Showing posts with label Internet Kill Switch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet Kill Switch. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

U.S. Military Beta-Tests Internet Kill-Switch on Japanese Relief Pretext

U.S. Military Beta-Tests Internet Kill-Switch on Japanese Relief Pretext

FLASHBACK: New Bill Gives Obama ‘Kill Switch’ To Shut Down The Internet

FLASHBACK: Kill Switch Beta: Government Blocks 84,000 Websites


FLASHBACK: Internet ‘kill switch’ bill gets a makeover
 
Mark Preston and Adam Levine
CNN
March 16, 2011


U.S. military blocks websites to help Japan recovery efforts


Washington (CNN) — The U.S. military has blocked access to a range of popular commercial websites in order to free up bandwidth for use in Japan recovery efforts, according to an e-mail obtained by CNN and confirmed by a spokesman for U.S. Strategic Command.

The sites — including YouTube, ESPN, Amazon, eBay and MTV — were chosen not because of the content but because their popularity among users of military computers account for significant bandwidth, according to Strategic Command spokesman Rodney Ellison.

The block, instituted Monday, is intended “to make sure bandwidth was available in Japan for military operations” as the United States helps in the aftermath of last week’s deadly earthquake and tsunami, Ellison explained.

U.S. Pacific Command made the request to free up the bandwidth. The sites, 13 in all, are blocked across the Department of Defense’s .mil computer system.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Internet ‘kill switch’ bill gets a makeover

Internet ‘kill switch’ bill gets a makeover

CNET
February 20, 2011

A Senate proposal that has become known as the Internet “kill switch” bill was reintroduced this week, with a tweak its backers say eliminates the possibility of an Egypt-style disconnection happening in the United States.

As CNET reported last month, the 221-page bill hands Homeland Security the power to issue decrees to certain privately owned computer systems after the president declares a “national cyberemergency.” A section in the new bill notes that does not include “the authority to shut down the Internet,” and the name of the bill has been changed to include the phrase “Internet freedom.”

“The emergency measures in our bill apply in a precise and targeted way only to our most critical infrastructure,” Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said yesterday about the legislation she is sponsoring with Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn). “We cannot afford to wait for a cyber 9/11 before our government finally realizes the importance of protecting our digital resources.”

But the revised wording (PDF) continues to alarm civil liberties groups and other critics of the bill, who say the language would allow the government to shut down portions of the Internet or restrict access to certain Web sites or types of content.

Even former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak didn’t actually “shut down” the Internet: at least at first, a trickle of connections continued.

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