Panel OKs bill that would increase cybersecurity oversight

A Senate committee has approved a bill that would require the president to notify Congress about existing and new cybersecurity programs that involve personally identifiable information.

The Senate Select Intelligence Committee has approved a bill that would require the president to notify Congress about existing and new cybersecurity programs that involve personally identifiable information (PII).

The bill, which also would fund some programs for fiscal 2010, would require the administration to provide documents about each such program’s legal justification, certifications of its legality, concepts of operations, privacy impact statements, and plans for independent audits or reviews of the program.

The requirements would apply to cybersecurity programs involving PII in which an agency is the intended recipient of e-mail messages or other electronic communication, with at least one of these situations to apply:

  • It uses another agency or department, such as the Homeland Security or Defense departments, to screen PII.
  • The agency transfers PII to another agency or department for cybersecurity purposes.
  • The agency transfers PII to an element of the intelligence community.

The committee said in its report explaining the bill, dated July 22, that the measure's provisions sought to set up a “preliminary framework for executive and congressional oversight to ensure that the government’s national cybersecurity mission is consistent with legal authorities and preserves reasonable expectations of privacy.”

The committee said the requirements intentionally exclude routine firewalls and antivirus programs that could be considered cybersecurity programs. It also said the requirements pertain to governmentwide cybersecurity programs.

“These types of programs pose challenging new legal and privacy questions that make congressional and executive branch oversight particularly important,” the report said.

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