Is Obama’s Cybersecurity Plan Recycled Bush?
Sunday, June 07, 2009
When President George W. Bush came up with his plan in 2003 to protect the nation’s key computer systems from cyber attacks, he called for collaborative efforts involving public-private partnerships and international organizations, all while protecting privacy and civil liberties. Wait. Isn’t that what President Barack Obama called for just this week?
Turns out the cybersecurity plan presented by the Obama administration is remarkably similar to that of its predecessor, right down to the length of the report: 76 pages. Obama’s team did at least change the name of its report (Cyberspace Policy Review) from that of Bush’s (National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace). The similarities between the two plans can be attributed to the fact that both administrations relied on the same person to lead the efforts: Melissa Hathaway, who worked under the director of national intelligence and was director of Bush’s computer security task force.
Obama didn’t entirely copy Bush’s blueprint. Whereas Bush wanted to centralize cybersecurity operations in the Department of Homeland Security, Obama prefers to place that responsibility in the White House.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
A Cybersecurity Quiz: Can You Tell Obama From Bush? (by Declan McCullagh, CNET)
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