Sweeping Cyber Security Order (www.theregister.com)
from atrielienz@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 05:08
https://lemmy.world/post/24407357

The sweeping directive, signed Thursday, covers a range of topics including securing federal communications networks against foreign snoops, issuing tougher sanctions for ransomware gangs, requiring software providers to develop more secure products, and using AI to boost America’s cyber defense capabilities, among others.

#technology

threaded - newest

semperverus@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 05:21 next collapse

Oh hey, it’s literally requiring the government agencies to do the exact same thing we have been doing in the corporate space these past several years.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 18 Jan 05:29 next collapse

Sounds like less than that. I read it as self-attestation for the most basic processes.

undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch on 18 Jan 08:03 collapse

I was thinking to myself “so they just have to keep doing what they’re doing” but my second thought was more in line with your comment.

metaStatic@kbin.earth on 18 Jan 06:45 next collapse

using AI

so close and yet so far

gidostro@lemmy.cafe on 18 Jan 07:32 next collapse

“ChatGPT, is this spam?”

TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 05:30 collapse

“No. That is a copypasta, not a meat replacement. I can give you recommendations of recipes for copypasta and spam dinners if you would like 😊”

Womble@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 23:20 collapse

Yes, I’m sure random commentors on the internet know better than the NSA what an appropriate use of AI is when it comes to cyber security…

cybersandwich@lemmy.world on 20 Jan 13:29 collapse

Exactly. Especially considering half these commenters are using chatbots and AI interchangeably as if there aren’t dozens of other tools that use AI/ML to parse data and do anomaly detection.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 18 Jan 08:06 next collapse

What about privacy and actual freedom of speech or curtailling corporate cyberintrusion into oir lives? Any of that?

WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 10:05 next collapse

Freedom and privacy were cancelled with Citizens United. I suggest you take up your concerns with the corporate dictatorship who doesn’t give a shit.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 04:22 collapse

What shall I write on the casings?

futatorius@lemm.ee on 19 Jan 11:55 collapse

Box 4.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 18 Jan 10:55 collapse

You have freedom of speech where the government can give it to you, stop expecting freedom of speech on platforms owned by private interests, that’s not how freedom of speech works.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 04:20 next collapse

Buy your free speech, just 16$ per month! No being mean to Elon allowed!

Even the nazi had free speech if you keep it in your.

What a farcical and useless understanding of “free speech” you have.

“It’s not censorship when Elon does it”

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 11:06 collapse

That’s exactly how it works though. You can say whatever you want on the sidewalk, once you enter a store it’s the store owner that decides if they allow you to say what you want to say.

You can say what you want on your own website, if you say it on someone else’s website they can censor you all they want.

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 19 Jan 18:32 collapse

Oops a billionaire just bought the city square. Enjoy your complimentary freedom in the designated free speech zone. Just don’t protest annoyingly…

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 21:07 collapse

Ok buddy, keep on trolling 👍

JackbyDev@programming.dev on 19 Jan 06:45 collapse

The elephant in the room with statements like this is that many communication enabling technologies are more akin to utilities. Where that line is and how close to utilities they are is debatable (do we include things like Twitter? Or just low level stuff like email. Are they utilities or merely similar to them?). Especially when you consider their necessity to operate in modern society and impossibility to rebuild yourself from scratch.

I get your point. I’m not trying to suggest corporations should be forced to allow 100% actually true free speech on their platforms.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 11:08 next collapse

Shitter can censor you all they want, they have zero obligation to allow you to say whatever you want as it’s a privately owned website. You can run your own website and say what you want on it though, just like you can put whatever message you want on your car or on your front lawn and people are free to read it or ignore it.

JackbyDev@programming.dev on 19 Jan 17:34 collapse

Look, I genuinely get what your saying, and I’m not saying people should be allowed to say whatever they want on Twitter. I’m certainly not saying the first amendment protects them. I’m just saying a lot of forms of online communication are critical in today’s society.

Like, if I got banned from Twitter for saying I dislike Elon Musk, does that sound okay? I know it’s currently legal, I’m not saying it isn’t. But it certainly feels like an unjust restriction of my speech. Not “free speech” in the protected first amendment sense, but certainly “free speech” in the sense that people should generally be allowed to say things. The response of “just build your own website and you can say what you want” is missing the point of the reach and power massive websites have. When people say “big tech restricts free speech” this is the sort of thing they’re trying to get at, but it sounds wrong because “free speech” is a pretty loaded and ambiguous term. Treating everyone saying free speech as if they mean something about the first amendment feels disingenuous to me.

And again, let me be perfectly clear, I’m not trying to insinuate that everyone should just get free reign to post whatever hateful content or misinformation they want wherever they want. I’m just saying that private companies being able to silence you on a global scale with no recourse or way to protest it feels very wrong. I don’t have a solution and don’t know where the line should be, but corporations shouldn’t just be able to gag people arbitrarily.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 19 Jan 21:09 collapse

I get your point but society decided it would rather have private interests managing social media so 🤷

Decentralization is one solution though.

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 20 Jan 16:16 collapse

Back before the internet existed newspapers were not required to print your editorial letters either

EvacuateSoul@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 12:50 collapse

Not a bill

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 13:15 collapse

Agreed. I’ll fix that. Thank you.