A bill titled ‘Securing Energy Infrastructure Act’ was proposed by Sens. Jim Risch, and Angus King. This bill, reintroduced last Thursday, would push the government to explore new ways to secure the electric grid against cyber attacks. This bill unanimously passed the Senate in December but was never put to a vote in the House.
On 17th January, Sens. John Thune, R-S.D., and Ed Markey, D-Mass., renewed their call to increase punishments for people running robocall scams. The Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence, or TRACED, Act would give the Federal Communications Commission more legal leeway to pursue and prosecute robocallers. Under the bill, telecom companies would also need to adopt tools to sift out robocalls.
Thune said, “The TRACED Act holds those people who participate in robocall scams and intentionally violate telemarketing laws accountable and does more to proactively protect consumers who are potential victims of these bad actors.”
The Federal CIO Authorization Act, which Reps. Will Hurd, and Robin Kelly, reintroduced on Jan. 4, passed the House unanimously on Tuesday. This bill would elevate the federal chief information officer within the White House chain of command and designate both the federal CIO and federal chief information security officer as presidentially appointed positions. The measure still lacks a Senate counterpart.
Lawmakers have also sent letters to different companies including Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and AT&T asking for information on the companies’ data sharing partnerships with third-party aggregators. These companies have time until Jan 30 to respond. Reps. Greg Walden, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Robert Latta, and Brett Guthrie, wrote, “We are deeply troubled because it is not the first time we have received reports and information about the sharing of mobile users’ location information involving a number of parties who may have misused personally identifiable information.”
To know more about these bills in detail, visit the Nextgov website.
Russia opens civil cases against Facebook and Twitter over local data laws
Harvard Law School launches its Caselaw Access Project API and bulk data service making almost 6.5 million cases available
Senator Ron Wyden’s data privacy law draft can punish tech companies that misuse user data