Massachusetts Daily Collegian

A free and responsible press serving the UMass community since 1890

A free and responsible press serving the UMass community since 1890

Massachusetts Daily Collegian

A free and responsible press serving the UMass community since 1890

Massachusetts Daily Collegian

Internet “Kill Switch” in USA?

MCT

The silence is deafening. You probably haven’t heard or read much about it. This is because the people that are trying to spread the word about the Internet “Kill Switch” are largely niche bloggers who would be directly impacted by the proposed legislation.
       
The recently resurfaced “Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act” would give President Obama and his Homeland Security Department the authority to declare a “cyberspace emergency.” If senate bill co-sponsors Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut and Susan Collins of Maine successfully pass this bill, DHS will, “establish and maintain a list of systems or assets that constitute covered critical infrastructure.” Essentially the president would be able to shut down the entire web without consulting the judiciary. Although the criteria for “critical infrastructure” have supposedly been modified and tightened since the introduction of the “Kill Switch” last year, it is no less alarming.
       
“For all of its user-friendly allure, the Internet can also be a dangerous place with electronic pipelines that run directly into everything from our personal bank accounts to key infrastructure to government and industrial secrets,” Lieberman warned of the penetrability of the Net. Thank you, Senator, for that brilliant technical analysis. According to a wired.com report, it appears that the bill has bipartisan support.
       
If this bill were introduced under a Republican administration, I dare say, the liberal media would be out for blood. The circumstances surrounding the “Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act” under the Obama administration feel eerily like those surrounding the passage of the USA Patriot Act after September 11. The left went batty over secret wiretapping, surveillance and the jailing of suspected terrorists – all without judicial consent and under the broadly-defined guise of “national security.” But when Obama signed a partial extension of the bill last year, all was quiet on the western front. Overnight, the press went from railing Bush about abusing civil liberties to barely covering the story under Obama. It appears the “Kill Switch,” which grants one man the authority to blackout mass media in America, is in for similar kid glove treatment.   

Disappointingly, the “Kill Switch” issue hasn’t received much play on talk radio either. 
       
This bill is so troubling because (I won’t even mention the new bureaucracy that will be created as a result of its passage) Americans increasingly get their news and other information from the Internet. Online news is now more popular than radio and newspapers, and the web medium is fast closing in on television. It won’t be long before the two fully merge in the mainstream.
           
Consider this.

Major telecommunications corporations such as AT&T and Verizon already spend millions of dollars each year on cyber security. We also have the FBI and other governmental agencies monitoring and acting upon potential Internet threats. No, their efforts do not provide an impenetrable shield against hackers, but shutting down the whole system is not the solution to solving these problems. Internet security breaches have occurred in recent years, and they will happen in the future. Recall some of the major financial security breaches in recent years including that with the TJX Companies and BJ’s wholesale club. Millions of credit cards and bank accounts were compromised in those situations. But in the case of TJX, it was years before the company caught on to the breach. Many major Internet security breaches are discovered after the fact – rendering a “Kill Switch” a moot solution, anyway.

Furthermore, I find it more than coincidental that the “Kill Switch” comes in the wake of renewed interest in reinstating the Fairness Doctrine. The Fairness Doctrine is code for curbing Fox News, talk radio and conservative websites. Given this administration’s attitude toward these outlets, this type of court-exempt power is bad news.

Look at the situation in Egypt.
       
The Egyptian government almost unilaterally blacked out Internet access nationwide, as well as most cell phone service last week due to the massive citizen protests in Cairo. Both President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have denounced this move – particularly the blocking of social networking sites.
       
Therefore, I beg the question, if the president feels the Internet should remain operational during a period of citizen revolt, a capital city in flames, a plunging stock exchange, rising death toll and the very real threat of a terrorist group, the Muslim Brotherhood, taking control of the nation, what exactly qualifies as an “emergency” scenario in which the Internet should be disconnected?
       
According to techi.com, Homeland Security is using a Hoover Dam breach as an example scenario. If someone was to gain access to the dam’s computers, he could haphazardly open the floodgates, so to speak. In theory, armed with the ability to freeze the Internet, the president could prevent such a catastrophic attack. However, this is assuming that the government will have prior knowledge of such a breach.

Living in an America with an Internet “Kill Switch” in the Oval Office is a frightening idea. The press needs to wake up and report on it before it loses the ability to do so.   

Shane Cronin is a Collegian columnist. He can be reached at [email protected].

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  • B

    BenFeb 1, 2011 at 11:47 pm

    Bravo, Mr. Cronin! This is one of the best articles I have read in the Daily Collegian in a long time.

    I’d heard about this. You’re right, it is kind of quiet. This would NOT be quiet if this were the Bush years. Back then, people were all upset that their civil liberties were being threatened by this thing called the Patriot Act, then they elected this guy called Obama and they didn’t give a crap when he extended it during his first year in office! Woot-woot! You rock, liberals!

    Joe Lieberman: “China has the power to shut down its Internet, so why can’t we?”

    Yes, we’re living in interesting times.

    Reply
  • T

    TimeKeeperAnonFeb 1, 2011 at 9:10 pm

    This is a travesty to truth and freedom. It must not be tolerated from any Government any where. The idea of a Kill Switch is for one purpose and one purpose only. To suppress truth. If you have done nothing wrong then you have no reason to fear the truth. Those who entertain this idea are strictly entertaining it to subvert freedom and the will of the people. The idea is fine for our Government to have. However, if our Government acts on the idea it will cause a outcry that will reach the heavens as the protests begin.

    Reply
  • M

    MarciFeb 1, 2011 at 5:12 am

    I think that having this kind of allowance is more than a good idea. If it is going to save our country from what could be a very devastating circumstance then so be it. I dont believe our top secrets in the military and so on should even be made public on the internet. Thats just inviting all kinds of trouble to our nation. And that is exactly what has been happening already with the Wikileaks. In this case, I fell that it is a good idea and come on, if people cant live without the internet thats just sad. It was said years ago that computers would take over the world, well I guess that has rung so very true!

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  • T

    TDJan 31, 2011 at 11:14 pm

    Shane, I completely agree. It’s ridiculous that none of my friends have heard about this. Thanks for writing such an informed article. I wrote something less informed about what the world without internet would be like. Hopefully it’s good for a laugh if you have a minute: http://TrendDefender.com.

    Reply