The White House's Cybersecuirty Legislative Proposal

Today the White House issued a Cybersecurity Legislative Proposal. The proposed legislation focuses on protecting the American people, the nation’s critical infrastructure, and the federal government's computers and networks.  While legislation of this nature would simplify the breach reporting process for businesses, and overall streamline cybersecurity laws, a number of legislative attempts to do this have previously failed.  It is important to note that while this proposal sets forth some guidelines, the specific details of how each provision would be instituted are not yet clear

Our critical infrastructure – such as the electricity grid, financial sector, and transportation networks that sustain our way of life – have suffered repeated cyber intrusion, and cyber crime has increased dramatically over the law decade. The President has thus made cybersecurity an Administration priority. 

  1.  To protect the American people, the proposed legislation calls for a national data breach reporting law which would simplify and standardize the existing patchwork of 47 state laws that contain these requirements. Additionally, the proposal calls for penalties for computer criminals and clarifies the penalties for computer crimes, synchronizes them with other crimes, and sets mandatory minimums for cyber intrusions into critical infrastructure.
  2. To protect our nation’s critical infrastructure the proposal calls on legislative changes to fully protect this infrastructure. Specifically, proposal will enable the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to quickly help a private-sector company, state, or local government when that organization asks for its help. It also clarifies the type of assistance that DHS can provide to the requesting organization.

Additionally, the proposal permits businesses, states, and local governments to share information about cyber threats or incidents with DHS. To fully address these entities’ concerns, it also provides them with immunity when sharing cybersecurity information with DHS. At the same time, the proposal mandates robust privacy oversight to ensure that the voluntarily shared information does not impinge on individual privacy and civil liberties.

Further, the proposal emphasizes transparency to help market forces ensure that critical-infrastructure operators are accountable for their cybersecurity.

Finally, the proposal requires DHS to work with industry to identify the core critical-infrastructure operators and to prioritize the most important cyber threats and vulnerabilities for those operators. Critical infrastructure operators would then take steps to address cyber threats, develop risk mitigation plans, and permit DHS to modify the processes which are implemented if they are insufficient. 

  1.  To protect federal government computers and networks the legislative proposal includes: an update to the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) as well as formalizing DHS’ current role in managing cybersecurity for the Federal Government’s civilian computers and networks, in order to provide departments and agencies with a shared source of expertise; giving DHS more flexibility in hiring highly-qualified cybersecurity professionals; the permanency of DHS’s authority to oversee intrusion prevention systems for all Federal Executive Branch civilian computers while codifying strong privacy and civil liberties protections, congressional reporting requirements, and an annual certification process; and preventions on states requiring companies to build their data centers in that state, as opposed to in the cloud, except where expressly authorized by federal law.

The Administration’s proposal also attempts to ensure the protection of individuals’ privacy and civil liberties through a framework designed expressly to address the challenges of cybersecurity. Some of these provisions include: requiring federal agencies (and likely federal contractors) to follow privacy and civil liberties procedures; limitations on monitoring, collecting, using, retaining, and sharing of information; requiring efforts to remove identifying information unrelated to cybersecurity threats; as well as immunity provisions for those business which comply with the proposal’s requirements.  

As the proposal concludes: 

Our Nation is at risk… [t]he Administration has responded to Congress’ call for input on the cybersecurity legislation that our Nation needs, and we look forward to engaging with Congress as they move forward on this issue.

Employers Don't Put Your Heads In the Sand, You May Be Required to Monitor, Investigate and Report Employees Accessing Child Pornography

The New Jersey Appellate Division (Doe v. XYC Corporation) and the Court of Appeals of Wisconsin (Maypark v. Securitas Serv. USA Inc. & Sigler v. Kobinsky) have both examined an employer’s duty to monitor employees conduct while at work, and have reached drastically different results. Additionally, at least seven states—Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and South Dakota—have enacted laws requiring computer technicians or Internet service providers to report child pornography if they encounter it in the scope of their work. 

New Jersey. In Doe v. XYC, the company’s IT department noticed an employee was accessing pornographic web pages while at work. Despite numerous complaints and suspicious usage by the employee, management took no formal action except to instruct the employee to stop visiting inappropriate web pages. Following the employee’s marriage to the Plaintiff, the employee took nude and semi-nude pictures of Plaintiff’s 10-year-old daughter and uploaded the photos to child porn web pages using his work computer. The employee was arrested and charged, and the Plaintiff sued the company, alleging that it knew or should have known of the employee’s conduct and had a duty to report it. The state Appellate Division reversed the trial court’s decision that no duty existed. It held that XYC Corporation knew or should have known the employee was accessing child pornography at work, and further had a duty to investigate and report it. Thus, in New Jersey, where an employer has the right and ability to monitor Internet usage and the employee has no expectation of privacy, employers have a duty to investigate and report the access of child pornography if they know or should have known an employee was doing so. For a detailed analysis of Doe, click here

Wisconsin. In Maypark v. Securitas, the plaintiff sued an employer for allowing a former employee, a security guard, to post photographs of the plaintiff’s employees on an adult website.   An earlier Wisconsin case, Sigler v. Kobinsky, held that a company could not be held liable for alleged negligent supervision leading to an employee's use of a company computer to harass plaintiffs where there is no probability of harm. Specifically, a company had no duty to monitor because it was not reasonably foreseeable that providing employees with unsupervised Internet access would probably result in harm.   Relying on Sigler, the Court in Maypark overturned a $1.4 million negligence verdict against the security company, finding the guard’s action were not foreseeable.

Given the unsettled law on this issue, employers should consider several important factors when it comes to monitoring of employees. The Society for Human Resource Management published an article (*registration required) analyzing this issue. The article provides a number of suggestions, including that of our own Nadine Abrahams, a Jackson Lewis Partner in our Chicago office, who suggests the first step should be setting up a procedure for the immediate reporting of child pornography that has been discovered and the designation of a company representative who should be notified.   Additional steps include:

  • Institution of clear, effective and thorough computer usage and monitoring polices, which also address employee expectation of privacy;
  • Training of employees conducting any monitoring;
  • Prompt investigation of computer usage and allegations of unlawful conduct; and
  • Consultation with legal counsel regarding the duty to report to authorities.