Cyber Security and American Cyber Competitiveness Act of 2011 - Calls for the enactment of bipartisan legislation to secure the United States against cyber attack, enhance American competitiveness and create jobs in the information technology industry, and protect the identities and sensitive information of American citizens and businesses by: (1) enhancing the security and resiliency of U.S. government communications and information networks against cyber attack; (2) incentivizing the private sector to quantify, assess, and mitigate cyber risks to networks; (3) promoting investments in the American information technology sector; (4) improving the capability of the government and the private sector to assess cyber risks and prevent, detect, and respond to cyber attacks; (5) preventing and mitigating identity theft; (6) enhancing U.S. diplomatic capacity and international cooperation to respond to emerging cyber threats; (7) protecting and increasing the resiliency of U.S critical infrastructure and assets against cyber attacks; (8) expanding resources for investigating and prosecuting cyber crimes in a manner that respects privacy rights and civil liberties and promotes American innovation; and (9) maintaining robust protections of the privacy of American citizens and their on-line activities and communications.
[Congressional Bills 112th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 21 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
112th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 21
To secure the United States against cyber attack, to enhance American
competitiveness and create jobs in the information technology industry,
and to protect the identities and sensitive information of American
citizens and businesses.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
January 25 (legislative day, January 5), 2011
Mr. Reid (for himself, Mrs. Feinstein, Mr. Kerry, Mr. Leahy, Mr. Levin,
Mr. Lieberman, Mr. Rockefeller, and Mr. Bingaman) introduced the
following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To secure the United States against cyber attack, to enhance American
competitiveness and create jobs in the information technology industry,
and to protect the identities and sensitive information of American
citizens and businesses.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Cyber Security and American Cyber
Competitiveness Act of 2011''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Malicious state, terrorist, and criminal actors
exploiting vulnerabilities in information and communications
networks and gaps in cyber security pose one of the most
serious and rapidly growing threats to both the national
security and economy of the United States.
(2) With information technology now the backbone of the
United States economy, a critical element of United States
national security infrastructure and defense systems, the
primary foundation of global communications, and a key enabler
of most critical infrastructure, nearly every single American
citizen is touched by cyberspace and is threatened by cyber
attacks.
(3) Malicious actors in cyberspace have already caused
significant damage to the United States Government, the United
States economy, and United States citizens: United States
Government computer networks are probed millions of times each
day; approximately 9,000,000 Americans have their identities
stolen each year; cyber crime costs American businesses with
500 or more employees an average of $3,800,000 per year; and
intellectual property worth over $1,000,000,000,000 has already
been stolen from American businesses.
(4) In its 2009 Cyberspace Policy Review, the White House
concluded, ``Ensuring that cyberspace is sufficiently resilient
and trustworthy to support United States goals of economic
growth, civil liberties and privacy protections, national
security, and the continued advancement of democratic
institutions requires making cybersecurity a national
priority.''
(5) An effective solution to the tremendous challenges of
cyber security demands cooperation and integration of effort
across jurisdictions of multiple Federal, State, local, and
tribal government agencies, between the government and the
private sector, and with international allies, as well as
increased public awareness and preparedness among the American
people.
SEC. 3. SENSE OF CONGRESS.
It is the sense of Congress that Congress should enact, and the
President should sign, bipartisan legislation to secure the United
States against cyber attack, to enhance American competitiveness and
create jobs in the information technology industry, and to protect the
identities and sensitive information of American citizens and
businesses by--
(1) enhancing the security and resiliency of United States
Government communications and information networks against
cyber attack by nation-states, terrorists, and cyber criminals;
(2) incentivizing the private sector to quantify, assess,
and mitigate cyber risks to their communications and
information networks;
(3) promoting investments in the American information
technology sector that create and maintain good, well-paying
jobs in the United States and help to enhance American economic
competitiveness;
(4) improving the capability of the United States
Government to assess cyber risks and prevent, detect, and
robustly respond to cyber attacks against the government and
the military;
(5) improving the capability of the United States
Government and the private sector to assess cyber risk and
prevent, detect, and robustly respond to cyber attacks against
United States critical infrastructure;
(6) preventing and mitigating identity theft and guarding
against abuses or breaches of personally identifiable
information;
(7) enhancing United States diplomatic capacity and
international cooperation to respond to emerging cyber threats,
including promoting security and freedom of access for
communications and information networks around the world and
battling global cyber crime through focused diplomacy;
(8) protecting and increasing the resiliency of United
States' critical infrastructure and assets, including the
electric grid, military assets, the financial sector, and
telecommunications networks against cyber attacks and other
threats and vulnerabilities;
(9) expanding tools and resources for investigating and
prosecuting cyber crimes in a manner that respects privacy
rights and civil liberties and promotes American innovation;
and
(10) maintaining robust protections of the privacy of
American citizens and their on-line activities and
communications.
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Introduced in Senate
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. (text of measure as introduced: CR S130)
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