Computerworld - A senior Republican senator on Thursday insisted there is no partisan dissent over the need for a strong national cybersecurity policy but added that a Democratic-backed cyber bill that is stalled in the Senate is not the answer.
In a blog post in yourhoustonnews.com, U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison noted that cybersecurity is a matter of "vital national importance" to both parties.
OPINION: Failure of Senate to pass Cybersecurity Act leaves us all at risk
"Experts have long cited cyber-terrorism as one of the potentially most dangerous threats to national security," Hutchison said while noting the potentially "devastating" consequences of attacks against U.S. power grids, financial institutions and other targets. "The question is not whether we act to prevent such attacks, the question is how we act," she said in the blog.
Hutchison said a White House-backed bill called the Cybersecurity Act, authored by Sens. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), takes the wrong approach to addressing cyberthreats.
The bill calls for the creation of a national standard for securing critical cyber assets and would enable better threat-information sharing between private companies and government agencies. The proposed legislation is stalled in Congress over Republican concerns that it would give the U.S. Department of Homeland Security too much control over cybersecurity matters while forcing private companies to adopt government prescribed standards.
Hutchison reiterated some of those concerns in her blog. The bill would provide "weak" legal liability protections for companies that want to cooperate with one another and "pre-determined government mandates would decide what cyber information should be shared by government," she said.
In contrast, the GOP-backed SECURE IT bill , authored by Hutchison, John McCain (R-Ariz.) and five other senators is a better option, she argued. "The bill authorizes essential legal liability and antitrust protections for companies that want to work together to combat cyber threats," and requires government agencies to share relevant information with them.
"The SECURE IT sponsors are concerned that the Lieberman-Collins bill would deter cooperation rather than encourage it. And we worry that it ignores cybersecurity's biggest challenge: constantly and rapidly evolving technological threats," Hutchison said.
The blog post comes two days after Hutchison and the other sponsors of the SECURE IT bill issued a joint statement expressing disappointment over the Senate's failure to pass bipartisan security legislation as the House had done earlier this year with the controversial CISPA bill.
Before Congress adjourned for its August recess, lawmakers from both parties had shared a commitment to work toward a compromise bill that would gain bipartisan support in the Senate, the statement said. But that didn't happen, and a premature vote on the bill was forced in the Senate instead, the statement claimed. "When it returns next month, the Senate should address cybersecurity, but not in the 'take it or leave it' manner the Majority Leader pursued," before the recess.
Originally published on www.computerworld.com. Click here to read the original story.