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siljaline
mind that delimiter
Premium
join:2002-10-12
Montreal, QC
·Bell Sympatico

 Obama's internet monitoring plan moves forward

Proposal for defending against cyber attacks worries privacy experts

The Obama administration is moving cautiously on a new pilot program that would both detect and stop cyber attacks against government computers, while trying to ensure citizen privacy protections.

The pilot program, known as Einstein 3, was supposed to launch in February. But the Department of Homeland Security is still pulling the plan together, according to senior administration officials.

Einstein 3 has triggered debate and privacy concerns because the program will use National Security Agency technology, which is already being employed on military networks.

Any involvement of the NSA — the agency which oversees electronic intelligence-gathering — in protecting domestic computer networks worries privacy and civil liberties groups who oppose giving such control to U.S. spy agencies.

Officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the program is still being finalized, said that while the technology will come from the NSA, the program will be managed and run by the Department of Homeland Security. The monitoring would be limited to government systems and any internet traffic moving in and out of them.

The latest developments in the Einstein 3 program were first reported Thursday on the Washington Post's website.

"The NSA will provide technical assistance," Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told reporters. "We absolutely intend to use the technical resources, the substantial ones that NSA has."

Einstein 1, which is currently in use by DHS, is an automated program designed to detect intrusions into government networks, and Einstein 2, which is now being put in place, is a more advanced system for detection. It is being used now by about five of the higher risk government agencies, one senior official said.

Einstein 3 would be designed to not only detect intrusions, but to stop them — preventing any malicious computer codes from getting into government networks and stopping any data theft from those systems. The key, said officials, is that the focus of the monitoring and prevention program is not the content of emails, but any codes attached to emails that could infect the system or steal information.

Ari Schwartz, a vice-president of the Center for Democracy and Technology, said Thursday that privacy advocates want to ensure that as the government begins to more aggressively protect its computer systems, it follows the law, and does not look into private systems.

"There are a number of concerns that come with this process, the main one being how do you go about protecting the system in a way that insures you're not monitoring private systems," said Schwartz. "I don't have a full answer to that question. But the president made that pledge. That makes me more comfortable that it won't happen."

The planned deployment of the new Einstein 3 program was noted in the administration's recently released cyber security review. The 60-day review said the government would continue to consult with privacy and civil liberties groups as the program moves forward.

Obama released the review saying that cyber threats are one of the most serious economic and national security challenges faced by the nation. And he said he will name a new cyber co-ordinator for the federal government.
Source:
»www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009···cks.html
--
siljaline

Here at Mountain View Chocolate, we’re committed to transparency and choice

SUMware
Premium
join:2002-05-21
»Cybersecurity Plan to Involve NSA, Telecoms (again)


siljaline
mind that delimiter
Premium
join:2002-10-12
Montreal, QC
·Bell Sympatico

Noted, thanks
--
siljaline

Here at Mountain View Chocolate, we’re committed to transparency and choice


Dude111
An Awesome Dude
Premium
join:2003-08-04
USA
reply to siljaline
Obama blows!

mongol

join:2004-06-21
Friendswood, TX
Big daddy Obama and big brother!


FunnyBones
Premium
join:2004-01-22
usa
·Vonage


1 edit
said by mongol See Profile :

Big daddy Obama and big brother!
Be sure to check out Utah as this will be the data center that holds all our information...

--
"Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes"

mongol

join:2004-06-21
Friendswood, TX
Biden will be put in charge of this. It'll be a gaf a minute...

Finger2208

join:2001-04-07
Lindale, TX
Chains you can believe in!


La Luna
Surviving Ashraful
Premium
join:2001-07-12
Warwick, NY
clubs:
reply to siljaline
I can't help but . Oh the irony.

Not to worry, he is appointing a new Cyber Co-Ordinator czar, all is well.

hoyleysox

join:2003-11-07
Long Beach, CA
·Time Warner Cable
·Cox HSI

reply to siljaline
Einstein 3 would be designed to not only detect intrusions, but to stop them — preventing any malicious computer codes from getting into government networks and stopping any data theft from those systems. The key, said officials, is that the focus of the monitoring and prevention program is not the content of emails, but any codes attached to emails that could infect the system or steal information.
Rather than securing the [windows] systems themselves the government has decided to install a program to monitor the internet ingresses that could be connect to those systems.

Makes me wonder if there is an unstated reason for the monitoring program.


sivran
Long Live The Suite
Premium
join:2003-09-15
Arlington, TX
clubs:
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to siljaline
quote:
"There are a number of concerns that come with this process, the main one being how do you go about protecting the system in a way that insures you're not monitoring private systems," said Schwartz. "I don't have a full answer to that question. But the president made that pledge. That makes me more comfortable that it won't happen."
How about doing what everyone else does: protect your network at the edge, harden the hosts inside with updates, antivirus, settings tweaks, etc., control physical access, and implement realistic policies that the end-users will actually follow, rather than try to subvert?

Sheesh. Gubmint.
--
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon profitable cause...
-
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