CFAA: Still Broken And Congress Is Unlikely To Fix It Any Time Soon
from the your-random-reminder dept
There's been some attention paid to a recent Forbes article that confirms what pretty much everyone has always said: Congress won't move forward with reforming the CFAA. There's nothing particularly new in the article. It's just rehashing things that were hashed out over the past few years: the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, a very out-of-date law concerning hacking, has been abused mightily for decades, well beyond its intended purpose. It got lots of attention as the law being used against Aaron Swartz, but the abuses started long before that. However, many tech companies, led by Oracle, have fought against reform (in part because they use the threat of the law to keep employees from running off with trade secrets, even though there are other laws for that). At the same time, the DOJ would actually like to make the law even worse.And, in the simplistic minds of many in Congress, if the big industry associated with the issue and the government don't want the necessary reforms -- even if the public is interested in such reforms -- it's just not worth doing. This doesn't necessarily mean that CFAA reform won't eventually happen, but like ECPA reform, patent reform and other related issues, very little can actually get through Congress these days. So in many cases, in the minds of certain folks in Congress, it's just not worth trying, even if it's the right thing to do.
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Filed Under: aaron's law, cfaa, congress, hacking, politics
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Patents were supposed to have done away with trade secrets. This is literally the purpose that patents were created for: to give tradesmen a strong incentive to publish their discoveries, rather than keeping them secret and then the secret all too often ends up dying with them. But somewhere along the line, things went sideways, and we ended up enshrining protection for trade secrets in law instead of working to stamp them out, and time and time again we see the harm that that causes.
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No surprises anywhere
There's another non-surprise. Oracle is one of (and often the) the worst of the tech companies.
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It's rather futile expecting something that is broken to be fixed by something that is broken.
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Why? It shows the real malaise of Washington isn't one side or the other, rather that the critters play for the camera and don't actually work to fix things.
For me the second part here is that you should be careful what you wish for. If the CFAA gets fixed, it's likely that the laws would get tougher and much more specific, and woudl almost certainly end making certain grey area activities into cold hard criminal acts.
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"the real malaise of Washington isn't one side or the other,"
... it's the corruption, greed and general lackadaisical attitude.
In addition, claiming both sides are the same is obviously incorrect.
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Oracle (much like the MAFIAA) spends millions on 'Lobbying' to make sure that laws always go in their favour, usually against the public.
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Which, even if I disagreed with certain choices about what got criminalized, would still be an improvement over what we have now. What we have now effectively lets prosecutors decide what is criminal and what is not.
A clear definition of what is criminal and what is not is essential. Without that, actual justice is impossible.
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Justice is Blonde
T'aint broken.
Its written exactly the way they want it written and does precisely what they want it to do.
Why on earth would they do anything to change that!??
Don't tell me you think the American Justice System is about Justice still! Under the current system, Justice can see with 20/20 vision and its the public that's blind.
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Also, isn't there a saying about how 'the best way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce it completely'? Maybe if they started publicly cracking down on things that are currently given a pass until the prosecution wants to score some easy PR, people might start calling for a real fix.
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