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H.R. 624: The "Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act", better known as CISPA, passed the House of Representatives and is now moving into the Senate. It's a better bill than it was in the last Congress, but it's still not ready to become law. Links to information in this podcast Music: Democracy is Dangerous by Thomas Pace (found on Music Alley by mevio) Text of H.R. 624: CISPA as it passed the House of Representatives Congressional Dish summary of CISPA White House veto threat Representatives Quoted in This Episode (in order of appearance) Rep. Alcee Hastings of Florida Rep. Rob Woodall of Georgia Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan Rep. Jared Polis of Colorado Rep. Adam Schiff of California Rep. Bill Enyart of Illinois Further Reading Sunlight Foundation article on lobbying efforts for CISPA
The debate of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) leads to a look at the Constitutional system for Direct Taxes The CISPA law has many people on edge and Dave & John have questions about it and direct taxes as outlined in the Constitution Article 1 Section 9
Some lawmakers have reintroduced the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), a bill that would allow private companies to share a wide range of cyber threat information with U.S. government agencies. We'll tell you why is CISPA a bad law if it passes.The first ever real life zombie attack unfolded on live TV. How could this attack have been avoided?Intel is joining the world of cord cutters and will soon give you a way to watch TV on their TV.
Over the past decade, disputes about intellectual property and piracy on the internet have become steadily more prominent. In October 2011, the House Judiciary Committee introduced the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). With its bipartisan sponsors, the bill proposed anti-piracy measures allowing the U.S. Department of Justice and intellectual property owners to exercise control over websites facilitating copyright infringement. In the Senate, the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA) introduced additional methods for the government and copyright holders to protect against counterfeit goods domestically and abroad. Given protests and an unprecedented internet blackout, voting on the bills was suspended. However, a third bill intended to protect against cyber threats, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), passed in the House of Representatives in April 2012. The Constitution Day 2012 forum examined constitutional questions raised by internet piracy, proposed legislation to regulate the internet, copyright law, and other issues related to intellectual property. It includes perspectives from the speakers, questions from a CWRU student panel, and audience participation.
XP Virtual Machine in Win 7 (allows legacy programs to run), disk imaging using Acornis True Image (great backup option), file program association (PC vs Mac, properties vs extensions), Profiles in IT (Steve Coast, founder OpenStreetMaps), Astronomy Day (April 28, a day for learning), MS patches Hotmail (improper token validation allowed password reset of any account, major exploit, patched April 20), Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (passed House with voluntary industry compliance, Whitehouse wants mandatory compliance), LinkIn update (iPad app finally released, full integration with calendar), Oracle vs Google (can the structure, sequence, and organization of Java APIs be protected IP, judge will decide), Dumb Idea of the Week (Hugvie Cushion, human shaped cushion for cell phone intimacy, has heart beat and pulse), and online storage wars are heating up (Google Drive, MS SkyDrive, Apple iCloud, Dropbox). This show originally aired on Saturday, April 28, 2012, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
XP Virtual Machine in Win 7 (allows legacy programs to run), disk imaging using Acornis True Image (great backup option), file program association (PC vs Mac, properties vs extensions), Profiles in IT (Steve Coast, founder OpenStreetMaps), Astronomy Day (April 28, a day for learning), MS patches Hotmail (improper token validation allowed password reset of any account, major exploit, patched April 20), Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (passed House with voluntary industry compliance, Whitehouse wants mandatory compliance), LinkIn update (iPad app finally released, full integration with calendar), Oracle vs Google (can the structure, sequence, and organization of Java APIs be protected IP, judge will decide), Dumb Idea of the Week (Hugvie Cushion, human shaped cushion for cell phone intimacy, has heart beat and pulse), and online storage wars are heating up (Google Drive, MS SkyDrive, Apple iCloud, Dropbox). This show originally aired on Saturday, April 28, 2012, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).