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In the dark of the night, UCITA will find you

Posted on June 16, 2008 by Chris Gamble and filed under Enterprise Computing.

InfoWorld reports that a new bill is in the Senate to combat spyware ... or does it?

S. 1625 named the Counter Spy Act prohibits taking over computers with zombies or to take information for identify theft. Except these new rules for our safety (which are already illegal under other bills)

"do not apply to any monitoring of, or interaction with, a subscriber's Internet or other network connection or service, or a protected computer, by or at the direction of a telecommunications carrier, cable operator, computer hardware or software provider, financial institution or provider of information services or interactive computer service..." -- (Section 6a)

And of course the 10th commandment or exemption provides for these activites when used for "(10) detection or prevention of the unauthorized use of software fraudulent or other illegal activities."

Info World provides a much more in-depth legal analysis, but for the purposes of IT management and security, this does not bode well.

Consider #1 -- Vendor at the end of its life and running out of cash. Given the choice of going out of business peacefully, or start dragging your customers through the muck -- what would most companies choose. Now consider this, would you as an IT professional want them to have that choice?

Consider #2 -- The latest BSA program to check copyrights had perforated your network. This is quite legal under this new law, but as no software is perfect, it has been piggy backed by a malicious hacker. There is no option to sue the BSA, and we can only hope that the hacker is in a country with extradition.

Consider #3 -- Your vertical market software is supported via an off-shore support contract. Your American vendor has every right to watch your network, but what ethics is their foreign vendor obligated to?

Not sure about you, but just those three scare the hell out of me -- and would cause grave concern in any lapel flag wearing Senator. So why has this thing progressed so far?



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