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Kerry Bentivolio on Technology
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No regulation of Internet service nor political speech
The freedom of speech is vital to our society. Where speech is controlled, ideas are controlled, and thus, people are controlled. Any free society must reject that. To do anything else would lead us down a slippery slope toward tyranny.As Congressman,
I will oppose any measures to regulate speech on the Internet, or to license and regulate the behavior of Internet service providers (ISPs). And I firmly oppose "equal time" regulations to control political speech..
The Constitution makes no distinction between what is good and bad protesting. It makes no value judgments. It is what it is, and
I must stand by in defense of the freedom of speech, even for those people who I strongly oppose. We have the right as individuals to engage in political speech free from restriction and intimidation.
Source: 2012 House campaign website, bentivolioforcongress.com
, Nov 6, 2012
Voted NO on protecting cyber security by sharing data with government.
Congressional Summary:- CISPA conducts federal cybersecurity activities to provide shared situational awareness enabling integrated operational actions to protect, prevent, and recover from cyber incidents.
Proponent's Argument for voting Yes:
- Rep. SINEMA: We need a 21st century solution for this 21st century problem. This bill ensures that research and development, intellectual property, and software code is no longer being stolen by China, Iran, and Russia.
- Rep. MAFFEI: We've already seen state actors like the People's Republic of China pursue widespread data theft from American computer networks. This is a clear and present danger.
Opponent's Argument for voting No:- Rep. McNERNEY: I'm concerned with the civil protections not required in H.R. 624. Businesses should be required to remove personally identifiable information before submitting data to Federal agencies.
- CNet.com: Rep. Ron Paul warned that
CISPA represents the "latest assault on Internet freedom"; that "CISPA is Big Brother writ large." CISPA would permit, but not require, Internet companies to hand over confidential customer records to federal agencies. What sparked the privacy worries--including opposition from the ACLU and the Republican Liberty Caucus--is the section of CISPA that says "notwithstanding any other provision of law." By including the word "notwithstanding," CISPA's drafters intended to make their legislation trump all existing laws. It would render irrelevant wiretap laws, Web companies' privacy policies, and more.
- Rep. LOFGREN: CISPA could allow any private company to share vast amounts of sensitive, private data about its customers with the government. CISPA would override all other privacy laws, and allow a private company to share nearly anything--from the contents of private emails to medical records--as long as it "directly pertains to" a broadly defined "cyber threat."
Reference: Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act;
Bill H.R.624
; vote number 13-HV117
on Apr 18, 2013
Page last updated: Feb 22, 2016