"Where is Security, governed through scrutiny? Your privacy denied, organized and confined, No place to hide, no place to hide.
"All must abide, all must adhere, future oppression becoming more clear. This is a warning so you must take heed, this coming vision is reality."
"Admit the consequences that freedom is an illusion".
FAR FACTORY-"SECURITRON POLICE STATE 2000" (FROM "OBSOLETE")
An UPDATE on the CISA bill lingering in U.S. SENATE: "The U.S. Senate is heading home for summer recess without taking further action on the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA), a.k.a. the “Darth Vader” surveillance bill. This is a victory for everyone who has spoken out against CISA."
Over 6 MILLION faxes were sent out protesting the Cyber spying Surveillance bill CISA as the bill is tabled until fall 2015. KEEP AN EYE ON CISA and be prepared to challenge and protest this bill.
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 Senate 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.
FROM DEMAND PROGRESS:
The government can actually read your emails without a warrant — and a veto-proof majority of the House agrees that shouldn't be happening. Add your name to demand a vote: http://bit.ly/1KHcYf6
FROM ACCESSNOW.ORG
The U.S. Senate is heading home
for summer recess without taking further action on the Cybersecurity
Information Sharing Act (CISA), a.k.a. the “Darth Vader” surveillance
bill. This is a victory for everyone who has spoken out against CISA. So
far, you’ve generated more than six million faxes, sending a strong message to Congress: We want real security, not more cybersurveillance.
In
turn, many senators also spoke out against the bill, calling for a
number of privacy improvements. Earlier this week, the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) wrote a letter
to Senator Al Franken to highlight the agency’s concerns about the
authority the bill would confer to companies to share your information
directly with any federal agency.
As
a result — and despite the endorsement of the Obama administration and
the concerted efforts of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a
champion of the bill — no final agreement could be reached in time for a
vote. That means that any action on CISA will have to be taken up in
the fall.
Even
with the proposed amendments, the draft legislation remains deeply
flawed. The changes fail to address nearly all of the problems we
highlight at StopCyberSyping.com.
It would still increase the government's surveillance powers. Law
enforcement could still use the information to prosecute whistleblowers
under the Espionage Act. It would still grant companies sweeping legal immunity for handing over our personal information to the government.
Fundamentally, CISA is not a security bill. It remains a surveillance bill at heart.
If
Congress is truly interested in improving digital security, it should
pass a law that takes steps to address pressing problems, such as
existing software vulnerabilities. CISA, however, does not do that. Even
in its amended form, it would be bad for privacy and bad for security.
If
there is anything the journey so far has taught us, it’s that there’s a
community that cares about getting cybersecurity right. Last week, you joined us in a Week of Action to fight CISA. You were not alone. There were 68 security experts, academics, and civil society organizations that penned a joint letter urging President Obama to veto CISA when and if it reaches his desk.
We hope you keep up the good work, and when CISA rises from the dead in the fall, you help us kill it for good.
Thanks-Stay Metal, Stay Brutal-KEEP THE INTERNET FREE AND OPEN-\m/ -l-
Thanks-Stay Metal, Stay Brutal-KEEP THE INTERNET FREE AND OPEN-\m/ -l-