Eager to head off criticism from privacy advocates and users over the expanded surveillance provisions in its forthcoming National Strategy for Securing Cyberspace, the Bush administration is expected to recommend appointing a federal "privacy czar" to act as watchdog. Chief among . . . . Eager to head off criticism from privacy advocates and users over the expanded surveillance provisions in its forthcoming National Strategy for Securing Cyberspace, the Bush administration is expected to recommend appointing a federal "privacy czar" to act as watchdog. Chief among the czar's duties would be to vet all government data gathering and security initiatives for potential privacy problems, according to a draft of the plan. The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . Eager to head off criticism from privacy advocates and users over the expanded surveillance provisio. eager, criticism, privacy, advocates, users, expanded, surveillance, provisio. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Alan Paller writes in the SANS digest, "The President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board has released the first phase of the US National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace - a list of the key questions to be answered in the Strategy. By releasing the questions first, the Board hopes to encourage interested parties to suggest innovative and thoughtful answers to each of the questions.". . .. Alan Paller writes in the SANS digest, "The President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board has released the first phase of the US National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace - a list of the key questions to be answered in the Strategy. By releasing the questions first, the Board hopes to encourage interested parties to suggest innovative and thoughtful answers to each of the questions." Fifty-three questions were chosen by the Board through a series of extensive consultations with private and public sector leaders and technical experts. The questions illuminate the key issues to be addressed in the National Strategy. The next step in the process of building the National Strategy is to enable interested parties to propose answers to these questions - answers that may help the people drafting the strategy do the best possible job and reflect the widest possible set of interests, experiences and knowledge. The SANS Institute has agreed to collect answers, sort them, and compile them for review by National Strategy drafters. SANS will not evaluate the responses or change them. The link for this article located at SANS is no longer available. . Alan Paller writes in the SANS digest, 'The President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board has. paller, writes, digest, president's, critical, infrastructure, protection, board. . Anthony Pell
The Clinton administration formally waded into the cybercrime debate this week by forwarding a proposal to Capitol Hill that calls for enhancing law enforcement's ability to conduct wiretaps while creating new privacy protections. Justice Department officials sent what they call the . . . . The Clinton administration formally waded into the cybercrime debate this week by forwarding a proposal to Capitol Hill that calls for enhancing law enforcement's ability to conduct wiretaps while creating new privacy protections. Justice Department officials sent what they call the "Enhancement of Privacy and Public Safety in Cyberspace Act" to House and Senate leaders on Monday, spelling out the details of a proposal first outlined by White House Chief of Staff John Podesta two weeks ago. The link for this article located at GovExec is no longer available. . The Biden administration's initiative aims to enhance cybersecurity measures for public institutions while prioritizing citizen data protection.. Cybercrime Debate, Privacy Enhancement, Law Enforcement Proposals. . Anthony Pell
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