The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, the controversial bill that allows intelligence agencies the power to obtain user data from companies beyond the rule of law, was signed off by President Obama a fortnight ago after being forcibly bundled with a vital Federal funding bill – together known as the “Omnibus” bill – that was guaranteed to pass. One man, however, intends to challenge this chicanery, even if he has to do it alone.
Republican Congressman Justin Amash plans to introduce legislation to remove the controversial CISA from the Omnibus bill, branding it “unconstitutional”:
Amash later released a statement regarding the above tweet to The Daily Dot. “Many of my colleagues remain unaware that a massive surveillance bill was snuck into the omnibus,” Amash said. “And if they are aware, they may have been misled into believing this bill is about cybersecurity.”
Amash has been a vocal opponent of CISA ever since the bill was muted, even before it formed a part of the Omnibus bill, branding it “anti-privacy legislation.” While Congress ultimately passed the bill, the Congressman – who also opposed the Patriot Act and failed in an attempt to strip powers from the NSA following the Snowden leaks in 2013 – feels he has a right to at least challenge its inclusion in Omnibus when reconvenes in January.
Despite Helldivers II's popularity, fans have long felt the game lacked collaborations. Nearly a year…
The anti-cheat system in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone has not met…
The NVIDIA app, which recently replaced GeForce Experience, has gained popularity for its revamped interface…
AMD is gearing up to expand its CPU lineup in early 2025, with recent leaks…
Following the leak of AMD's flagship laptop CPU, another processor from the AMD Kraken Point…
DeepCool has just announced the ASSASSIN IV VC VISION CPU cooler, the latest in its…