark Hemingway

Growing ‘independent’ nature of electorate is helping GOP

The proportion of Republicans, Democrats, and independents that turnout to vote shape the outcome of every election.  Even small shifts in these percentages can dramatically...

It’s not just Rangel — Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., to be tried on ethics charges

Here’s your Friday night news dump — move over Charlie Rangel: Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) has chosen to go through an ethics trial, like the one lined up for...

—Mark Hemingway

NYT: ‘No more disputing’ economic recovery has slowed down, jobs outlook ‘discouraging’

With the dismal GDP figures that came in today, The New York Times isn’t mincing words. The outlook for jobs and economic growth is bleak: There is no more disputing it:...

—Mark Hemingway

More Beltway Confidential posts...




To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. Teenaged robbery suspect’s attempt to disappear fails
  2. Jury trial set for suspect in poorly researched robbery
  3. Muni mechanic, accomplice face three years for transfer sales
  4. Man stabbed outside Mission Street club
  5. Muni Fast Pass with BART option to be phased out by October
  6. More details emerge about fatal inmate stabbing at San Quentin
  7. Officer risks own safety to save mother, kids
  8. Wildfire jumps aqueduct in high desert outside Los Angeles, threatens hundreds of homes
  9. Medevac company suspends AZ service after crash
  10. Jobs a casualty in SFFD takeover of the Presidio; Alioto-Pier's office responds





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.
blog comments powered by Disqus
RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Mobile | Contact Us | Rack Locations | Advertise | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy