Declan McCullough of CNET details why the bill — which encourages private businesses to voluntarily share "cyberthreat information" with the U.S. government — has privacy advocates up in arms.
McCullough explains that the legislation "authorizes federal agencies to conduct warrantless searches of information they obtain from e-mail and
Furthermore, the bill overrides existing privacy policies and wiretap laws, so the feds would be able to "compile a database of information shared by private companies and search that information for possible violations of hundreds, if not thousands, of criminal laws."
The House Intelligence committee contends that any claim that "this legislation creates a wide-ranging government surveillance program" is untrue.
But groups including the ACLU and Electronic Frontier Foundation argue that the bill allows for collection of sensitive private information such as Internet records and contents of emails, which could then be used "without meaningful oversight for purposes unrelated to cybersecurity."
CISPA now heads to the Senate and could soon end up on President Obama's desk to potentially sign into