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A new act, the Cybersecurity and American Cyber Competitiveness Act of 2013 calls for this very action. The legislation has been introduced in hopes to bring the public and private sectors together to collaborate against hackers. It strives to fortify identity management to stop identity theft, expand investigations into cyber threats and boost international cooperation to respond to hackers. At the same time, the act has several stipulations that will protect the privacy of citizens as well. This act shows high promise in resolving security breaches. If passed, this act will likely acknowledge the concerns that lawmakers had regarding the previous act.
While many hackers seek confidential information, some have other agendas. Several major cyber-attacks have taken place against the U.S. government since the original act was introduced in 2012. Just last Saturday, a hacktivist group called Anonymous infiltrated the Department of Justice website and threatened to release confidential government files to the public if the government did not reform the criminal justice system. Even if these hackers do not steal information for themselves, they threaten our national security when they gain access to government websites.
Securing the nation's networks from international hackers hoping to gain intelligence and American hackers hoping to send the government a message is vital to preventing security breaches. The Cybersecurity Act, and perhaps even stricter legislation, should be passed in order to maintain our national security.
Aanchal Johri. Aanchal Johri ('14) served as co-Editor-in-Chief of Silver Chips Online with Jack Estrin from 2013-2014. In January 2014, Johri represented Silver Chips Online at the White House as the only high school journalist to <a href="http://silverchips.mbhs.edu/story/12356">cover</a> the White House State of Science, Technology, Engineering and … More »
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