Crossroads Blog | Institute National Security and Counterterrorism

anonymity, Criticism, Current Affairs, Identity Management, NS-TIC, Privacy, regulation

Editorial: Obama and the Internet Pharaoh

In an editorial appearing in the Washington Times on February 4, 2011, the writer criticizes the Obama Administration's National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace ("NS-TIC"), as well as the federal government overall for recent attempts to grant "a White House cyberczar [what the writer calls] Mubarak-like power to declare an emergency and issue directives to any private companies deemed . . . critical by government."

The writer points out that private companies are better suited to guard the Internet, as they "have more of an incentive to preserve their billion-dollar investments than '9 to 5' bureaucrats with guaranteed lifetime employment."  And, in reference to Egypt's temporary Internet shut-down, the writer notes that these "clumsy censorship attempts were bypassed with proxy severs and other simple workarounds."

With regard to the NS-TIC, the writer argues that despite assurances from administration officials that the NS-TIC will not operate as a national ID system, "any government involvement in identity management or security on the Internet is a bad idea.  Big-government types can't resist the urge to control things they feel are currently beyond thier grasp. . . . The temptation to squelch inconvenient speech is too great; no political should ever be given a button to silence the Internet."

 

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The entire editorial piece can be found at the link provided above, or here.   

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