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CISPA Author Rogers: China's Cyber 'Predators' Must Be Stopped

Author of controversial cyber espionage bill says it would let U.S. stop predators, not spy on its own

April 17, 2012 RSS Feed Print

If there's something the author of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act wants you to know, it's that CISPA isn't about spying on ordinary Americans—it's about stopping China from stealing America's stuff.

"I've never seen something grow more exponentially serious than China's capabilities in cyber espionage," Congressman Mike Rogers said at a breakfast in Washington, D.C., Tuesday. "It is so prolific—it's breathtaking. In the last year, China has stolen so much intellectual property that it would be considered 50 times the print collection of the United States Library of Congress."

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China is using those patents to become an "economic predator," he said.

The bill would allow the government to share all of its classified cyber-security knowledge with private companies, forming knowledge-sharing agreements that would hopefully keep China (and other countries and hackers) out of American computer networks. The catch is that the information shared is a two-lane street—companies would also be allowed to share private data with the federal government, provided there is a reasonable "cyber threat."

That last bit has made CISPA an increasingly controversial bill on Capitol Hill—critics say that the bill is overly broad and can allow the government to spy on personal E-mails and the web browsing habits of ordinary Americans. On Monday, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation launched a "week of protest" to let Congress know that Internet users are concerned about their privacy.

[Civil Liberties Organizations Launch Protests Against CISPA]

Rogers doesn't see what the big deal is.

"At home on your laptop, you won't see any bit of a difference, other than you'll have the comfort that somebody … has applied that malicious software filter on their systems so it's not getting through to your laptop computer," he said. "Pretty good stuff."

He says that recent meetings with privacy advocates have been productive.

Over the past several days, there have been indications that Congress is willing to back off some of the most controversial language in the bill. In the current version, most personal information would be stripped from data shared with the government, and the bill no longer defines intellectual property theft as something relating to national security.

"We think we're making huge progress with the privacy groups, so they understand what we're trying to accomplish, which isn't anything nefarious," Rogers said. "We've found that sweet spot."

But just because your personal information can be stripped from the data doesn't mean that it will be. "Your personal data can be minimized in this as needed," he said. "In some cases, you'll want that personal data, because something [malicious] is embedded in it."

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I would think, based on what I read in the news and our lack of security after the Cold War combined with our cozy free trade relationship, that they almost have everything already.

"China has made industrial espionage an integral part of its economic policy, stealing company secrets to help it leapfrog over U.S. and other foreign competitors to further its goal of becoming the world’s largest economy, U.S. intelligence officials have concluded in a report released last month.

What has been happening over the course of the last five years is that China -- let’s call it for what it is -- has been hacking its way into every corporation it can find listed in Dun & Bradstreet,” said Richard Clarke, former special adviser on cybersecurity to U.S. President George W. Bush, at an October conference on network security.

“Every corporation in the U.S., every corporation in Asia, every corporation in Germany. And using a vacuum cleaner to suck data out in terabytes and petabytes. I don’t think you can overstate the damage to this country that has already been done.”

While a precise dollar figure for damage is elusive, the overall magnitude of the attacks is not, Borg said.

“We’re talking about stealing entire industries,” he said. “This may be the biggest transfer of wealth in a short period of time that the world has ever seen.”

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-22/china-based-hacking-of-760-companies-shows-cyber-cold-war.html

Chinese `stole all nuclear secrets' - Espionage: Devastating report reveals that for 20 years Peking agents stripped America of weapons technology

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/chinese-stole-all-nuclear-secrets-1096016.html

^ Explains how China skipped decades of R&D leaping from AK-47s and WWII Soviet tanks to stealth bombers and plans for a space station. Now that they are up-to-date, China has announced double-digit increases to their military budget to put it into production the technology they "acquired."

For more than a year, hackers with ties to the Chinese military have been eavesdropping on U.S. Chamber of Commerce officials involved in Asia affairs, authorities say. The hackers had access to everything in Chamber computers, including, potentially, the entire U.S. trade policy playbook.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/chinese-hack-us-chamber-commerce-authorities/story?id=15207642

etc... etc... etc... ad infinitum.

It looks to me like the U.S. government just bent over and let them take whatever they wanted which we didn't hand them on a silver platter.

WASP of CA 1:14PM April 20, 2012

"CISPA Author Rogers: China's Cyber 'Predators' Must Be Stopped"

Right. And you're gonna do that by passing business-government collaborative snooping laws in the USA. Uh-huh.

Sharkey of TX 2:57PM April 19, 2012

Really? And when they find out Mei Huang Lo stole something. How do you arrest him in China. China wont do anything and wont extradite him either. This totalitarian Orwellian scam isn't making sense people!

Common sense of NJ 8:49AM April 18, 2012

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