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Obama's Cybersecurity Review's Reviews are In and...

BY Nancy Scola | Monday, June 1 2009

They're not bad. Obama released a 76-page "Cyberspace Policy Review" report Friday, the result of a 60-day process of consultation. And as an opening volley, advocates, activists, and lawmakers are judging it a solid shot. The Washington Post's Ellen Nakashima, for example, quotes one cybersecurity advocate calling the plan "pretty good." Similarly, NextGov's Guatham Nagesh finds praise for the review at AT&T and the computer security think tank the SANS Institute. And then there's the positive first reaction of both Republicans and Democrats on the Hill; CQ's Daniel Fowler has Olympia Snowe (R-ME) and Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) coming together to "applaud President Obama for highlighting the extraordinarily serious issue of cybersecurity."

You'll find one of the major reasons why folks are happy with the review in the inevitable White House Films movie version of the report's release. (See above.)

In starring roles are Symantec's John Thompson, the Center for Democracy and Technology's Leslie Harris, and the National Science Foundation's Jeannette Wing -- or, as Wing puts it, the "academia, industry, government ecosystem." Bush-era cybersecurity was criticized for being too insular, unnecessarily aloof, and cut off from the concerns of players outside the immediate government cybersecurity circle. Team Obama seems to be going to pains to take the exact opposite approach.

There are signs that the Obama White House is also making it a priority to cause a subtle but powerful shift in how the public thinks about cybersecurity. Previous White House efforts focused to a great extent on strengthening and security securing our public and private digital infrastructure. The Obama White House wants to tap into something far more personal and immediate: our own considerable dependence on computers and the Internet.

To wit, acting White House cybersecurity point person Melissa Hathaway introduces the Cyberspace Policy Review on the White House website by blogging about her own family's fervent embrace of modern technology, writing "I can’t imagine my world without this connectivity and I would bet that you cannot either."

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