Tuesday, July 28, 2015

ITP V.015 WORLD APOCALYPSE: CISA IS BACK?

Hey EUROPEAN UNION, U.S.A: A more constructive way of assuring those internet cookies are not abused is to be in the know about cyberspying bills here in the U.S.A. If you're not in the know, this week, the U.S.Congress is set to vote on CISA (a modified version of CISPA and SOPA), if passed internet user info gets sent to NSA via GOOGLE, FACEBOOK ect.



Sign this petition below AGAINST CISA:
http://www.cispaisback.org/






FROM FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE:
 It's baffling how poorly Congress seems to understand technology.
Maybe using technology as outdated as Congress' thinking will help them finally get the message — don't mess with the Internet.
Send a fax: https://www.faxbigbrother.com/?org=fftf
TIME Magazine covers Operation: Fax Big Brother. Getting creative and using technology helps get our message out!
FROM EFF:
The only thing good about the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 (CISA, S. 754) is that it hasn’t passed yet. But it won’t stay that way without you.
Join EFF and our friends for a Week of Action to Stop CISA, and tell the Senate to vote no on CISA.
CISA is called a cybersecurity bill, but it’s really a cyber spying bill—and it wouldn’t even prevent major cyber attacks that endanger the privacy of ordinary people, like the Target or U.S. Office of Personnel Management breaches. Instead, the bill encourages companies to share your private information with the government, and grants them sweeping liability protection when they do so, endangering the privacy and civil liberties of Internet users.
CISA may be up for a vote as early as this week, and unlike CISPA, President Obama hasn’t promised to veto this bill. But grassroots activism has killed bad cybersecurity legislation before, and we can do it again.
Join in the Week of Action at Stop Cyber Spying. Email your Senators and tell them to vote no on CISA. Then tell your friends to do the same. While you’re there, make sure to use Fight for the Future’s new tool to send a fax to lawmakers, too. Since Congress doesn’t seem to understand modern technology, we want to use something they understand to make sure they get the message.
CISA sacrifices privacy without improving security. Tell Congress: We deserve both.

"We figured we’d use some 80s technology to try to get our point across"
time.com

http://www.cispaisback.org/





Thanks-Stay Metal, Stay Brutal-\m/ -l-