WhoWhatWhy

Barb

Carpe Scrotum
Apr 2, 2009
5,717
1,632
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in a house.
This little news publication should, in a more perfect world, become much, much more widely followed.

The Marathon Bombing: What the Media Didn?t Warn You About - WhoWhatWhy


"We ought to care more about the narrative we’re getting, about the texture of what saturates us. The way in which a story is handled shapes our emotions and perceptions, determines priorities, and influences seemingly unrelated outcomes that affect us in profound ways, sometimes transforming our society."
 
This little news publication should, in a more perfect world, become much, much more widely followed.

The Marathon Bombing: What the Media Didn?t Warn You About - WhoWhatWhy


"We ought to care more about the narrative we’re getting, about the texture of what saturates us. The way in which a story is handled shapes our emotions and perceptions, determines priorities, and influences seemingly unrelated outcomes that affect us in profound ways, sometimes transforming our society."

and relating to Boston, this bullshit has already started

But yesterday, when the House was debating the contentious bill, CISPA advocates didn’t seem to be paying attention to any of those issues. Rep. Mike McCaul, R-Texas, cited the Boston bombings while arguing for CISPA to be adopted. “In the case of Boston, they were real bombs,” McCaul said, adding that we also need to arm ourselves against “digital bombs. These bombs are on their way.” Similarly apocalyptic statements were made by Rep. Candice Miller, R-Mich., who made no mention of Boston, though argued that CISPA was needed to stop hackers in countries like Iran and North Korea from crippling American infrastructure and causing the destruction of American jobs. Rep. Dan Maffei, D-N.Y., even used the debate to take aim at WikiLeaks, bizarrely claiming CISPA was needed to stop the whistleblowing website from pursuing efforts to “hack into our nation’s power grid.”

Mike McCaul cites Boston bombing as a reason why CISPA should be passed.
 
These and other lawmakers are taking advantage of, and attempting to appease, the fear among many Americans who are willing to surrender their freedom for the illusion of security.

The broad language of the bill, which imposes its standards above "any other provision of law," would effectively void privacy contracts between companies and their customers. Specifically it states that "Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a self-protected entity may, for cybersecurity purposes ... share such cyber threat information with any other entity, including the Federal Government." Companies could not be held accountable for violating terms of service agreements or other arrangements in which they promise not to share customer information with other parties.

Privacy and civil liberties advocates, including the American Civil Liberties Union, have blasted CISPA for overriding private contracts and authorizing both corporate and government access to personal information. Several Internet freedom groups also objected to the bill, warning that people will be less willing to use online services for fear that their privacy will be compromised.

CISPA Vote: House Passes Cybersecurity Bill To Let Companies Break Privacy Contracts

Let’s hope it fails in the Senate, or ultimately vetoed by the president.
 

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