The Senate ed a bill Tuesday aimed at improving cyber-security by encouraging companies and the government to share information about threats. It took roughly six years to win approval for such a program.
The Cyber-security Information Sharing Act ed by a 74-21 vote. It overcame concerns about privacy and transparency from some senators and technology companies, such as Apple and Yelp. s6c5h
The Senate rejected amendments, including one addressing concerns that companies could give the government personal information about their customers. Another failed amendment would have eliminated part of the bill that would keep secret information about which companies participate and what they share with the government.
The bill's co-sponsors, Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Richard Burr, R-N.C., said the measure was needed to limit high-profile Sony Pictures last year.
"From the beginning we committed to make this bill voluntary, meaning that any company in America, if they, their systems are breached, could choose voluntarily to create the partnership with the federal government. Nobody's mandated to do it," Burr said.
Companies would receive legal protections from antitrust and consumer privacy liabilities for participating in the voluntary program.
The House ed its version of the bill earlier this year with strong bipartisan . The two versions of the bill will need to be reconciled before being sent to the White House for the president's signature.
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who opposed the bill, offered an amendment addressing privacy concerns, but it failed to . It would have required companies to make "reasonable efforts" to remove unrelated personal information about their customers before providing the data to the government.
"You just can't hand it over," Wyden said. "You've got to take affirmative steps, reasonable, affirmative steps, before you share personal information."
Senators also rejected an amendment Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., had offered that would have removed a provision to keep secret more information about materials that companies provide to the government. Leahy criticized the bill's new exemption from the US Freedom of Information Act as overly broad because it pre-empts state and local public information requests, and it was added without public debate.
The Sunshine in Government Initiative, a Washington organization that promotes open government policies, urged the Senate last week to Leahy's amendment. The AP is one of at least nine journalism groups that are of the organization.
Despite the lengthy road to the Senate bill, it's unclear whether it would improve Internet security. Participation is voluntary and companies have long been reluctant to tell the US government about their security failures.
"ing the bill will have no effect on improving cyber-security," said Alan Paller, director of research for the SANS Institute. "That's been demonstrated each time sharing legislation has been ed. The cost to companies of disclosing their failings is so great that they avoid it even if there is a major benefit to them of learning about other peoples' failings."
Senators ed an amendment by Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., that limited the bill to 10 years.
Cyber-attacks have affected an increasing number of Americans who shop at Target, use Anthem medical insurance or saw doctors at medical centers at the University of California, Los Angeles.
More than 21 million Americans recently had their personal information stolen when the Office of Personnel Management was hacked in what that the US believes was a Chinese espionage operation.
Sen. John McCain, R-Az., chairman of the Senate Committee on Armed Services, called the bill's age an important first step. He noted that in the past year the United States has been attacked in cyberspace by Iran, North Korea, China and Russia and that there had been attacks against the t Chiefs of Staff, the Pentagon, OPM and an email hacking of the director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
The US and the technology industry already operate groups intended to improve sharing of information among the government and businesses, including the Homeland Security Department's US Computer Emergency Readiness Team.
"What this bill means is more internet s' personal information being funneled, will be directed to, the NSA."
Presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rand Paul, R-Ky., had opposed the bill, although Paul and fellow presidential candidates Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas; Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., each did not vote Tuesday. The White House has said it s the information-sharing bill.