Cybersecurity: Selected Legal Issues
Edward C. Liu
Legislative Attorney
Gina Stevens
Legislative Attorney
Kathleen Ann Ruane
Legislative Attorney
Alissa M. Dolan
Legislative Attorney
Richard M. Thompson II
Legislative Attorney
March 14, 2012
Congressional Research Service
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CRS Report for Congress
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Cybersecurity: Selected Legal Issues

Summary
The federal government’s role in protecting U.S. citizens and critical infrastructure from cyber
attacks has been the subject of recent congressional interest. Critical infrastructure commonly
refers to those entities that are so vital that their incapacitation or destruction would have a
debilitating impact on national security, economic security, or the public health and safety. This
report discusses selected legal issues that frequently arise in the context of recent legislation to
address vulnerabilities of critical infrastructure to cyber threats, efforts to protect government
networks from cyber threats, and proposals to facilitate and encourage sharing of cyber threat
information amongst private sector and government entities. This report also discusses the degree
to which federal law may preempt state law.
It has been argued that, in order to ensure the continuity of critical infrastructure and the larger
economy, a regulatory framework for selected critical infrastructure should be created to require a
minimum level of security from cyber threats. On the other hand, others have argued that such
regulatory schemes would not improve cybersecurity while increasing the costs to businesses,
expose businesses to additional liability if they fail to meet the imposed cybersecurity standards,
and increase the risk that proprietary or confidential business information may be inappropriately
disclosed.
In order to protect federal information networks, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), in
conjunction with the National Security Agency (NSA), uses a network intrusion system that
monitors all federal agency networks for potential attacks. Known as EINSTEIN, this system
raises significant privacy implications—a concern acknowledged by DHS, interest groups,
academia, and the general public. DHS has developed a set of procedures to address these
concerns such as minimization of information collection, training and accountability
requirements, and retention rules. Notwithstanding these steps, there are concerns that the
program may implicate privacy interests protected under the Fourth Amendment.
Although many have argued that there is a need for federal and state governments, and owners
and operators of the nation’s critical infrastructures, to share information on cyber vulnerabilities
and threats, obstacles to information sharing may exist in current laws protecting electronic
communications or in antitrust law. Private entities that share information may also be concerned
that sharing or receiving such information may lead to increased civil liability, or that shared
information may contain proprietary or confidential business information that may be used by
competitors or government regulators for unauthorized purposes.
Several bills in the 112th Congress would seek to improve the nation’s cybersecurity, and may
raise some or all of the legal issues mentioned above. For example, H.R. 3523 (Rogers (Mich.))
addresses information sharing between the intelligence community and the private sector. H.R.
3674 (Lungren) includes provisions regarding the protection of critical infrastructure, as well as
information sharing. S. 2102 (Feinstein) seeks to facilitate information sharing. S. 2105
(Lieberman) includes the information sharing provisions of S. 2102, as well as provisions relating
to the protection of critical infrastructure and federal government networks. S. 2151 (McCain)
also addresses information sharing among the private sector and between the private sector and
the government. Many of these bills also include provisions specifically addressing the
preemption of state laws.

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Cybersecurity: Selected Legal Issues

Contents
Legal Issues Related to Protecting Critical Infrastructure ............................................................... 1
Deference to Agency Decisions................................................................................................. 2
Availability of Judicial Review ........................................................................................... 3
Questions of Fact................................................................................................................. 4
Interpretations of Law ......................................................................................................... 4
Liability Concerns ..................................................................................................................... 5
Proprietary and Confidential Business Information .................................................................. 6
Legislation in the 112th Congress .............................................................................................. 9
H.R. 3674, the PRECISE Act of 2011................................................................................. 9
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012............................................................................. 10
Legal Issues Related to the Protection of Federal Networks ......................................................... 13
EINSTEIN Overview .............................................................................................................. 14
EINSTEIN and the Fourth Amendment .................................................................................. 15
Monitoring Communications from Federal Employees .................................................... 18
Monitoring Communications from Private Persons to Federal Employees ...................... 19
Alternative to Traditional Warrant Requirement ............................................................... 21
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight ..................................................................................... 21
Legislation in the 112th Congress ............................................................................................ 22
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012............................................................................. 22
Legal Issues Related to Sharing Cybersecurity Threat Information .............................................. 24
Electronic Communications Privacy Act................................................................................. 25
Antitrust Law........................................................................................................................... 27
Liability for Information Sharing ............................................................................................ 28
Protection of Proprietary or Confidential Business Information............................................. 29
Legislation in the 112th Congress ............................................................................................ 30
H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, As
Ordered Reported........................................................................................................... 30
H.R. 3674, PRECISE Act.................................................................................................. 32
S. 2102, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2012 ........................................... 33
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012............................................................................. 35
S. 2151, the SECURE IT Act ............................................................................................ 36
Preemption..................................................................................................................................... 38

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 41

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Cybersecurity: Selected Legal Issues

or many, the Internet has become inextricably intertwined with daily life. Many rely on it to
perform their jobs, pay their bills, send messages to loved ones, track their medical care,
F and voice political opinions, among a host of other activities. Likewise, government and
business use the Internet to maintain defense systems, protect power plants and water supplies,
and keep other types of critical infrastructure running.1 Consequently, the federal government’s
role in protecting U.S. citizens and critical infrastructure from cyber attacks has been the subject
of recent congressional interest.2
This report discusses selected legal issues that frequently arise in the context of legislation to
address vulnerabilities of private critical infrastructure to cyber threats, efforts to protect
government networks from cyber threats, and proposals to facilitate and encourage sharing of
cyber threat information amongst private sector and government entities. This report also
provides an overview of the ways in which federal laws of these types may preempt or affect the
applicability of state law.
Legal Issues Related to Protecting
Critical Infrastructure

Although no federal statute currently imposes a generally applicable obligation on businesses in
the private sector to take measures to protect themselves from cyber vulnerabilities, Congress has
chosen to impose regulatory standards regarding the security, including the cybersecurity, of
specific sectors or types of private entities.3 For example,4 chemical facilities are subject to
chemical facility anti-terrorism standards (CFATS) promulgated by the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), which include provisions requiring chemical facilities to take measures to protect
against cyber threats.5 Electrical utilities are required to comply with reliability standards,
including standards to protect against cyber incidents, set by the North American Electrical
Reliability Corporation (NERC).6 Similarly, the Maritime Transportation Security Act (MTSA)
gives the Coast Guard the authority to regulate the security of maritime facilities and vessels,
including requiring security plans that contain provisions for the security of communications
systems used in those facilities.7

1 Critical infrastructure commonly refers to those entities that are so vital that their incapacitation or destruction would
have a debilitating impact on national security, economic security, or the public health and safety. 42 U.S.C. §5195c(e).
For more information, see CRS Report RL30153, Critical Infrastructures: Background, Policy, and Implementation, by
John D. Moteff.
2 See, e.g., Siobhan Gorman, Cybersecurity Bills Duel Over Rules for Firms, WALL ST. J., March 9, 2012, at A6.
3 See also GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE, Information Technology: Federal Laws, Regulations, and
Mandatory Standards for Securing Private Sector Information Technology Systems and Data in Critical Infrastructure
Sectors, GAO-08-1075R, September 16, 2008, available at http://www.gao.gov/assets/100/95747.pdf.
4 The existing regulatory frameworks discussed here do not constitute an exhaustive list of all regulations applicable to
critical infrastructure, but are only intended to provide some context for the following discussions.
5 P.L. 109-295 §550 (codified at 6 U.S.C. §121 note). For a more detailed discussion of CFATS, see CRS Report
R41642, Chemical Facility Security: Issues and Options for the 112th Congress, by Dana A. Shea.
6 For a more detailed discussion of cybersecurity and electrical utilities, see CRS Report R41886, The Smart Grid and
Cybersecurity—Regulatory Policy and Issues
, by Richard J. Campbell.
7 46 U.S.C. §§70102, 70103.
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Proposals that focus on the increased cybersecurity of certain sectors of the economy are
frequently justified on the grounds that those private entities, including energy, transportation, or
communication providers, comprise the nation’s critical infrastructure. If the incapacity or
destruction of such systems or assets would have a debilitating impact on national security,
economic security, or public health and safety, it would be in the national interest to ensure that
such critical infrastructure was adequately protected. Consequently, it has been argued that a
regulatory framework governing selected critical infrastructure entities is needed to ensure that
these private entities take measures adequate to maintain a minimum level of security from cyber
threats, in order to protect the rest of the economy.8
On the other hand, others have argued that such regulatory schemes would not improve
cybersecurity and would also increase the costs of doing business for these sectors of the
economy.9 There are also concerns that businesses would face additional exposure to civil
liability from private suits if they failed to meet the imposed standards. As many of these
regulatory schemes provide regulatory agencies with access to information held by the regulated
entities, concerns have also been raised about the inappropriate disclosure of proprietary or
confidential business information.
The concerns raised by these issues have shaped the existing legal schemes regulating the security
of specific categories of critical infrastructure, and have also informed recent legislative proposals
to address widely reported weaknesses in the security of critical infrastructure from cyber threats.
A brief overview of each of these issues is provided in the next sections of this report. The report
will then examine how recent cybersecurity legislation would specifically address some or all of
these issues.
Deference to Agency Decisions
Several of the bills that would establish a regulatory scheme for the cybersecurity of critical
infrastructure provide the agencies charged with administering the program with the discretion to
identify those private entities that would fall within the scope of a particular bill and that will,
therefore, be subject to the requirements that would be imposed under the bill. Being subject to
the regulations may have significant cost, liability, or other implications for the private entity that
has been designated as covered critical infrastructure; such entities may seek to challenge their
designation as covered critical infrastructure through redress mechanisms created in the statute or
through judicial review of agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).10
Entities may also seek judicial review of agency actions in the context of enforcement actions
taken against them under the various regulatory schemes.

8 For a more detailed discussion of critical infrastructure policy arguments, see CRS Report RL30153, Critical
Infrastructures: Background, Policy, and Implementation
, by John D. Moteff.
9 E.g., Securing America’s Future: The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 Before the S. Comm. on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs
, 112th Cong. (statement of former DHS Secretary Tom Ridge on behalf of U.S. Chamber of
Commerce) (“New compliance mandates would drive up costs and misallocate business resources without necessarily
increasing security.”)
10 5 U.S.C. §701 et seq. E.g. Nat'l Propane Gas Ass'n v. DHS, 534 F. Supp. 2d 16 (D.D.C. 2008) (denying temporary
restraining order in action brought under APA claim for review of agency’s designation of propane as chemical of
interest for purposes of CFATS).
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Depending upon the legislative language delegating regulatory authority to the agency, a court
will evaluate an agency’s decision under varying standards of review. In the context of regulating
the security of critical infrastructure, a more deferential standard of review of agency
determinations typically means that regulated private entities would have less recourse in the
event that they wanted to challenge an agency’s determination. On the other hand, a less
deferential standard of review may extend the time to implement particular security standards if
the agency encounters delays caused by litigation. Examples of the different types of judicial
review that may be involved are discussed below.
Availability of Judicial Review11
As a general matter, there is a “‘strong presumption that Congress intends judicial review’ of
administrative action.”12 This presumption is embodied in the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA), which provides that “final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a
court [is] subject to judicial review.”13 The APA provides two exceptions to the presumption of
availability of judicial review of agency action: (1) “to the extent that ... statutes preclude judicial
review” and (2) “where agency action is committed to agency discretion by law.”14 However,
judicial review of an unreviewable determination may occur if there is a constitutional issue.15
Under the APA, judicial review of agency actions may be unavailable if such review is
specifically precluded by statute.16 This exemption requires the existence of an explicit statutory
provision prohibiting judicial review of agency action. Additionally, even where judicial review
has not been explicitly barred, the APA precludes judicial review where the decision has been
committed to agency discretion by law.17 This second exemption has been interpreted by the
Supreme Court to be a very narrow exception, and applies only in situations where the statute
provides no law for a reviewing court to apply.18 For example, in Webster v. Doe,19 the Supreme
Court held that firing decisions made by the Director of Central Intelligence were unreviewable
because the National Security Act provided that the Director “may, in his discretion, terminate the
employment of any officer or employee of the [Central Intelligence Agency] whenever he shall

11 For more information on judicial review of agency actions, see CRS Report R41546, A Brief Overview of
Rulemaking and Judicial Review
, by Vanessa K. Burrows and Todd Garvey.
12 Gutierrez De Martinez v. Lamagno, 515 U.S. 417, 424 (1995)(quoting Bowen v. Michigan Academy of Family
Physicians, 476 U.S. 667, 670 (1986)); see also McNary v. Haitian Refugee Center, Inc., 498 U.S. 479, 496 (1991);
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136 (1967); Citizens to Protect Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971);
28 U.S.C. §1331. But see Block v. Community Nutrition Institute, 467 U.S. 340, 349 (1984) (noting that “[t]he
presumption favoring judicial review of administrative action ... may be overcome by specific language or specific
legislative history that is a reliable indicator of congressional intent”). “The congressional intent necessary to overcome
the presumption may also be inferred from contemporaneous judicial construction barring review and the congressional
acquiescence in it ... or from the collective import of legislative and judicial history behind a particular statute,” or from
“inferences of intent drawn from the statutory scheme as a whole.” Id.
13 5 U.S.C. §§702, 704.
14 5 U.S.C. §701.
15 See Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592 (1988); Oestereich v. Selective Service System, 393 U.S. 233 (1968).
16 5 U.S.C. §701(a)(1).
17 5 U.S.C. §701(a)(2).
18 Citizens of Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971).
19 Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592 (1988).
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deem such termination necessary or advisable in the interests of the United States.”20 The Court
held that such a statute “exuded deference” and noted:
Short of permitting cross-examination of the Director concerning his views of the Nation’s
security and whether the discharged employee was inimical to those interests, we see no
basis on which a reviewing court could properly assess an Agency termination decision.21
Since the statute contained no standards a court could apply to evaluate the Director’s decision,
the Court determined that these decisions had been committed to agency discretion by law, and
were consequently unreviewable.
Questions of Fact
Where a statute does provide judicially administrable standards, agency determinations of factual
questions are typically reviewed under the “substantial evidence” or “abuse of discretion
standards.”22 In the administrative context, substantial evidence review and abuse of discretion
review occur in factually distinct circumstances. Substantial evidence is required when an agency
engages in either formal rulemaking or an adjudicatory hearing.23 In contrast, abuse of discretion
applies in cases of informal rulemaking and decisions.24
Some courts appear to consider substantial evidence a more demanding standard than abuse of
discretion, but the consistent theme of both standards is that the court is not free to substitute its
judgment in place of the agency’s.25 In terms of analysis, the substantial evidence and abuse of
discretion standards are both less stringent than de novo review, which would allow a court to
look at the evidence anew and come to its own conclusions. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has
described these standards as requiring “more than a mere scintilla” of support and comparable to
the standard a trial judge must meet to sustain a jury’s verdict.26 In the federal courts, a jury
verdict will not be disturbed if “reasonable and fair-minded persons in exercise of impartial
judgment” might have come to the same conclusion as the jury.27
Interpretations of Law
Agencies may also exercise discretion in interpreting the terms used in a statute. In the context of
the proposals to regulate the cybersecurity of critical infrastructure, which are discussed in more
detail below, there are a number of provisions that may require the Secretary of Homeland

20 50 U.S.C. §403-4a(e)(1).
21 Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. at 600.
22 5 U.S.C. §706(2).
23 5 U.S.C. §706(2)(E).
24 5 U.S.C. §706(2)(A).
25 See, e.g., Frontier Fishing Corp. v. Evans, 429 F. Supp. 2d 316, n.7 (citing Indus. Union Dep’t v. API, 448 U.S. 607,
705 (1980) (Marshall, J., dissenting) (asserting that substantial evidence is more stringent, but is ultimately a deferential
standard).
26 Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB, 305 U.S. 197, 229 (1938); NLRB v. Columbian Enameling & Stamping Co., 306
U.S. 292, 300 (1939)
27 E.g., Kosmynka v. Polaris Industries, Inc., 462 F.3d 74, 79-82 (2d Cir. 2006) (upholding jury’s finding that a
manufacturer was negligent for failing to warn that its all-terrain vehicle might upend itself despite uncontested
evidence that the manufacturer had received no reports of such incidents).
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Security (the Secretary) to use her discretion to interpret the language of the bills. For example,
the various definitions for covered critical infrastructure used by the bills may require a finding
that the disruption of a function, system, or asset would lead to harms that were “significant,”
“extraordinary,” or “prolonged.” These terms may be susceptible to more than one specific
construction, and the different interpretations may have material consequences for those subject
to the regulatory scheme. A narrow definition may mean that fewer entities would be subject to
regulation, while a broader definition may encompass a more expansive cross-section of
businesses.
The validity of an agency’s construction of a statute would likely be evaluated using the two-
prong test described by the Supreme Court in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council.28
First, if the text and legislative history of the statute demonstrate that Congress has spoken
directly on the issue, then that statutory language or history must control. However, under the
second prong, if the statute is ambiguous because “Congress has not directly addressed the
precise question at issue,” the agency’s interpretation will stand so long as it is a reasonable one.29
Therefore, under Chevron, whether a particular statutory provision is ambiguous or not can
change the degree of deference afforded an agency. Where no ambiguity exists, the reviewing
court’s focus is on the intent of Congress, and it may interpret the law de novo without any
deference toward the agency’s interpretation. On the other hand, if the statute is ambiguous, either
because the language used is susceptible to more than one meaning or because the law contains
internal inconsistencies, the reviewing court is not permitted to supplant its own interpretive
preferences for that of the agency, unless the agency’s interpretation is unreasonable. Under this
deferential standard of review, the discretion available to an agency is inversely proportional to
the degree of specificity provided in a particular statute. In the context of the bills discussed by
this report, the less specific a particular bill is regarding the Secretary’s regulatory authority, the
more flexibility would be available to her to exercise during implementation.
Liability Concerns
The creation of a regulatory scheme applicable to critical infrastructure may raise issues
regarding the effects that the new regulatory scheme would have on the potential civil or criminal
liability of the covered entities. Regulators may be given the authority to impose civil or criminal
penalties for non-compliance, or may seek to promote compliance by offering financial
incentives.30
In addition to the forms of liability imposed by regulatory authorities, questions may arise
regarding the potential ways in which the regulatory scheme may expose covered entities to
additional private civil liability. In this context, a federal regulatory scheme could be viewed as
creating a standard of care that might be used to establish tort liability under state law. Entities

28 Chevron v. Nat’l Resources Def. Council, 467 U.S. 837, 842-45 (1984).
29 Id.
30 A second issue with respect to enforcement is whether penalties would be limited to fines and other monetary
penalties or whether injunctive relief may also be sought to compel compliance or to stop a non-compliant facility from
operating. For example, violations of CFATS can be punished by civil monetary penalties or an injunction to cease
operations. 6 C.F.R. §27.300. Similarly, under MTSA, covered vessels and facilities without an approved security plan
may be prohibited from operating. 46 U.S.C. §70103(c)(5). Questions may also arise regarding the types of
investigative authorities that would be provided to the agency tasked with administering the regulatory scheme.
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that fall below that standard of care face the possibility of liability in the event of a security
breach, separate and apart from any penalties that might be imposed by government regulators.
The most likely form that such a civil action would take is in a tort suit alleging that the private
entity had acted negligently; that is, the entity had failed to exercise reasonable care in the face of
a foreseeable risk. Under current state law, entities found negligent may be liable for harm that
results from their negligence.31
The existence of a federal regulatory scheme that imposes compliance standards may affect suits
alleging negligence in two ways. First, the entities that are subject to the compliance standards
may be found negligent per se if they fail to satisfy those standards.32 Negligence per se is a
theory of negligence in which the fact that an entity’s conduct has violated some applicable
statute is prima facie evidence that the entity has acted negligently.33 Unless the defendant could
rebut that presumption, the defendant would likely be found to be per se negligent, and
consequently liable for any harm that results from that negligence.34 In the context of cyber
threats to critical infrastructure, this might mean that a regulated entity that fails to adequately
secure its information infrastructure as required under a federal regulatory scheme would be
liable for a cyber incident that causes harm to customers or other third parties.
Second, entities that are not subject to regulation under a federal scheme may not be subject to
negligence per se. However, the performance standards or other requirements imposed under that
scheme may still affect their liability for negligence if such requirements establish an applicable
standard of care that the nonregulated entity would be judged against in a private civil suit.35
Proprietary and Confidential Business Information36
Access to the confidential business information of owners and operators of the nation’s critical
infrastructure continues to be an important component of efforts to protect critical infrastructure
from cyber threats. However, some owners and operators of critical infrastructure may be hesitant
to share security-related information with the government because of the possible disclosure of
this information to the public under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). In addition,
concerns also exist that sharing of cybersecurity information may facilitate access to proprietary
and confidential business information by competitors. Furthermore, some have expressed

31 Reese v. Philadelphia & R. R. Co., 239 U.S. 463, 465 (1915) (“The rule is well settled that a railroad company is not
to be held as guaranteeing or warranting absolute safety to its employees under all circumstances, but is bound to
exercise the care which the exigency reasonably demands in furnishing proper roadbed, tracks, and other structures. A
failure to exercise such care constitutes negligence.”).
32 See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS, §285 (“The standard of conduct of a reasonable man may be ... adopted by
the court from a legislative enactment or an administrative regulation which does not so provide ...”).
33 See, e.g., Makas v. Hillhaven, Inc., 589 F. Supp. 736, 741 (M.D.N.C. 1984) (“Negligence per se in effect is a
presumption that one who has violated a safety statute has violated its legal duty to exercise due care.”).
34 See, e.g., Resser v. Boise-Cascade Corp., 587 P.2d 80, 84 (Or. 1978) (violation of state law establishing speed limits
at railroad crossing raises a rebuttable presumption of negligence).
35 See, e.g., Burmaster v. Gravity Drainage Dist. No. 2, 448 So. 2d 162, 164 (La. Ct. App. 1984) (Occupational Safety
and Health Act regulations and standards published by industry groups warrant consideration as evidence of standard of
care, even if they are not controlling).
36 See CRS Report R41406, The Freedom of Information Act and Nondisclosure Provisions in Other Federal Laws , by
Gina Stevens and CRS Report RL33670, Protection of Security-Related Information, by Gina Stevens and Todd B.
Tatelman.
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concerns that the government may use information obtained for cybersecurity purposes for other
secondary purposes, such as regulatory actions.
The Freedom of Information Act of 1974 (FOIA) regulates the disclosure of federal agency
records.37 Subsection (b)(3) of FOIA, commonly referred to as exemption 3, permits agencies to
withhold information under FOIA that is specifically prohibited from disclosure by other federal
statutes.38 For a nondisclosure provision in a separate federal statute to qualify for exemption 3
status, the nondisclosure provision must meet the following criteria: either the statute must
require that matters be withheld from the public in such a manner as to leave no discretion on the
issue; or the statute must establish particular criteria for withholding or refer to particular types of
matters to be withheld; and it must specifically cite FOIA exemption 3.39 If the statute meets the
criteria of exemption 3 and the information to be withheld falls within the scope and coverage of
FOIA, the information is exempt from disclosure under exemption 3.40 Statutes that meet these
criteria are referred to as “FOIA exemption 3 statutes.”41
To encourage private and public sector entities and persons to voluntarily share their critical
infrastructure information with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Critical
Infrastructure Information Act of 2002 (CIIA) includes several measures to ensure against
disclosure of protected critical infrastructure information by DHS. Relevant to this discussion, the
CIIA provides protections against the disclosure of information that is voluntarily provided by a
critical infrastructure entity to DHS. This information is designated as critical infrastructure
information (CII), and for purposes of FOIA, the CIIA expressly prohibits the disclosure of
critical infrastructure information. Therefore, the classification of information as CII would
protect that information from disclosure under FOIA.
According to the Department of Justice, the agency responsible for administering FOIA, the CIIA
will operate as an exemption 3 statute under FOIA for critical infrastructure information that is
obtained by the Department of Homeland Security.42 The CIIA also provides that CII will not be
subject to agency rules or judicial doctrine regarding ex parte communications discussed below.
With respect to concerns about litigation, CIIA limits the use of CII in civil litigation and provides
that sharing CII with the agency does not count as the “waiver of any applicable privilege or
protection provided under law,” such as trade secret protection or the attorney-client privilege.43
CIIA authorizes the use or disclosure of such information by officers and employees in

37 5 U.S.C. §552.
38 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(3).
39 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(3).
40 U.S. Department of Justice, Statutes Found to Qualify under Exemption 3 of the FOIA, (August 2011) available at
http://www.justice.gov/oip/exemption3.pdf.
41 Examples of FOIA exemption 3 statutes are the Aviation and Transportation Security Act of 2001 (ATSA) which
designates 16 categories of sensitive security information and includes information submitted pursuant to a requirement
and information voluntarily submitted, P.L. 107-71, codified at 49 U.S.C. §40119; the Critical Infrastructure
Information Act of 2002 (CIIA) which provides confidentiality protections for critical infrastructure information
voluntarily submitted to DHS, P.L. 107-296, codified at 6 U.S.C. §133 et seq.; the Maritime Transportation Security
Act of 2002 (MTSA) which requires covered entities to submit information to the federal government, P.L. 107-295;
and the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) , as amended, which requires community water systems to perform
vulnerability analyses of their facilities and includes protections for vulnerability assessments. P.L. 107-188, 42 U.S.C.
§300i-2.
42 Department of Justice, “Homeland Security Law Contains New Exemption 3 Statute,” FOIA Post (2003).
43 See Fed. R. Evid. 501.
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furtherance of the investigation or the prosecution of a criminal act, or for disclosure to Congress
or the Government Accountability Office.
Prior to the enactment of this FOIA exemption 3 statute, critical infrastructure information would
have fallen under the scope of exemption 4 of FOIA which exempts from disclosure “trade
secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or
confidential.”44 The latter category of information (commercial information that is privileged or
confidential) is relevant to the issue of the federal government’s protection of private sector CII.
To fall within this second category of exemption 4, the information must satisfy three criteria. It
must be (1) commercial or financial, (2) obtained from a person, and (3) confidential or
privileged. The D.C. Circuit has held that the terms “commercial or financial” should be given
their ordinary meaning, and that records are commercial if the submitter has a “commercial
interest” in them.45 The second criteria, “obtained from a person,” refers to a wide range of
entities.46 However, information generated by the federal government is not “obtained from a
person,” and as a result is excluded from exemption 4’s coverage.
Providing information to a regulatory agency may also be subject to further disclosure if the
communication would implicate agency rules or judicial doctrine regarding ex parte
communications. Under the APA, formal agency adjudications are to be decided solely on the
basis of record evidence. The APA provides that “[t]he transcript of testimony and exhibits,
together with all papers and requests filed in the proceeding, constitutes the exclusive record for
decision.”47 The reason for this “exclusiveness of record” principle is to provide fairness to the
parties in order to ensure meaningful participation. Challenges to the “exclusiveness of record”
occur when there are ex parte contacts—communications from an interested party to a decision-
making official that take place outside the hearing and off the record.48 The APA prohibits any
“interested person outside the agency” from making, or knowingly causing, “any ex parte
communication relevant to the merits of the proceeding” to any decision making official.49
Similar restraints are imposed on the agency decision makers.50 Additionally, ex parte
communications received in violation of these rules are generally required to be disclosed to all
other interested parties and made part of the public record for the proceeding.51 As noted above,
CII is exempt from the rules regarding ex parte communications. However, if an entity is
involved in a proceeding where ex parte communications are prohibited, there may be concerns
that providing cybersecurity information that would not qualify as CII might implicate the rules
against ex parte communications, and could be subject to disclosure on the public record or to
other interested parties.

44 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(4).
45 Public Citizen Health Research Group v. FDA, 704 F.2d 1280, 1290 (D.C. Cir. 1983).
46 See, Nadler v. FDIC, 92 F.3d 93, 95 (2d Cir. 1996)(term “person” includes “individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or public or private organization other than an agency” (quoting definition found in Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §551(2)).
47 5 U.S.C. §556(e).
48 Id.
49 5 U.S.C. §557(d)(1). For example, under CFATS, during an adjudication ex-parte communications between the
department and the chemical facility is not permitted. 6 C.F.R. §27.320.
50 5 U.S.C. §557(d)(1)(E).
51 5 U.S.C. §557(d)(1)(C).
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Legislation in the 112th Congress
This section provides a brief description of proposed cybersecurity legislation in the 112th
Congress that includes regulatory provisions regarding the security of critical infrastructure with
particular emphasis placed on the provisions that implicate the legal issues discussed above.
H.R. 3674, the PRECISE Act of 2011
H.R. 3674, the Promoting and Enhancing Cybersecurity and Information Sharing Effectiveness
Act of 2011 (PRECISE Act), was introduced on December 15, 2011, by Representative Lungren.
On February 1, 2012, the Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, and Security
Technologies of the House Homeland Security Committee held a mark-up of the bill, and an
amended version was forwarded to the full committee by voice vote.
Section 2 of the PRECISE Act would authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to identify
and evaluate cybersecurity risks to critical infrastructure and to review and develop a collection of
existing internationally recognized consensus-developed risk-based performance standards.52 The
PRECISE Act would give the Secretary the authority to designate particular facilities or functions
of critical infrastructure companies as covered critical infrastructure.53 Such entities would be
subject to more stringent regulation than non-covered critical infrastructure. Specifically, the
PRECISE Act would require agencies responsible for regulating entities designated as covered
critical infrastructure to incorporate the most effective and cost-efficient of the collected risk-
based performance standards into their regulatory regimes.54 Entities would be eligible for
designation as covered critical infrastructure if their disruption or destruction would cause a
significant loss of life, major economic disruption,55 mass evacuations for an extended length of
time, or severe degradation of national security or national security capabilities.56
The PRECISE Act would explicitly provide for judicial review of the designation of facilities or
functions as covered critical infrastructure.57 What constitutes a function for these purposes is not
expressly specified in the bill. Similarly, many of the terms used in the definition of covered
critical infrastructure, such as “significant loss of life” or “extended length of time” are also not
defined. Consequently, the Secretary may choose to provide a definition of these terms, in the
course of designating covered critical infrastructure, through the rulemaking process. Under
Chevron, a court reviewing the Secretary’s interpretation of what length of time qualified as
“extended” would first inquire as to whether Congress had clearly spoken on the issue. If
Congress left the ambiguity unresolved, then the court would apply a deferential standard of
review to the agency’s interpretation, and only require that the agency’s interpretation be
reasonable.

52 H.R. 3674, §2 (new §227 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (HSA)).
53 Id. (new HSA §227(f)).
54 Id. (new HSA §227(d)(3)).
55 Major economic disruptions would include (A) the immediate failure of, or loss of confidence in, a major financial
market; or (B) the sustained disruption of financial systems that would lead to long term catastrophic economic damage
to the United States. Id. (new HSA §227(f)(2)).
56 Id.
57 Id. (new HSA §227(g)).
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The PRECISE Act does not appear to include any new liability limitations with respect to covered
critical infrastructure.58 Information that is voluntarily provided to DHS (e.g., for purposes of risk
assessments under the bill) would be considered CII under the CIIA. Additionally, the Secretary
of DHS is given the authority to designate, as appropriate, information provided by critical
infrastructure as sensitive security information (SSI).59
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, was introduced on February 14, 2012, by Senator
Lieberman. Title I of the bill would create a regulatory scheme for the protection of selected
systems and assets of critical infrastructure from cybersecurity threats. Specifically, the bill would
authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to identify cybersecurity risks to critical
infrastructure,60 designate certain assets or systems as “covered critical infrastructure,”61 and
identify performance standards that covered critical infrastructure would have to meet in order to
guard against the identified cybersecurity risks.62 If the Secretary determines that an existing
regulatory scheme would adequately protect covered critical infrastructure from cyber threats,
then no new performance standards would be imposed with respect to that covered critical
infrastructure.63
The potential applicability of this new regulatory regime to an entity would depend upon whether
its systems or assets had been designated by the Secretary as covered critical infrastructure.64 The
bill would define covered critical infrastructure as systems or assets that, if damaged or accessed
without authorization, could reasonably lead to the interruption of life sustaining services
sufficient to cause a mass casualty event with an extraordinary number of fatalities or mass
evacuations with a prolonged absence, catastrophic economic damage to the United States, or
severe degradation of national security.65 Catastrophic economic damage is defined to include the
failure or substantial disruption of a U.S. financial market, transportation system, or other
systemic, long-term damage to the U.S. economy.66 Commercial information technology
products67 are statutorily precluded from being designated as covered critical infrastructure, as are
systems or assets based solely on activities that are protected by First Amendment rights.68

58 The PRECISE Act does contain immunity provisions in the context of information sharing. These provisions are
discussed infra at “H.R. 3674, PRECISE Act.”
59 H.R. 3674, §2 (new HSA §228(c)). SSI is governed under the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, which is
also a FOIA exemption 3 statute. SSI regulations prohibit TSA from making available to the public any transportation
information “obtained or developed during security activities or research and development activities.” 49 C.F.R.
§1520.15(a). Disclosure of information that is both SSI and CII is governed solely by the CIIA and its implementing
regulations. 49 C.F.R. §1520.16(h). For more information on sensitive security information, see CRS Report RL32425,
Sensitive Security Information and Transportation Security: Issues and Congressional Options, by Mitchel A.
Sollenberger.
60 S. 2105, §102.
61 S. 2105, §103.
62 S. 2105, §104.
63 S. 2105, §104(d).
64 Owners of critical infrastructure can also self-designate or request that their systems or assets be considered covered
critical infrastructure. S. 2105, §103(b)(4).
65 S. 2105, §103(b)(1)(C).
66 S. 2105, §103(b)(1)(C)(ii).
67 That term is defined in the bill to mean “a commercial item that organizes or communicates information
(continued...)
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Because of a perceived increased regulatory burden that might accompany a designation of a
system or asset as covered critical infrastructure, some entities may wish to dispute such a
designation. The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 would explicitly provide for judicial review of
decisions to designate systems or assets as covered critical infrastructure.69 Such review would
likely involve both questions of fact as well as interpretations of the bill’s language. Examples of
factual questions that might be raised include whether the disruption of an asset could lead to a
mass casualty event or degradation of national security. The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 does not
specify a particular standard of review that courts should use when reviewing these questions.
But, under the APA, a court is likely to apply a “substantial evidence” or “abuse of discretion”
standard to these types of factual questions.
Questions of law might also arise in the context of a designation as covered critical infrastructure
under the Cybersecurity Act of 2012. For example, the bill does not provide specific definitions
for terms such as an “extraordinary number of fatalities” or “prolonged absence.” The bill would
also prohibit the Secretary from designating a commercial information technology product, or any
services provided in support of a commercial information technology product, as covered critical
infrastructure.70 Questions of interpretation may arise with respect to this exemption. For
example, the Secretary may wish to designate a larger system, which happens to contain a
commercial information technology product, as covered critical infrastructure. However, the
affected entity may argue that such a designation would violate the bill’s prohibition on
designating commercial information technology products as covered critical infrastructure. If the
Secretary were to interpret these provisions as permitting that designation, perhaps arguing that
there is a distinction between designating a commercial information technology product as critical
infrastructure and designating a system that is partially comprised of a commercial information
technology product as covered critical infrastructure, it is likely that a reviewing court would
evaluate this interpretation under the Chevron analysis described above. Specifically, a reviewing
court would first ask whether the statute clearly answered the question, and, if the statute did not,
would uphold the Secretary’s interpretation to the extent that it is a reasonable one.
In order to enforce its provisions, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 explicitly authorizes DHS to
develop civil monetary penalties to be levied against covered critical infrastructure that was found
to be non-compliant with the applicable performance standards.71 The bill would allow owners or
operators of covered critical infrastructure to self-certify annually that they are compliant, or

(...continued)
electronically.” S. 2105, §2(1).
68 S. 2105, §103(b)(2).
69 S. 2105, §103(c). Many other Secretarial decisions, such as the determination that an existing regulatory scheme is
inadequate, would appear to have sufficient judicially manageable standards to qualify for judicial review under the
APA. But see S. 2105, §104(f)(1), authorizing the President to exempt any covered critical infrastructure from
performance standards, if the President determines that a sector specific regulatory agency has sufficient requirements
to protect against the identified risks. Such a decision may not be subject to judicial review because the APA does not
generally apply to decisions made by the President. Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788, 800 (1992).
70 S. 2105, §103(c).
71 S. 2105, §105(c)(1)(B).
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submit to a third-party assessment of compliance.72 However, audits and inspections by DHS
would also be authorized if there were a reasonable suspicion of non-compliance.73
With respect to private civil liability, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 provides some immunity for
covered critical infrastructure that experience cybersecurity incidents related to identified risks.74
The owner or operator of the covered critical infrastructure would be eligible to receive immunity
from punitive damages in a private civil suit, but such immunity would be available if the entity
had also met applicable performance requirements under the bill, had received a successful
assessment, and was also in substantial compliance at the time of the incident.75
The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 would authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to collect
information from covered critical infrastructure in order to conduct risk assessments and to
evaluate compliance with applicable performance standards.76 The bill provides that any
information collected under its authority would be considered critical infrastructure information
(CII) under the Critical Infrastructure Information Act of 2002 (CIIA).77 While information must
normally be submitted voluntarily in order to be considered CIIA, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012
removes this requirement with respect to information that would be collected pursuant to the
bill.78 Information would not be considered CII if it were submitted to conceal violations of law,
inefficiency, or administrative error; prevent embarrassment to a person, organization, or agency;
or interfere with competition in the private sector.79
In addition to the authorities established under Title I of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, Title III of
the bill would amend the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to create a National Center for
Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC or Center).80 The NCCC is charged with managing
“Federal efforts to secure, protect, and ensure the resiliency of the Federal information
infrastructure, national information infrastructure, and national security and emergency
preparedness communications infrastructure....”81 The Director of the NCCC will be appointed by
the President and will report directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security (the Secretary).82
Additionally, the NCCC will have one deputy director from the intelligence community83 who is
chosen by the Director of National Intelligence and reports directly to the Secretary.84

72 S. 2105, §105(c)(1)(A). Companies that can demonstrate that their covered critical infrastructure are sufficiently
secured against the risks identified would only have to certify every three years. S. 2105, §105(c)(4).
73 S. 2105, §105(d)(2).
74 S. 2105, §105(e).
75 Id.
76 S. 2105, §§101(b), 105(d)(3)(A), 107(a)(1).
77 S. 2105, §107(b). The CIIA consists of a group of provisions that address the circumstances under which the
Department of Homeland Security may obtain, use, and disclose critical infrastructure information as part of a critical
infrastructure protection program. It was enacted, in part, to respond to the need for the federal government and owners
and operators of the nation’s critical infrastructures to share information on vulnerabilities and threats, and to promote
information sharing between the private and public sectors in order to protect critical assets.
78 S. 2105, §107(b).
79 S. 2105, §107(a)(2).
80 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §242(a)).
81 Id. (new HSA §242(d)).
82 Id. (new HSA §242(c)).
83 See Id. (new HSA §241(12)). Intelligence community has the meaning given in 50 U.S.C. 401a(4), which includes
the Office of Director of National Intelligence; the Central Intelligence Agency; the National Security Agency; certain
(continued...)
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There are several places in which Title I provisions detailing DHS’s authority to regulate critical
infrastructure security overlap with the Center’s responsibilities as outlined in Title III. For
example, both the Center and the Secretary of Homeland Security are instructed to conduct cyber
risk assessments of critical infrastructure,85 and inform critical infrastructure owners about
security conditions. The Center must provide classified and unclassified security information to
national information infrastructure owners, which could include entities designated as critical
infrastructure by DHS under Title I.86 DHS is required to provide information to critical
infrastructure owners about cybersecurity threats, however, provision of classified information is
not directly addressed.87 Finally, both entities play a role in responding to cybersecurity
emergencies. The Center must develop and coordinate a “national incident response plan that
details the roles of Federal agencies, State and local governments, and the private sector....”88 In
similar language, DHS must “improve the capabilities and procedures of government and private
section entities to respond to a major cyber incident” and “clarify specific roles, responsibilities,
and authorities of the government” when responding.89 Since these Title I and III authorities
overlap but are not wholly duplicative, it may not be clear if or how the exercise of these
authorities would coincide.
Title I also gives the President the authority to exempt organizations that have been designated as
covered critical infrastructure by DHS from the requirements imposed in Title I, if they are
sufficiently regulated by a sector-specific agency.90 While these exempted entities are clearly free
from Title I requirements, it appears that they are still subject to the Title III provisions that apply
to covered critical infrastructure.91 If they are not exempted, these information systems will be
excepted from DHS requirements under Title I, but will still have to comply with the Title III
affirmative obligation for covered critical infrastructure operators to share information with the
Center about cyber incidents.92
Legal Issues Related to the Protection of Federal
Networks

Prompted by a perceived threat to governmental information technology (IT) systems, DHS, in
conjunction with the National Security Agency (NSA), has incrementally ramped up monitoring

(...continued)
elements of the Department of Defense; intelligence elements of the military branches, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the Departments of Energy, State, Homeland Security, and Treasury.
84 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §242(g)(2)).
85 S. 2105 §§102(a)(2), and 301 (new HSA §242(e)(2)).
86 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §242(e)(6)(B)).
87 S. 2105 §105(b).
88 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §242(e)(8)).
89 S. 2105 §109.
90 S. 2105 §104(f).
91 Title III defines covered critical infrastructure as “as system or asset designated by the Secretary ... in accordance
with the procedure established under section 103 of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012.” S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §241(3)).
This definition makes no mention of the exemption process that takes place after the designation is determined, as laid
out in Section 104. See S. 2105 §104(f).
92 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243(c)(1)(B)).
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of federal government networks over the past decade to identify and prevent cyber attacks. A
focal point of these efforts is EINSTEIN, a network intrusion system that monitors all federal
agency networks for potential attacks. As part of this monitoring, all communications by federal
executive agency employees made on federal networks, and incidentally, all communications they
have with private citizens, are monitored for malicious activity. This monitoring may trigger
Fourth Amendment guarantees to the right to be free from unreasonable searches and excessive
government intrusion. Additionally, Congress has enacted statutory rules that place a higher
restriction than the Constitution on government access to electronic communications.93
This section surveys EINSTEIN’s background and discusses the Fourth Amendment concerns it
raises for both federal employees and private citizen’s communicating with them. It will then
discuss alternative privacy and civil liberties protections that may be instituted to complement
Fourth Amendment protections. Finally, this section discusses recent legislative efforts in the
112th Congress to improve the federal government’s cybersecurity networks.
EINSTEIN Overview
Before EINSTEIN was introduced, federal agencies reported cyber threats to DHS manually and
on an ad hoc basis.94 It was usually done after the agency systems were affected by the attack. To
remedy this, DHS, in collaboration with NSA, created EINSTEIN—a system to detect and report
network intrusions. EINSTEIN’s mandate derived from a combination of statutes, presidential
directives, and agency memoranda. The first mandates for EINSTEIN came in 2002 with the
Homeland Security Act and Homeland Security Presidential Directive 7.95 In 2007, the Office of
Management and Budget required all federal executive agencies to develop a comprehensive plan
of action to defend against cyber threats.96 Coinciding with these statutory and administrative
directives, DHS and NSA launched EINSTEIN in three phases, each increasingly more
sophisticated than the last.
DHS rolled out EINSTEIN 1 in 2004 to automate the process by which federal agencies reported
cyber threats to the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT), the
operational arm of DHS’s cybersecurity division.97 Under EINSTEIN 1, federal agencies
voluntarily sent “flow records” of Internet network activity to DHS so it could monitor the
Internet traffic across the federal .gov domain. These flow records included basic routing
information such as the IP addresses of the connecting computer and the federal computer
connected to.98 US-CERT used this information to detect and mitigate malicious activity that

93 This section focuses on the constitutional concerns with EINSTEIN under the Fourth Amendment. Although statutes
such as the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, P.L. 99-508, 100 Stat. 1848, and the Privacy Act of 1974,
5 U.S.C. §522a, may be implicated, they will not be discussed here.
94 DEP’T OF HOMELAND SECURITY, PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT: EINSTEIN PROGRAM, at 3 (2004) (hereinafter EINSTEIN
1 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT), available at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/privacy_pia_eisntein.pdf.
95 Id. at 1.
96 Office of Management and Budget, Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies:
Implementation of Trusted Internet Connections (TIC) (November 20, 2007), available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/
sites/default/files/omb/assets/omb/memoranda/fy2008/m08-05.pdf.
97 EINSTEIN 1 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT, supra note 94 at 4.
98 Id. at 6-7. An IP address is a unique identifier used by most computers when sending data over the Internet. It is akin
to a personal telephone number or street address. See Stephanie Crawford, What is an IP address?, HOW STUFF WORKS,
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/internet/basics/question549.htm.
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threatened federal networks. This information was shared with both public and private actors on
the DHS website.99
In an effort to upgrade EINSTEIN’s capabilities, DHS launched EINSTEIN 2, which is capable
of alerting US-CERT of malicious network intrusions in near-real time.100 Sensors installed at all
federal agency Internet access points make a copy of all network activity coming to and from
federal networks, including addressing information and the content of the communication.101
These data are later scanned for the presence of “signatures,” patterns that correspond to a known
threat, such as denial of service attacks, network backdoors, malware, worms, Trojan horses, and
routing anomalies.102 The system triggers an alert when it senses malicious activity. All the data
corresponding with the trigger, including the content of the communication, are saved.103
Personnel at US-CERT then analyze the stored messages and act accordingly.
In 2010, DHS began testing EINSTEIN 3 on one federal agency.104 In addition to detecting cyber
threats, this newest iteration also is designed to block and respond to these threats before any
harm is done.105 US-CERT is also testing the ability of EINSTEIN 3 to provide real-time
information sharing with other federal agencies and the NSA.106
EINSTEIN and the Fourth Amendment
There is no doubt that EINSTEIN’s monitoring of all communications coming to and from federal
agency computers poses significant privacy implications—a concern acknowledged by DHS,
interest groups, academia, and the general public.107 This program affects not only federal
employees, but also any private citizen who communicates with them. DHS has developed a set
of procedures to address these concerns, such as minimization of information collection, training
and accountability requirements, and retention rules. Notwithstanding these steps, growth of this
Internet monitoring program may trigger privacy interests protected under the Fourth
Amendment.

99 See http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/techalerts/ for an example of cybersecurity alerts provided to the public.
100 DEP’T OF HOMELAND SECURITY, PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT: EINSTEIN 2, at 1 (2008) (hereinafter EINSTEIN 2
PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT), available at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/privacy_pia_einstein2.pdf.
101 Id. at 9. For more information on intrusion detection systems, see NAT’L INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECH.,
GUIDE TO INTRUSION DETECTION AND PREVENTION SYSTEMS (IDPS) (2007) (Pub. No. 800-94), available at
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-94/SP800-94.pdf (hereinafter “NIST REPORT”).
102 NIST REPORT, supra note 101, at 9-5.
103 EINSTEIN 2 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT, supra note 100, at 10.
104 According to DHS, the name of the agency is classified. DEP’T OF HOMELAND SECURITY, PRIVACY IMPACT
ASSESSMENT: INITIATIVE THREE EXERCISE, at 3 (2010) (hereinafter EINSTEIN 3 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT) available
at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/privacy_pia_nppd_initiative3.pdf.
105 Id. at 3.
106 Id. at 4.
107 See, e.g., DEP’T OF HOMELAND SECURITY, PRIVACY COMPLIANCE REVIEW OF THE EINSTEIN PROGRAM (2012)
(hereinafter EINSTEIN PRIVACY COMPLIANCE REVIEW), available at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/
privacy_privcomrev_nppd_ein.pdf; THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT, RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF A
COMPREHENSIVE AND CONSTITUTIONAL CYBERSECURITY POLICY (2012) (hereinafter THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT),
available at http://www.constitutionproject.org/pdf/TCPCybersecurityReport.pdf; Jack Goldsmith, The Cyberthreat,
Government Network Operations, and the Fourth Amendment
(2010), available at http://www.brookings.edu/papers/
2010/1208_4th_amendment_goldsmith.aspx.
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The Fourth Amendment provides in relevant part: “The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated ....”108 The principal purpose of the Fourth Amendment is to protect the privacy of
individuals against invasion from government officials.109 Not all government acts, however,
trigger Fourth Amendment protections. For the Fourth Amendment to apply, a court must first
inquire whether the governmental act constitutes a search or seizure in the constitutional sense.110
To determine if a search has occurred, a court will ask whether the individual had an actual
expectation of privacy that society would deem reasonable.111 If yes, the court will then ask if the
search was reasonable—the core Fourth Amendment requirement.112 Except in well-defined
instances, a search is not reasonable unless the government obtains a warrant based upon
probable cause.113 There are, however, exceptions to this rule such as special needs and consent
that will be explored below.
There seems to be a consensus in federal courts that Internet users are not entitled to privacy in
the non-content, routing information of their Internet communications.114 In United States v.
Forrester
, the government obtained court permission to install a device similar to a pen register to
record the to/from addresses of the defendant’s emails, the IP addresses of the sites he visited, and
the total volume of data sent to and from his account.115 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held
that these surveillance techniques were indistinguishable from the pen register upheld by the
Supreme Court in Smith v. Maryland.116 Internet users should be aware, the panel reasoned, that
this routing information is provided to the Internet service provider for the purpose of directing
the information.117
On the other hand, the cases generally demonstrate that an individual has a legitimate expectation
of privacy in the content of a communication. In United States v. Warshak, the Ninth Circuit ruled
that a “subscriber enjoys a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of emails that are
stored with, or sent or received through, a commercial ISP.”118 In an earlier case, the Second
Circuit opined that Internet users have an expectation of privacy in the content of the e-mail while

108 U.S. CONST. amend. IV.
109 Camara v. Mun. Ct., 387 U.S. 523, 528 (1967).
110 Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 32-33 (2001).
111 This formulation for determining whether a search of seizure occurred derives from Justice Harlan’s concurrence in
Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 361 (1967) (Harlan, J., concurring).
112 Texas v. Brown, 460 U.S. 730, 739 (1983).
113 Mincey v. United States, 437 U.S. 385, 390 (1978). Probable cause has been defined as “the facts and circumstances
within the officers’ knowledge and of which they had reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient in themselves
to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed.” Brinegar v. United
States, 338 U.S. 160, 175 (1948).
114 United States v. Forrester, 512 F.3d 500, 511 (9th Cir. 2007) (holding no reasonable expectation of privacy in the
to/from line addresses of e-mails and IP address of websites visited); United States v. Christie, 624 F.3d 558, 574 (3rd
Cir. ) (holding no reasonable expectation of privacy in IP address); United States v. Perrine, 518 F.3d 1196, 1205 (10th
Cir.) (holding no reasonable expectation of privacy in Internet subscriber information given to Internet service
provider).
115 United States v. Forrester, 512 F.3d at 511. A pen register is a device that records the numbers dialed from a
telephone. 18 U.S.C. §3127(3).
116 Id. at 510. In Smith v. Maryland, the Court held that the use of a pen register—a device that obtains the telephone
numbers dialed from a certain phone—was not a search under the Fourth Amendment. 442 U.S. 735, 745-46 (1979).
117 Forrester, 512 F.3d at 510.
118 United States v. Warshak, 631 F.3d 266, 287 (6th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks omitted).
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in transmission.119 Although the Supreme Court declined to resolve this issue in City of Ontario v.
Quon
, deciding the case on other grounds, it opined in dicta that “cell phones and text message
communications are so pervasive that some persons may consider them to be an essential means
or necessary instruments for self-expression, even self-identification. That might strengthen the
case for an expectation of privacy.”120
This content/non-content distinction is as old as Fourth Amendment case law.121 In the late
nineteenth century, the Court explained in Ex parte Jackson that the outside of a mailed letter—its
“outward form and weight”—was not entitled constitutional protection.122 However, the
government must obtain a warrant before examining the contents of a letter or sealed package.123
The Court protected the inside contents of the letter, but held that the outside, non-content
material was not entitled to (in modern parlance) a reasonable expectation of privacy. This same
rule was carried over to the telephone context.124 In Katz v. United States, the Court held that the
contents of Katz’s conversation—the actual words spoken—were protected under the Fourth
Amendment.125 A decade later the Court completed the other side of the doctrine in Smith v.
Maryland
, and held that a person has no expectation of privacy in the non-content, routing
information of the telephone call—the numbers dialed.126
EINSTEIN 2 not only collects the routing, non-content portions of communications, such as e-
mail header information, but also scans and collects the content of the communications, such as
the body of e-mails.127 Based on the reasoning of the Internet content cases, individuals most
likely have a reasonable expectation of privacy in those electronic communications.128 The
EINSTEIN program requires a Fourth Amendment inquiry into two discrete classes of
individuals: (1) federal agency employees who access federal networks while at work; and (2)
private persons who either contact a federal agency directly or who communicate via the Internet

119 United States v. Lifshitz, 369 F.3d 173, 190 (2d Cir. 2004).
120 City of Ontario v. Quon, 130 S. Ct. 2619, 2630 (2010).
121 See Orin Kerr, Applying the Fourth Amendment to the Internet: A General Approach, 62 STAN. L. REV. 1005, 1022-
29) (2010) (analogizing the content/non-content distinction developed in the Fourth Amendment letter and telephone
cases with internet communications).
122 Ex parte Jackson, 96 U.S. 727, 733 (1878); Forrester, 512 F.3d at 511 (citing Ex parte Jackson, 96 U.S. at 733).
123 Ex parte Jackson, 96 U.S. at 733.
The constitutional guaranty of the right of the people to be secure in their papers against
unreasonable searches and seizures extends to their papers, thus closed against inspection, wherever
they may be. Whilst in the mail, they can only be opened and examined under like warrant, issued
upon similar oath or affirmation, particularly describing the thing to be seized, as is required when
papers are subjected to search in one’s own household. No law of Congress can place in the hands
of officials connected with the postal service any authority to invade the secrecy of letters and such
sealed packages in the mail; and all regulations adopted as to mail matter of this kind must be in
subordination to the great principle embodied in the fourth amendment of the Constitution.
Id.
124 Kerr, supra note 121, at 1023-24.
125 Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 359 (1967)
126 Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 745-46 (1979).
127 EINSTEIN PRIVACY COMPLIANCE REVIEW, supra note 107, at 5.
128 See Legal Issues Relating to the Testing, Use, and Deployment of an Intrusion-Detection System (EINSTEIN 2.0) to
Protect Unclassified Computer Networks in the Executive Branch, 33 Op. O.L.C. 1, *11 (2009) (hereinafter Legal
Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0), available at http://www.justice.gov/olc/2009/e2-issues.pdf.
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with a federal employee.129 The Fourth Amendment rights of the former primarily rest on cases
dealing with privacy in the workplace and consent, while the latter requires a broader look at
privacy and electronic communications.
Monitoring Communications from Federal Employees
As work and personal lives can become enmeshed, many employees are accessing not only work
e-mail while on the clock, but also personal e-mails. EINSTEIN monitors not only federal
executive agency employees’ work e-mails or other official Internet activity, but also any
information accessed on a federal agency computer including personal e-mails accessed from
sites such as Gmail or Hotmail, or other Internet communications such as Facebook and Twitter.
This poses several Fourth Amendment issues.
In City of Ontario v. Quon, the Supreme Court upheld under the Fourth Amendment the city’s
search of text messages sent on a city-issued pager by a police officer employed by that city.130
Before issuing the pagers, the city had announced a usage policy that informed the officers that
the city reserved the right to monitor the use of the pager including e-mail and Internet use, with
or without notice to the employee.131 The Court assumed without deciding that the employee had
a reasonable expectation of privacy in the sent text messages, that the review of text messages
constituted a search, and that the same rules that apply to a search of an employee’s office apply
equally to an intrusion into his electronic communications.132 Further, the Court declined to
decide which Fourth Amendment employment-based test from O’Connor v. Ortega applied—the
plurality’s “operational realities” test that looked at the specific facts of the employment situation
on a case-by-case basis, or Justice Scalia’s private employment equivalence test—because the
Court decided the case on narrower grounds.133
The Court instead relied on the special needs exception to the warrant requirement, which holds
that in certain limited instances a government employer need not get a warrant to conduct a
search. When a government employer conducts a warrantless search for a “non-investigatory,
work-related purpose,” it does not violate the warrant requirement if it is “justified at its inception
and if the measures are reasonably related to the objective of the search and not excessively
intrusive in light of the circumstances giving rise to the search.”134 In the Court’s judgment, the
city had a “legitimate work-related rationale,” and the scope of the search was reasonable and not
“excessively intrusive.”135

129 There is also a third category of cases: where a federal employee sends a communication while on the federal
network to a private person. Because the principles that apply to communications from a private person to a federal
employee are the same as the principles that apply to communications from a federal employee to a private person,
these two categories will be discussed jointly.
130 City of Ontario v. Quon, 130 S. Ct. 2619, 2624 (2010). For an in-depth treatment of Quon, see CRS Report R41344,
Public Employees’ Right to Privacy in Their Electronic Communications: City of Ontario v. Quon in the Supreme
Court
, by Charles Doyle.
131 Quon, 130 S. Ct. at 2625.
132 Id. at 2630.
133 Id. at 2630.
134 Id. at 2631.
135 Id. (internal citations omitted).
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Like the city communication policy in Quon, as a condition of enrolling in EINSTEIN 2, each
federal agency is required to enter into an agreement with DHS that certifies that certain log-on
banners or computer user agreements are used to ensure employees are aware of and consent to
the monitoring, interception, and search of their communications on federal systems.136 Applying
the “operational realities” test from O’Connor, the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal
Counsel posits that use of the log-on banners on all federal computers will eliminate any
expectation of privacy in communications transmitted over those systems.137 Professor Orin Kerr
takes a different approach, treating the terms of service of an Internet service contract—the
equivalent to a log-on banner—as consent rather than an outright elimination of a reasonable
expectation of privacy.138 Under either approach, the conclusion reached is likely the same—the
monitoring is in all likelihood reasonable.139 However, Quon was limited to searches for a
“noninvestigatory work-related purpose.”140 If EINSTEIN could be construed as overreaching
this permissible purpose, say, by scanning e-mails for unlawful activity instead of simply
malicious computer activity, a court may find its scope beyond Quon’s holding. Further, Quon
insisted that these work-related investigations not be “excessively intrusive.”141 A reasonable
argument could be made that monitoring the content of every employee communication is
excessively intrusive. Additional questions remain. For instance, what is the scope of a non-
investigatory, work-related purpose? Does scanning for malicious activity qualify as a work-
related purpose? Does United States v. Jones’s physical intrusion test apply here where the
employee’s electronic papers and effects are being scanned?142 Because no court has confronted a
program like EINSTEIN, answers to these questions are unclear.
Monitoring Communications from Private Persons to Federal Employees
EINSTEIN not only monitors the computer activity of federal agency employees, but also any
communications sent by a private person to a federal employee on his governmental e-mail or
personal e-mail. One may argue that these concerns are more serious than in the employment
context, on the theory that there is neither a presumption that an individual’s privacy rights are
diminished nor has the private actor consented to monitoring by clicking on a log-on banner or
user agreement that would inform him of the privacy implications of his communication.
Some would argue that the third-party doctrine permits EINSTEIN’s monitoring of private
parties.143 Traditionally, there has been no Fourth Amendment protection for information

136 Legal Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0, supra note 128, at *11.
137 Id. at 32-33.
138 Kerr, supra note 121, at 1031.
139 See also THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT, supra at note 107, at 14 (“For federal employees, the analysis that employees
consent to having Einstein monitor communications is likely reasonable given the overwhelming importance of
protecting key federal agency networks.”).
140 Quon, 130 S. Ct. at 2631.
141 Id.
142 Another possible approach is that taken in United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. ___ (2012) (slip op.), in which the Court
held that a physical intrusion into a constitutionally protected area—there, the defendant’s car (an effect)—coupled
with an attempt to obtain information, was a Fourth Amendment search. If a court concluded that an e-mail is a paper
(or packet of data, an effect), protected under the Fourth Amendment’s catalog of protected areas (persons, houses,
papers, and effects), the Jones physical intrusion analysis may call into question whether EINSTEIN’s surveillance is
constitutionally permissible.
143 Legal Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0, supra note 128, at 35-36 (citing Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 743-44)
(1979)).
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voluntarily conveyed to a third-party.144 This doctrine dates back to the “secret agent” cases, in
which any words uttered to another person, including a government agent or informant, were not
covered by the Fourth Amendment.145 Because federal employees have agreed to permit
governmental monitoring of their communications, the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) argues
they are permitting ex ante surveillance of all their communications, including those from private
persons to the federal employee’s personal e-mail.146
However, the third-party cases have traditionally applied only to non-content information. In
Smith v. Maryland
, the Court noted that pen registers only disclose the telephone numbers dialed:
“[n]either the purport of any communication between the caller and the recipient of the call, their
identities, nor whether the call was even completed is disclosed by pen registers.”147 The case
rested on the devices “limited capabilities.”148 The Ninth Circuit borrowed this reasoning in
Forrester, where the panel distinguished “mere addressing” in an e-mail such as the to/from line,
from “more content-rich information” such as the text in the body of an e-mail.149 And as noted in
United States v. Warshak, people still should expect privacy in the content of their telephone calls
despite the ability of an operator to listen.150 Further, the Supreme Court has noted that “the broad
and unsuspected governmental incursions into conversational privacy which electronic
surveillance entails necessitate the application of Fourth Amendment safeguards.”151 These cases
severely diminish the argument that the third-doctrine permits absolute access to private
communications. Instead, it could be reasonable to conclude from these cases that the third-party
doctrine would permit access to the routing information of Internet communications, but might
not go so far as to allow monitoring of the content of those communications.
Additionally, the OLC contends that under the “secret agent” cases the government can monitor
private communications even if the sender is unaware that the recipient is a federal employee or
did not anticipate that the communication would be opened on a federal computer.152 The “secret
agent” cases generally hold that “when a person communicates to third-party even on the
understanding that the communication is confidential, he cannot object if the third party conveys
that information or records thereof to law enforcement authorities.”153 Because these cases do not
limit the instances this rule can be applied, it seems reasonable that they can be applied to
EINSTEIN.

144 United States v. Miller, 425 U.S. 435 (1976) holding that financial statements and deposit slips transmitted to bank
were not protected from police inquiry because they had been turned over to a third party); Smith, 442 U.S. 735. It
should be noted that in United States v. Jones, Justice Sotomayor opined that it “may be necessary to reconsider the
premise that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily disclosed to third
parties.” United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. ___, 5 (Sotomayor, J., concurring in the judgment and the opinion).
145 United States v. White, 401 U.S. 745, 750 (1971) (holding that the Fourth Amendment “affords no protection to a
wrongdoer’s misplaced belief that a person to whom he voluntarily confides his wrongdoing will not reveal it.”)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
146 Legal Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0, supra note 128, at 36-37.
147 Smith, 442 U.S. at 741 (quoting United States v. N.Y. Tel. Co., 434 U.S. 159, 167 (1977)).
148 Id. at 742.
149 United States v. Forrester, 512 F.3d 500, 511 (9th Cir. 2007).
150 United States v. Warshak, 631 F.3d 266, 285 (6th Cir. 2007).
151 United States v. U.S. Dist. Ct., 407 U.S. 297, 313 (1972).
152 Legal Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0, supra note 128, at 39.
153 SEC v. Jerry T. O’Brien, Inc., 467 U.S. 735, 743 (1984).
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Alternative to Traditional Warrant Requirement
Assuming both federal employees and those communicating with them have a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the contents of their communications, EINSTEIN must be tested under
the general reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment. A search is generally
unreasonable without a warrant or some individualized suspicion.154 However, under the “special
needs exception” cases, the Court has held that when there are special governmental needs,
beyond normal law enforcement, the government may need neither a warrant nor any level of
individualized suspicion.155 To determine whether the special needs exception applies, the Court
balances the individual’s privacy expectations against the governmental interest at stake.156 This
rule has been used to support certain police searches at checkpoints such as sobriety
roadblocks,157 border searches,158 and checkpoints looking for a witness to a crime.159 However,
the Court did not permit a drug interdiction checkpoint when the “primary purpose was to detect
evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing.”160
Here, an argument could be made that the nature of cybersecurity and the impracticability of
obtaining a warrant might justify application of the special needs doctrine to the EINSTEIN
program.161 The ostensible primary purpose of the program’s cybersecurity measures is not for
ordinary law enforcement needs, but instead to protect the critical infrastructure of the nation.
Moreover, the government will need to act quickly if the program is to be feasible.162 It could also
be argued, however, that unless the threat required immediate review, a government agency
should obtain a warrant based upon probable cause to review personally identifiable information,
or, at a minimum, review the communications in a redacted format that includes only the threat
information and no personally identifiable information.163 As one commentator noted, it is nearly
impossible to predict what is reasonable without knowing the severity of the cybersecurity threat
and the exact measures taken to meet it.164
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight
In addition to the Fourth Amendment, there may be other mechanisms for protecting the privacy
of Internet users. Indeed, the Constitution is only the floor for privacy protections. In many
instances, Congress and state legislatures have created privacy protections beyond what is
protected under their respective constitutions. These include statutes such as the Electronic
Communications Privacy Act165 and the Privacy Act of 1974.166

154 Chandler v. Miller, 520 U.S. 305, 308 (1997).
155 Nat’l Treasury Emplys. Union v. Von Raab, 489 U.S. 656, 665-66 (1989).
156 Id.
157 Michigan Dep’t of State Police v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444, 455 (1990).
158 United States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606 (1977).
159 Illinois v. Lidster, 540 U.S. 419, 428 (2004).
160 City of Indianapolis v. Edmond, 531 U.S. 32, 38 (2000).
161 Legal Issues Relating to EINSTEIN 2.0, supra note 128, at 54.
162 Goldsmith, supra note 107, at 14.
163 THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT, supra note 107, at 16.
164 Goldsmith, supra note 107, at 13.
165 Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, P.L. 99-508, 100 Stat. 1848.
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As to existing privacy protections, EINSTEIN has several privacy safeguards. For example,
federal agencies are required to post notices on their websites that computer security information
is being collected.167 The computer programs recording network flow records strip down the
information so that minimal content information is exposed.168 Further, only the raw computer
network traffic that contains malicious activity is viewed by DHS personnel; any “clean” traffic is
promptly deleted from the system.169 Information is only collected when it relates to an actual
cyber threat.170 Analysts handling the monitored communications are given privacy training on an
annual basis.171 These privacy protections are handled internally within DHS.
Jack Goldsmith, former head of the Office of Legal Counsel, has proposed a system of four
oversight mechanisms similar to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court172 to ensure the
reasonableness of the searches under EINSTEIN: (1) independent ex ante scrutiny to ensure that
the governmental procedures stay within their statutory authority; (2) privacy protections such as
minimization procedures, also subject to ex ante judicial review; (3) ex post oversight
mechanisms, in which the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence report to
Congress every six months regarding privacy compliance and the inspectors general from each
agency also report to Congress on a yearly basis; and (4) a sunset provision requiring Congress to
reapprove the regime four years into operation.173
Others have proposed there be some form of independent oversight beyond DHS’s privacy
office.174 Additionally, there are proposals that content of communications not be shared with law
enforcement officials or used in any non-cyber crime investigation, unless the data was obtained
as part of a legitimate cybersecurity threat.175
Legislation in the 112th Congress
This section provides a brief description of proposed cybersecurity legislation in the 112th
Congress that include provisions regarding the EINSTEIN program with particular emphasis
placed on the provisions that implicate the legal issues discussed above.
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 was introduced on February 14, 2012. Title II of the bill
would amend the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) to codify many of the

(...continued)
166 Privacy Act of 1974, P.L. 93-579, 88 Stat. 1896.
167 EINSTEIN 1 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT, supra note 94, at 9.
168 EINSTEIN 2 PRIVACY IMPACT ASSESSMENT, supra note 100, at 12.
169 Id.
170 EINSTEIN PRIVACY COMPLIANCE REVIEW, supra note 107, at 4.
171 Id. at 7.
172 The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is a comprised of 11 federal district court judges who are designated by
the Chief Justice to hear applications for surveillance orders authorized under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
of 1978. 50 U.S.C. §1803.
173 Goldsmith, supra note 107, at 14.
174 THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT, supra note 107, at 28.
175 Id.
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current executive agency network intrusion practices described above. Specifically, the bill would
enact a new Section 3553 of Title 44 of the United States Code to provide the Secretary of DHS
with the statutory authority to oversee all information security policies that will be binding on all
federal agencies.176 The Secretary would be given the explicit statutory authority to “acquire,
intercept, retain, use, and disclose communications and other system traffic that are transiting to
or from or store on agency information systems and deploy countermeasures with regard to the
communications and system traffic.” In light of the test phase of EINSTEIN 3, this section
apparently would vest in the Secretary the authority to not only intercept communications, but to
react to actionable data based on perceived threats. Consistent with current practice, The
Cybersecurity Act of 2012 would leave the Department of Defense (DOD), the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in charge of
their respective network intrusion systems. This bill would also permit DHS to contract with
private ISPs to further its mission of preventing network intrusions.
Additionally, the National Center for Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC) created under
Title III of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012177 would have various responsibilities with respect to
federal networks. First, the NCCC must implement and enforce a security system for the federal
information infrastructure,178 which does not include national security systems or information
systems used by the Department of Defense, the military or the intelligence community.179
Second, the Center is to provide cybersecurity technology, upon request, and information, both
classified and unclassified, to owners of national information infrastructure. Third, the NCCC
must develop a national incident response plan and is responsible for coordinating national cyber
incident response efforts. Finally, the NCCC must create an information sharing system that
collects information from and redistributes information to federal agencies, state and local
governments, national information infrastructure, critical infrastructure, and the private sector.
Both federal agencies and critical infrastructure have an affirmative obligation to provide certain
information to the Center’s information sharing program.180 Other entities, including state and
local governments and private sector actors, can participate voluntarily in the program.181
Title III instructs the NCCC to “develop, oversee the implementation of, and enforce policies,
principles, and guidelines on information security for the federal information infrastructure,
including exercise of the authorities under the Federal Information Security Management Act of
2002.”182 Therefore, it appears that NCCC is intended to exercise the authority granted to the
Secretary in Title II.
Several provisions in Title III also appear to overlap with authority granted to DHS under FISMA
in Title II. For example, both Title II and Title III require risk assessments to be completed on
agency information systems. In Title III, NCCC must conduct risk assessments on all federal
information systems, which excludes national security systems and systems used by the

176 S. 2105, 112th Cong. §3553 (2012).
177 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §242(a)).
178 “Federal information infrastructure” is defined as “information and information systems that are owned, operated,
controlled, or licensed by, or on behalf of, a Federal agency ... ” but explicitly excludes systems used by the
Department of Defense, the military, and an element of the intelligence community. S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §241(8)).
179 Id. (new HSA §241(8)(B), 242(e)(3)).
180 Id. (new HSA §243(b)(1)(B), (c)(1)(B)).
181 Id. (new HSA §243(c)(1)(C)).
182 Id. (new HSA §242(e)(3)).
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Department of Defense, the military, or the Intelligence Community.183 In Title II, DHS is
instructed to conduct risk assessments on agency information systems, except national security
systems and systems used by the Department of Defense, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI).184
Additionally, the security policies and procedures created under Title II and Title III appear to
apply to different sets of federal agencies because of different exemptions granted under each
Title. While national security systems and systems used by the Department of Defense, CIA, and
DNI are exempted from the security policies and procedures implemented by DHS pursuant to
Title II, other members of the intelligence community are not exempted.185 In contrast, all
national security systems and systems used by the Department of Defense, the military, and the
entire Intelligence Community are exempted from the requirements NCCC must implement under
Title III.186 Therefore, it appears that the NCCC may be implementing two different sets of
policies for two different sets of federal agencies, one set under Title II and one set under Title III.
It appears that all federal agencies must participate in the NCCC information sharing system,
including complying with the affirmative obligation to provide information to the Center.187
Legal Issues Related to Sharing Cybersecurity
Threat Information

Many policymakers have argued that there is a need for the federal government and owners and
operators of the nation’s critical infrastructures to share information on vulnerabilities and threats,
and to promote information sharing between the private and public sectors in order to protect
critical assets from cybersecurity threats. Private sector entities may wish to share information
with one another about threats they have faced or are currently facing. They may also wish to
collaborate in devising solutions to these security issues. Additionally, the government may have
information about cybersecurity threats that would be similarly useful to potential targets in the
private sector. The government may also see value in having access to information from the
private sector about cybersecurity threats.
Obstacles to information sharing may exist in current laws protecting electronic communications
or in antitrust law. Entities that share information may also be concerned that sharing or receiving
such information may lead to increased civil liability, or that shared information may contain
proprietary or confidential information that may be exposed to unauthorized use by competitors
or government regulators.

183 Id. (new HSA §242(e)(2)).
184 Id. §201 (new 44 U.S.C. §3553(b)(3), (f)).
185 See Id. (new 44 U.S.C. §3553(f)).
186 See S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §241(8)) (defining “Federal information infrastructure”).
187 Id. (new HSA §243(b)(2)(B)-(C)).
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Electronic Communications Privacy Act188
The Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) generally prohibits (1) the interception of
wire, oral or electronic communications (wiretapping);189 (2) access to the content of stored
electronic communications and to communications transaction records;190 and (3) the use of trap
and trace devices and pen registers.191
ECPA generally prohibits intercepting wire, oral, or electronic communications by means of an
electronic, mechanical or other device, but sets forth a number of exceptions to the general
prohibition.192 Relevant to this discussion, ECPA provides a general exemption for
communications service providers, permitting them to intercept communications when incidental
to improving service or protecting themselves against fraud.193 This exemption does not apply to
random monitoring except where used for mechanical or service quality control checks.
Communications service providers are also permitted to intercept communications in order to
assist federal and state officials operating under a judicially supervised interception order,194 and
for the regulatory activities of the Federal Communications Commission.195
Under the stored communications provisions of ECPA, providers of electronic communication
services (ECS) to the public may not disclose the contents of any “communication while in
electronic storage by that service.”196 Public remote computer service (RCS) providers similarly
may not disclose the contents of
any communication which is carried or maintained on that service – (A) on behalf of, and
received by means of electronic transmission from (or created by means of computer
processing of communications received by means of electronic transmission from), a
subscriber or customer of such service; (B) solely for the purpose of providing storage or
computer processing services to such subscriber or customer, if the provider is not authorized
to access the contents of any such communications for purposes of providing any services
other than storage or computer processing.197

188 See CRS Report 98-326, Privacy: An Overview of Federal Statutes Governing Wiretapping and Electronic
Eavesdropping
, by Gina Stevens and Charles Doyle for a more detailed discussion of the federal laws governing
wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping, along with appendices including copies of the texts of ECPA and FISA. See
also
CRS Report R41733, Privacy: An Overview of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, by Charles Doyle.
189 18 U.S.C. §§2510-2522.
190 18 U.S.C. §§2701-2712.
191 18 U.S.C. §§3121-3127. Pen registers capture the numbers dialed on a telephone line; trap and trace devices identify
the originating number of a call on a particular phone line. See 18 U.S.C. §3127(3)-(4). The USA PATRIOT Act
enlarged the coverage of the Pen Register Statute to include sender/addressee information relating to email and other
forms of electronic communications. P.L. 107-56, §216(c)(2).
192 18 U.S.C. §2511.
193 18 U.S.C. §2511(2)(a)(i), (h).
194 18 U.S.C. §2511(2)(a)(ii).
195 18 U.S.C. §2511(2)(b).
196 18 U.S.C. §2702(a)(1).
197 18 U.S.C. §2702(a)(2).
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Both ECS and RCS providers may not disclose any “record or other information pertaining to a
subscriber to or customer of such service (not including the contents of communications covered
by [the disclosure restrictions described above]) to any government entity.”198
However, the statute does provide a number of exceptions under which an ECS or RCS provider
may disclose the contents of a communication. These exceptions cover disclosures made
• to the addressee or intended recipient of the communication;
• with the consent of the sender, addressee, or intended recipient of the
communication, or to the subscriber in the case of remote computing service;
• in order to forward such communication to its destination;
• as may be necessarily incident to the rendition of the service or to the protection
of the rights or property of the service provider;
• to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children;
• to law enforcement if the contents were inadvertently obtained by the service
provider and appear to pertain to the commission of a crime; and
• to a government entity, if the provider, in good faith, believes that an emergency
involving danger of death or serious physical injury to any person requires
disclosure.199
With respect to pen registers and trap and trace devices, ECPA outlaws installation or use of a pen
register or trap and trace device, except under one of seven circumstances:
• pursuant to a court order issued under sections 3121-3127;
• pursuant to a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court order;200
• with the consent of the user;
• when incidental to service;
• when necessary to protect users from abuse of service;
• when necessary to protect providers from abuse of service;201 or
• in an emergency situation.202
Some have argued that the framework provided by ECPA may be an obstacle to sharing cyber
threat information among communications service providers or between such entities and the
government.203 The statute permits service providers to conduct random monitoring of

198 18 U.S.C. §2702(a)(3).
199 18 U.S.C. §2702(b) (emphasis added). The record disclosure exceptions are similar. 18 U.S.C. 2702(c).
200 18 U.S.C. §3121 (“Except as provided in this section, no person may install or use a pen register or a trap and trace
device without first obtaining a court order under section 3123 of this title or under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act of 1978 (50 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.)”).
201 18 U.S.C. §3121(b).
202 18 U.S.C. §3125(a).
203 See, e.g., Aaron J. Burstein, Amending the ECPA to Enable a Culture of Cybersecurity Research, 22 HARV. J.L. &
TECH. 167 (2008).
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communications in order to perform mechanical or service quality control checks; however, these
purposes may not sufficiently capture the wholesale monitoring of networks to detect or intercept
cyber threats.204 Additionally, the restrictions on voluntary disclosures of the contents of
communications and addressing information are generally limited to the purpose of protecting the
service provider’s rights or property. Consequently, ECPA may hinder sharing of information
about cyber threats where the service provider is not the target of the threat. Given this
uncertainty, providers may be hesitant to share cyber threat information as violating ECPA can
expose them to criminal penalties and private civil liability.
Antitrust Law
Companies may be assisted in combating cybersecurity threats by sharing information with one
another about threats they have faced or are currently facing. Companies may also wish to
collaborate in devising solutions to these security issues. The antitrust laws are often cited as an
impediment to such collaboration. This is so because if a collaboration is found to violate antitrust
laws, the collaborating entities may be subject to civil and criminal penalties.205
Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act prohibits contracts, combinations, and conspiracies in
restraint of trade.206 The Supreme Court has found that not all contracts or combinations that
restrain trade are forbidden by the Sherman Act; rather, only those agreements that unreasonably
restrain trade are prohibited.207 Nonetheless, when competitors share information with one
another, concerns regarding violations of the antitrust laws may arise.208 The sharing of
information may create the opportunity to conspire to fix prices, restrain output, or otherwise
agree to unreasonably restrain competition to the detriment of consumers.
Two types of analyses are used to determine the lawfulness of collaborative activity among
competitors: per se and rule of reason.209 The per se analysis is applied to collaborations that have
been found to be always or almost always in violation of the antitrust laws because they result in
raising prices or reducing output without any appreciable benefit to competition.210 Only the most
egregious collaborations, such as those to fix prices, rig bids, or reduce output, are considered to
be per se illegal.211 All other collaborations among competitors are subject to review under the
rule of reason standard.212 The rule of reason consists of a flexible inquiry into the potential
competitive benefits of an agreement as they are weighed against the potential competitive harms.
Most agreements to share information will likely be reviewed under the rule of reason standard.213

204 18 U.S.C. §2511(2)(a)(i).
205 15 U.S.C. §§1, 4, 15, 26.
206 15 U.S.C. §1.
207 Standard Oil Co. of N.J. v. U.S., 221 U.S. 1, 60 (1911) (interpreting the language of Section One to require that in
order for restraints in trade to be considered unlawful, the methods used to restrain the market must be undue or
unreasonable).
208 See Fed. Trade Comm'n & U.S. Dep't of Justice, Antitrust Guidelines for Collaborations Among Competitors
(2000), available at http://www.ftc.gov/os/2000/04/ftcdojguidelines.pdf (hereinafter Competitor Collaboration
Guidelines).
209 Nat’l Soc’y of Prof’l Eng’rs v. United States, 435 U.S. 679, 692 (1978).
210 Business Electronics Corp. v. Sharp Electronics Corp., 485 U.S. 717, 723 (1988).
211 Competitor Collaboration Guidelines, supra note 208, at 3.
212 Id.
213 Continental T.V. Corp. v. GTE Sylvania Corp., 433 U.S. 36, 49 (1977).
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Most collaborations among competitors that exist for the sole purpose of combating cybersecurity
threats would be analyzed under the rule of reason standard.
Collaboration among competitors may include a wide variety of activity including research and
development, shared manufacturing facilities, and other joint ventures.214 Agreements to share
information may be a part of other broader collaborative activities, or an end unto themselves.
The Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) recognize that
information sharing among competitors often has pro-competitive and efficiency-enhancing
benefits that may outweigh any anticompetitive risks.215 The DOJ and the FTC, therefore, have
devised guidelines to aid companies in developing collaborative business plans that minimize
antitrust concerns.216 The first aspect of the agreement that the agencies will examine is the extent
of the collaboration and the purpose for the collaboration.217 To the extent that the sharing of
information is limited to the purpose of aiding in combating cybersecurity threats, it is likely that
the antitrust concerns raised by any potential agreement would be limited as well.218
Groups of competitors wishing to collaborate to combat cybersecurity threats, even when
following the DOJ and FTC’s guidelines, may nonetheless be concerned about antitrust scrutiny.
To aid these groups, the DOJ has developed a process for the groups to submit their plans to
collaborate to the DOJ for a determination by the agency of whether the proposed collaboration
would raise antitrust concerns.219 It is called the Business Review Procedure. The procedure has
been used in the cybersecurity context in the past. For example, the Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI) requested that the DOJ review its proposal to share information related to cyber
threats. After examining the proposal, the DOJ issued a business review letter stating that the DOJ
was not inclined to initiate an antitrust enforcement action against the collaborative efforts of
EPRI on the theory that the proposal would reduce cybersecurity costs and may have a pro-
competitive effect.220 Nonetheless, the DOJ, as it always does in these circumstances, reserved the
right to pursue any antitrust concerns should the collaborative effort prove to have a future
anticompetitive effect.
Liability for Information Sharing
Some have argued that sharing or receiving information about cybersecurity threats could
potentially expose private sector entities to increased liability. To the extent that ECPA or the
antitrust laws prohibit private sector entities from sharing cybersecurity threat information
amongst themselves or with the government, violating these laws could lead to civil or criminal
penalties imposed by the government.221 Additionally, both ECPA and the antitrust laws provide

214 Competitor Collaboration Guidelines, supra note 208, at 6-7.
215 Id. at 1.
216 Id.
217 Id. at 12.
218 See Letter from Joel I. Klein, Assistant Attorney General, Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, to Barbara
Greenspan, Associate General Counsel, Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. (October 2, 2000) available at
http://justice.gov/atr/public/busreview/6614.htm.
219 28 C.F.R. §50.6.
220 Letter from Joel I. Klein, Assistant Attorney General, Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, to Barbara
Greenspan, Associate General Counsel, Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. (October 2, 2000) available at
http://justice.gov/atr/public/busreview/6614.htm.
221 15 U.S.C. §§1, 4; 18 U.S.C. §§2511, 2701, 3121.
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private rights of action for harmed parties to recover damages from entities that have violated
these statutes.222 Consequently, violating ECPA or the antitrust laws may also expose entities to
private civil liability.
Concerns about private civil liability for information sharing may also arise based on the effect
that information sharing may have on private civil actions based on injuries caused by a
defendant’s negligent actions. One way of proving negligence is by convincing a jury that the
defendant did not act reasonably in the face of a foreseeable risk.223 In the absence of a
foreseeable risk, a defendant typically has no judicially enforceable duty to mitigate that risk.224
However, if a defendant has received information about an active cybersecurity threat, then that
would tend to show that the risk of attack from such threat was a foreseeable one. In other words,
notice of cybersecurity risks might lead a jury to find that the defendant had a duty to act
reasonably. For example, if a defendant is using software package X in its information
infrastructure, and the defendant receives information from other private sector entities or the
government that software package X has been vulnerable to cyberattacks, the receipt of this
information may lead a jury to conclude that the defendant was aware of the risk presented by
using that software package. If such a duty were found, then the defendant could be liable for any
harm that resulted from its negligence.
Receiving information about cybersecurity threats may also be relevant to whether the actions
taken by a defendant in the face of a foreseeable risk were reasonable. In order to determine
whether a defendant’s actions were reasonable, juries are often asked to balance the foreseeable
risks of the defendant’s actions with the foreseeable risks of the defendant’s inaction.225 For
example, shared cybersecurity threat information may include effective and low-cost measures
that could be taken to mitigate or prevent a threat. A jury evaluating whether a defendant had
acted negligently may find the fact that the defendant had knowledge of effective and low-cost
preventative measures may determine that the defendant should be held to a higher standard of
care than if the defendant had not received such information.226
Protection of Proprietary or Confidential Business Information227
Sharing cybersecurity threat information may raise concerns about how that information would be
used. For example, there may be concerns that other businesses could use the information to gain
a competitive advantage. There may also be concerns that cybersecurity threat information shared
with the government might be used for regulatory purposes unrelated to cybersecurity. As a result,

222 15 U.S.C. §§15, 26; 18 U.S.C. §§2520, 2707.
223 See, e.g., First Electric Cooperative Corp. v. Pinson, 642 S.W.2d 301, 303 (Ark. 1982) (“there is no negligence in
not guarding against a danger which there is no reason to anticipate”).
224 Id.
225 E.g., Schuldies v. Service Machine Co., 448 F. Supp. 1196, 1199 (E.D. Wis. 1978) (“a person fails to exercise
ordinary care when, without intending to do any wrong, he does an act or omits a precaution under circumstances in
which a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence ought reasonably to foresee that such act or omission will subject
the interests of another to an unreasonable risk of harm”).
226 E.g., Rodriguez v. New Haven, 439 A.2d 421, 424 (Conn. 1981) (“knowledge of a dangerous condition generally
requires greater care to meet the standard of reasonable care”).
227 See CRS Report R41406, The Freedom of Information Act and Nondisclosure Provisions in Other Federal Laws ,
by Gina Stevens and CRS Report RL33670, Protection of Security-Related Information, by Gina Stevens and Todd B.
Tatelman.
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some private sector entities may be hesitant to voluntarily share cybersecurity-related information
with other businesses or with the government.
For example, voluntary sharing of cybersecurity threat information with the government may be
inhibited by concerns that such information might be made publicly available under the Freedom
of Information Act of 1974 (FOIA), which regulates the disclosure of information held by the
government.228 Other potential obstacles to sharing information with the government are agency
rules or judicial doctrine regarding ex parte communications, the rules of discovery in civil
litigation, and state laws requiring public disclosure.
Information that is designated as critical infrastructure information (CII) under the CIIA is
protected from disclosure under FOIA. Similarly, the CIIA provides that CII will not be subject to
agency rules or judicial doctrine regarding ex parte communications. With respect to concerns
about litigation, CIIA limits the use of CII for use in civil litigation and provides that sharing CII
with the agency does not count as the “waiver of any applicable privilege or protection provided
under law,” such as trade secret protection or the attorney-client privilege.229 CIIA also authorizes
the use or disclosure of such information by officers and employees in furtherance of the
investigation or the prosecution of a criminal act; or for disclosure to Congress or the
Government Accountability Office.
Many of these concerns are also raised in the context of protecting information collected from
critical infrastructure, and are discussed in more detail supra at “Proprietary and Confidential
Business Information.”
Legislation in the 112th Congress
This section provides a brief description of proposed cybersecurity legislation in the 112th
Congress that include regulatory provisions addressing the sharing of cybersecurity threat
information amongst the private sector and between the government and the private sector.
Particular emphasis has been placed on the provisions that implicate the legal issues discussed
above.
H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, As
Ordered Reported

H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011 (CISPA), was introduced
on November 30, 2011, by Representative Rogers of Michigan, to facilitate sharing of cyber
threat information between the Intelligence Community (IC)230 and the private sector. On

228 5 U.S.C. §552.
229 See Fed. R. Evid. 501.
230 Under 50 U.S.C. §401a(4), the IC is comprised of the following offices: the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence; the Central Intelligence Agency; the National Security Agency; the Defense Intelligence Agency; the
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency; the National Reconnaissance Office; other offices within the Department of
Defense for the collection of specialized national intelligence through reconnaissance programs; the intelligence
elements of the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marine Corps, the Coast Guard, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Department of Energy; the Bureau of Intelligence and
Research of the Department of State; the Office of Intelligence and Analysis of the Department of the Treasury; the
Office of Intelligence and Analysis of the Department of Homeland Security; and such other elements as may be
(continued...)
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December 1, 2011, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence held a mark-up of the
bill and favorably ordered reported an amended version to the House.231
CISPA would direct the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to establish procedures under
which IC elements would be allowed to share cyber threat intelligence with the private sector.232
Information from the IC would only be shareable with entities or persons with appropriate
security clearances, and only if sharing would be consistent with the need to protect national
security.233 Entities receiving shared cyber threat information from the IC would be required to
take measures to protect that information from unauthorized disclosure.234 CISPA also directs the
DNI to issue guidelines allowing heads of IC elements to grant clearances through an expedited
process to employees or officers of certified entities and to certified entities.235
In order to address the perceived legal obstacles to information sharing among the private sector,
CISPA would give private sector entities the explicit authority to use cybersecurity systems to
identify and obtain cybersecurity threat information to protect their rights and property, and to
share such information with any other entity, including with the federal government.236 Entities
that provide cybersecurity goods and services, also known as cybersecurity providers, would have
similar authority to use cybersecurity systems to identify, obtain, and share cyber threat
information, from the networks of consenting customers.237 CISPA also provides that nothing in
the bill may be construed to require a private entity to share information with the federal
government or require a private entity to share information with the federal government as a
condition of receiving cyber threat intelligence from the IC.238
The bill would require shared information to be subject to anonymization or minimization.239
CISPA would also explicitly prohibit shared information from being used by businesses to gain an
unfair competitive advantage to the detriment of the entity sharing the information.240 CISPA also
explicitly exempts information shared with the federal government from disclosure under
FOIA.241 Additionally, the bill would provide that information shared with the federal government

(...continued)
designated by the President, or designated jointly by the Director of National Intelligence and the head of the
department or agency concerned, as an element of the intelligence community.
231 H. Permanent Select Comm. on Intelligence, Bipartisan Cybersecurity Bill Clears Key Hurdle, December 1, 2011,
available at http://intelligence.house.gov/press-release/bipartisan-cybersecurity-bill-clears-key-hurdle. See also Lauren
Gardner, House Panel Backs Cybersecurity Bill with Stronger Privacy Provisions, CQ, December 1, 2011, available at
http://www.cq.com/news.do.
232 H.R. 3523, §2 (new §1104(a)(1) of the National Security Act of 1947 (NSA)).
233 Id. (new NSA §1104(a)(2)).
234 Id. (new NSA §1104(a)(2)(C)).
235 Id. (new NSA §1104(a)(3)).
236 Id. (new NSA §§1104(b)(1), (2)).
237 Id.
238 Id. (new NSA §1104(c)(3)).
239 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(2)(A)). Minimization typically refers to limitations on what information is acquired; how it
is acquired; how it is maintained; who has access to it within the capturing agency and under what circumstances; to
whom and under what circumstances it is disclosed beyond the capturing agency; how long it is preserved; and when
and under what circumstances it is expunged. For a discussion of minimization procedures in the context of national
security letters, see CRS Report R41619, National Security Letters: Proposals in the 112th Congress, by Charles Doyle.
240 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(2)(B)).
241 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(2)(C)).
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could not be disclosed to an entity outside of the federal government, except with the
authorization of the entity sharing the information.242 The federal government would be permitted
to use shared information for any lawful non-regulatory purpose, provided that a significant
purpose of the use is protecting cybersecurity or national security.243 The federal government is
also specifically prohibited from searching shared cyber threat information unless it is for the
purpose of protecting cybersecurity or national security.244
With respect to concerns about increased liability resulting from sharing cybersecurity threat
information, CISPA would provide civil and criminal immunity for entities that, acting in good
faith, use cybersecurity systems to obtain, use, or share information in accordance with the new
authorities created by the bill.245 Furthermore, no civil or criminal cause of action would be
allowed to be based on an entity’s failure to act on information obtained or shared with it.246
H.R. 3674, PRECISE Act
Section 3 of the PRECISE Act addresses sharing of cybersecurity threat information among the
private sector and between the private sector and the public sector. The bill would establish a not-
for-profit entity called the National Information Sharing Organization (NISO) to serve as a
collector of information relating to cyber threats.247 Membership in the NISO would be voluntary
and open to state and local government, the private sector, and academic institutions.248
Like many of the bills introduced to address cybersecurity information sharing in the 112th
Congress, the PRECISE Act would give private sector entities the explicit authority to use
cybersecurity systems to identify and obtain cyber threat information to protect their rights and
property, and to share such information.249 However, the PRECISE Act would only authorize
sharing such information via the NISO.250 However, once received by the NISO, the information
might be disseminated to the NISO’s members, including the federal government, and subject to
the limitations discussed in the next paragraph.251 Entities that provide cybersecurity goods and
services, also known as cybersecurity providers, would have similar authority to use
cybersecurity systems to identify, obtain, and share cyber threat information, with the consent of
the party to which they are providing such goods or services.252
The PRECISE Act would impose restrictions on how information shared with the NISO could be
disclosed or used.253 Information shared with the NISO would be exempt from disclosure under

242 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(2)(C)(ii)).
243 Id. (new NSA §1104(c)(1)).
244 Id. (new NSA §1104(c)(2)).
245 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(3)(A)).
246 Id. (new NSA §1104(b)(3)(B)).
247 H.R. 3674, §3 (new HSA §241).
248 Id. (new HSA §245).
249 Id. (new HSA §248(a)). The PRECISE Act also explicitly provides that the sharing of cyber threat information via
the NISO would not constitute a violation of federal antitrust laws. Id. (new HSA §252).
250 Id. (new HSA §248(a)).
251 Id.
252 Id.
253 Id. (new HSA §248(b)).
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FOIA, and state or local laws requiring disclosure.254 Additionally, the use of such information in
any civil action would not be permitted without the submitter’s consent.255 The federal
government would be prohibited from using or disclosing shared information for regulatory
purposes, except in the context of a criminal cybersecurity prosecution or investigation, for
disclosures to congressional committees, or with the authorization of the submitter.256 State and
local governments would also be prohibited from further disclosing or distributing the shared
information without the submitter’s consent, and from using the information for any purpose
other than the protection of information systems or the investigation and prosecution of a criminal
act.257 The act of sharing information with the NISO would not constitute a waiver of any
privilege with respect to the information.258
In order to address concerns that private sector entities may have about liability, information
shared with the NISO may not be used as the basis of a civil or criminal cause of action based on
the failure to warn.259 However, unauthorized disclosures of information shared with the NISO
and its members would be punishable by imprisonment of up to one year, criminal fines, or
both.260
S. 2102, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2012
S. 2102, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2012 (CISA), was introduced on February
13, 2012, by Senator Feinstein, for the purpose of improving the sharing of cybersecurity
information among entities in the private sector, and between the private sector and the
government. The provisions of CISA have also been incorporated, largely without change, into
Title VII of S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, as introduced on February 14, 2012.
CISA would address the perceived obstacles to information sharing in existing law by giving
private entities affirmative authority to monitor their own information systems for cybersecurity
threats, or the information systems of a consenting third party.261 CISA would also provide
explicit authority for private entities to disclose and receive lawfully obtained cybersecurity
information so long as the shared information is used for cybersecurity protection and reasonable
efforts are made to safeguard individually identifiable information.262 However, nothing in CISA
would be permitted to be construed to authorize price fixing or market allocation between
competitors.263

254 Id. (new HSA §§248(b)(1), (b)(4)(A)).
255 Id. (new HSA §248(b)(2)).
256 Id. (new HSA §248(b)(3)).
257 Id. (new HSA §248(b)(4)).
258 Id. (new HSA §248(b)(5)).
259 Id. (new HSA §248(b)(6)). Additionally, as noted above, the use of shared information in any civil action would not
be permitted without the submitter’s consent. Id. (new HSA §248(b)(2)).
260 Id. (new HSA §250).
261 S. 2102, §2; S. 2105, §701.
262 S. 2102, §3; S. 2105, §702.
263 S. 2102, §8(a)(5); S. 2105, §707(a)(5).
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Under CISA, the Secretary of DHS would be authorized to designate cybersecurity exchanges,
for the purpose of efficiently receiving and distributing cybersecurity threat indicators.264 Non-
federal entities are explicitly given the authority to provide cybersecurity threat indicators to a
cybersecurity exchange, which may only use, retain, or further disclose shared information for the
purpose of protecting against or mitigating cybersecurity threats.265
CISA would provide that information shared with a cybersecurity exchange would be exempt
from disclosure under FOIA, as well as any restrictions on ex parte communications.266 Sharing
information with a cybersecurity exchange would not constitute a waiver of any applicable
privilege regarding the information, including any trade secret protection.267 Furthermore, no
federal entity would be permitted to use a cybersecurity threat indicator as evidence for a
regulatory enforcement action against the entity that shared the information.268
Federal entities would not be permitted to disclose cybersecurity threat information unless the
disclosure is made to protect a federal entity from a cybersecurity threat, or to mitigate a
cybersecurity threat to another component, officer, employee, or agent of the federal entity with
cybersecurity responsibilities, any cybersecurity exchange, or a private entity that provides a
federal entity with an electronic communication service, remote computing service, or
cybersecurity service.269 The recipient of information from a federal entity must also comply with
any requirements regarding the protection and further disclosure of such information.270
Additional restrictions would apply if cybersecurity threat information was to be shared with law
enforcement. Federal cybersecurity exchanges could only disclose information to law
enforcement if the information appears to relate to a crime which has been, is being, or is about to
be committed, and if minimization procedures developed by the Secretary and approved by the
Attorney General permit such disclosure.271 Federal entities that are not cybersecurity exchanges
may use cyber threat information to protect against cybersecurity threats, but must comply with
similar restrictions on disclosing shared information to law enforcement.272 Any disclosure of
cyber threat information to a non-federal entity shall be accompanied by a written agreement
under which the recipient of the information agrees that the information will only be used in a
manner consistent with the restrictions on disclosures to law enforcement.273 CISA directs the
Secretary of DHS to devise minimization procedures to protect individually identifiable
information from unnecessary disclosure.274 These procedures are to be developed in consultation

264 S. 2102, §4; S. 2105, §703. The Secretary of DHS would also be required to designate a lead cybersecurity
exchange to serve as the focal point within the federal government for cybersecurity information sharing. S. 2102,
§4(c); S. 2105, §703(c).
265 S. 2102, §5; S. 2105, §704. Classified threat information may only be shared with certified entities with adequate
security clearances. Security clearances may be granted to certified entities and employees of certified entities. S. 2102,
§6; S. 2105, §705.
266 S. 2102, §§5(d), (e); S. 2105, §§704(d), (e).
267 S. 2102, §5(f); S. 2105, §704(f).
268 S. 2102, §7(c); S. 2105, §706(c).
269 S. 2102, §5(g)(1)(A); S. 2105, §704(g)(1)(A).
270 S. 2102, §5(g)(1)(B); S. 2105, §704(g)(1)(B).
271 S. 2102, §5(g)(2); S. 2105, §704(g)(2).
272 S. 2102, §5(g)(3); S. 2105, §704(g)(3).
273 S. 2102, §5(g)(3)(B); S. 2105, §704(g)(3)(B).
274 S. 2102, §5(g)(4); S. 2105, §704(g)(4).
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with privacy and civil liberties experts, the Director of National Intelligence, and the Secretary of
Defense.
CISA provides immunity from civil and criminal liability arising from monitoring activities or
voluntary disclosure of cyber threat information in compliance with CISA. However, this
immunity only applies if the disclosure is made (1) to a cybersecurity exchange, (2) by a provider
of cybersecurity services to a customer, (3) to a private entity or governmental entity that
provides or manages critical infrastructure, or (4) to any other private entity if the threat
information is also provided to a cybersecurity exchange within a reasonable amount of time.275
Immunity would also be provided if an entity acts in good faith reliance that such actions are
permitted by CISA.276 No liability protections would attach to conduct that knowingly and
willfully violates CISA.277 With respect to negligence based actions, CISA would bar civil or
criminal liability based on the reasonable failure to act on information received. No breach of
contract claims could be brought based on compliance with lawful restrictions placed on shared
information.278 However, none of these protections could be construed to limit liability for a
failure to comply with the requirements imposed on the use and protection of information.279
S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012
Title VII of the S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, contains virtually the same provisions as
S. 2102, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2012, discussed above. While Title VII of
S. 2105 authorizes the Secretary of Homeland Security to designate both Federal and non-Federal
entities as cybersecurity exchanges, with the goal of “efficiently receiv[ing] and distribut[ing]
cybersecurity threat indicators ... ,”280 Title III of the bill would also address this need by directing
the new National Center for Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC or Center) to create its
own information sharing program.281 Specifically, the NCCC would be charged with creating an
information sharing system that collects information from and redistributes information to federal
agencies, state and local governments, national information infrastructure, critical infrastructure,
and the private sector. Both federal agencies and critical infrastructure would have an affirmative
obligation to provide certain information to the Center’s information sharing program.282 Other
entities, including state and local governments and private sector actors, would be permitted to
participate voluntarily in the program.283
It may not be clear how these separate authorities would interact. For example, under Title VII,
DHS would be required to designate a lead cybersecurity exchange within 60 days of the
enactment of the act.284 Following this interim period, which can only last 60 days, it is unclear if

275 S. 2102, §7(a); S. 2105, §706(a).
276 S. 2102, §7(b); S. 2105, §706(b).
277 S. 2102, §7(f); S. 2105, §706(f).
278 S. 2102, §7(e); S. 2105, §706(e).
279 S. 2102, §7(g); S. 2105, §706(g).
280 S. 2105 §703(a)-(b).
281 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243).
282 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243(b)(1)(B), (c)(1)(B)).
283 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243(c)(1)(C)).
284 S. 2105 §703(c)(3)(A). Until this designation is finalized, the National Cybersecurity and Communications
Integration Center (NCCIC) would serve as the interim lead exchange. S. 2105 §703(c)(3)(B).
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the NCCC program will be designated as a cybersecurity exchange. If the NCCC program is
designated as an exchange, either the lead or an additional federal exchange,285 the restrictions
and protections outlined in Title VII would likely apply. Title VII creates specific limitations on
the use of information in the exchange by federal entities,286 non-federal entities,287 and the
exchange itself.288 Additionally, information shared in an exchange is explicitly exempted from
Freedom of Information Act requests289 and ex parte communications limitations.290 Title VII also
provides immunity from liability based on lawfully obtained cybersecurity information that is
voluntarily disclosed to an exchange.291 Finally, exchanges are bound by specific requirements
regarding with whom an exchange can share classified information, including restricting access to
people with “an appropriate security clearance.”292
However, if the NCCC program is not designated as an exchange, it arguably appears that Title
VII would not apply to the program at all. Title III includes far fewer restrictions on the use of the
information gathered by the Center’s program. Notably, Title III provides the Center much greater
discretion in disseminating classified information, only instructing the Director to create
procedures to ensure classified information is “appropriately shared between and among
appropriate Federal and non-Federal entities....”293 However, unlike Title VII exchanges, Title III
does not specifically restrict who can receive classified information from the NCCC information
sharing program. Furthermore, Title III does not provide protection from liability for entities that
provide information to the NCCC program, even though certain entities, like covered critical
infrastructure, are required to disclose incident-related information.294
S. 2151, the SECURE IT Act
S. 2151, the Strengthening and Enhancing Cybersecurity by Using Research, Education,
Information, and Technology Act of 2012 (SECURE IT Act), was introduced by Senator McCain
on March 1, 2012. Title I of the SECURE IT Act addresses the sharing of cybersecurity threat
information among the private sector and between the private sector and the public sector.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the SECURE IT Act would give private sector
entities the explicit authority to employ countermeasures and use cybersecurity systems to
identify, obtain, or otherwise possess cyber threat information for the purpose of preventing,
investigating, or otherwise mitigating threats to information security.295 This authority applies to
networks owned by an entity, or to other networks as authorized by the other networks’ owner.296

285 S. 2105 §703(d).
286 S. 2105 §704(g).
287 S. 2105 §704(c).
288 S. 2105 §704(b), (g).
289 See 5 U.S.C. §552.
290 S. 2105 §704(d)(1), (e).
291 S. 2105 §706(a)(2).
292 S. 2105 §705(a).
293 S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243(a)(2)).
294 See S. 2105 §301 (new HSA §243(c)(1)(B).
295 S. 2151, §102(a)(1).
296 Id.
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Entities would also be authorized to disclose cyber threat information to a cybersecurity center297
or to any other entity for the same purposes.298 Entities that provide information security products
or services, also known as information security providers, would also be permitted to obtain,
identify, possess, or disclose cyber threat information encountered in the course of providing such
services. However, customers must be given a reasonable opportunity to authorize or prevent any
disclosure, or to request anonymization of such information.299
Private entities would be permitted to share information directly with each other, but recipients of
cybersecurity threat information would be obligated to comply with restrictions (such as
anonymization) set forth by the entity providing the information.300 Shared information may not
be used to obtain an unfair competitive advantage. The act of sharing would not be considered a
violation of the antitrust laws if shared to assist with information security.301
Providers of electronic communication services, remote computing services, or cybersecurity
services to a federal agency or department would be required to provide any cyber threat
information related to the provision of such services that is in the provider’s possession.302 The
provider is also permitted to provide this threat information to a cybersecurity center,303 and the
notified federal department or agency is required to provide the threat information with a
cybersecurity center.304 A cybersecurity center would be required to share information with other
cybersecurity centers,305 and may disclose such information to other federal entities for
cybersecurity or national security purposes, or for the prevention, investigation, or prosecution of
any of the crimes that are eligible for an interception order under ECPA.306 Such information may
also be disclosed to a provider of electronic communication services, remote computing services,
or cybersecurity services, for purposes related to those services.307
The SECURE IT Act would place restrictions on how information shared with cybersecurity
centers could be disclosed or used.308 Except for the disclosures provided in the preceding
paragraph, information shared with a cybersecurity center could not be disclosed by the
cybersecurity center without the consent of the entity that provided the information.309

297 The bill defines the term cybersecurity center to mean the Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center, the
Intelligence Community Incident Response Center, the United States Cyber Command Joint Operations Center, the
National Cyber Investigative Joint Task Force, the National Security Agency/Central Security Service Threat
Operations Center, the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center, and any successor center. S.
2151, §101(5).
298 S. 2151, §102(a)(2).
299 S. 2151, §102(a)(3).
300 S. 2151, §§102(e)(1), (2).
301 S. 2151, §102(e)(3).
302 S. 2151, §102(b)(1).
303 Id.
304 S. 2151, §102(b)(2).
305 S. 2151, §102(d)(1)(B).
306 S. 2151, §102(c)(1)(A).
307 S. 2151, §102(c)(1)(B).
308 S. 2151, §102(c).
309 S. 2151, §102(c)(2) (requiring prior consent for disclosures to state, tribal, and local governments for criminal
prevention, investigation, or prosecution); S. 2151, §102(c)(3) (requiring prior consent for disclosures outside of the
federal government); S. 2151, §102(c)(7) (requiring prior consent for subsequent disclosures of information shared with
state, tribal, and local governments).
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Information shared with a cybersecurity center would also be exempt from disclosure under FOIA
and similar state or local laws requiring disclosure.310 Shared information would also not be
subject to any restrictions on ex parte communications.311 Federal, state, tribal, and local
governments would be prohibited from using or disclosing shared information for regulatory
purposes.312
In order to address concerns that private sector entities may have about liability, the SECURE IT
Act provides civil and criminal immunity for actions authorized under the bill.313 Additionally, no
cause of action would be permitted against an entity for using, receiving, or disclosing cyber
threat information, or for any act or omission following the lawful receipt of such information.314
Notwithstanding these provisions, no immunity would be provided for unlawful disclosures of
classified information.315
Preemption
As the body of federal cybersecurity law grows, the possibility that it will preempt conflicting
state law will increase with it. After September 11, 2001, states took various measures to protect
their critical infrastructure. This included defining “critical infrastructure,” creating security
standards for these entities, and carving out exceptions under public disclosure laws so vital
information would not get into the hands of bad actors.
It is well established that the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution can invalidate
any state law that interferes with or is contrary to federal law.316 This is known as preemption.
The preemptive effect of a federal statute can be either expressly stated in the statute or implied
by the structure and purpose of the legislation.317 If there is express language, the court will
interpret the words used by Congress and assume that the ordinary meaning of the text expresses
the legislative purpose.318 For example, if Congress uses broad language in its preemption
provision, the court will construe its preemptive effect broadly.319 Absent explicit preemptive
language, there are two types of implied preemption: (1) field preemption, where the federal
regime is “so pervasive to make the reasonable inference that Congress left no room for the States
to supplement it”;320 and (2) conflict preemption, where state law “stands as an obstacle to the
accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”321

310 S. 2151, §§102(c)(4), (5), (7).
311 S. 2151, §102(c)(6).
312 S. 2151, §102(c)(8). However, the procedures to implement the SECURE IT Act would not be considered
“regulatory” for the purposes of this limitation. Id.
313 S. 2151, §102(g)(1)(A).
314 S. 2151, §102(g)(1)(B).
315 S. 2151, §102(g)(2).
316 Hillsborough County v. Automated Med. Labs., Inc., 471 U.S. 707, 713 (1985).
317 Gade v. Nat’l Solid Wastes Mgmt. Ass’n, 505 U.S. 88, 98 (1992).
318 Morales v. TWA, 504 U.S. 374, 383 (1992).
319 Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, 471 U.S. 724, 739 (1985).
320 Fidelity Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. v. De le Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141, 152-53 (1982) (quoting Rice v. Sante Fe Elevator
Corp., 331 U.S. 218, 230 (1947)).
321 Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67 (1941).
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Because any preemption analysis relies on congressional intent, the language of the statute is of
primary importance. Many of the proposals provide explicit language preempting state laws. For
example, Title I of S. 2105, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, contains an express preemption
provision, stating: “This Act shall supersede any statute, provision of a statute, regulation, or rule
of a State or political subdivision of a State that expressly requires comparable cybersecurity
practices to protected covered critical infrastructure.”322 This section is followed by a savings
clause that states: “Except as expressly provided in subsection (a) and section 105(e), nothing in
this Act shall be construed to preempt the applicability of any other State law or requirement.”323
Because the scope of “covered critical infrastructure” has yet to be determined, it is impossible to
identify with specificity which state critical infrastructure laws would be preempted by this
provision of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012. However, certain categories of state laws may be
more likely to be preempted, such as those that directly regulate industrial facilities. For example,
New Jersey has enacted the Toxic Catastrophe Prevention Act which was designed to prevent the
release of hazardous substances from industrial plants and provide an abatement and evacuation
plan in the event a catastrophic release occurs.324 That act requires that an owner or operator of a
covered facility establish a risk management program. Likewise, Maryland requires that any
facility where hazardous materials are stored analyze the security of the facility every five years
in accordance with rules adopted by the Department of State Police.325 Similarly, New York
requires the commissioner of the state division of homeland security to review security measures
for all critical infrastructure relating to energy generation and transmission in the state every five
years.326 The state public service commission has the discretion whether to require the owners of
these facilities to implement these plans. The application of these and other similar state
requirements to covered critical infrastructure may be preempted if they are “comparable” to the
risk-based performance standards to be established by the Secretary of DHS under the
Cybersecurity Act of 2012.
It could also be argued that the broad language “comparable security practices,” coupled with a
savings clause that fails to carve out exceptions for state regulation of covered critical
infrastructure, evidences Congress’s intent to cover the whole field of protecting critical
infrastructures.327 Further, DHS may argue for a broad construction of this preemption provision
as it has argued in the past that “the law of preemption recognizes that state laws must give way
to Federal statutes and regulatory programs to ensure a unified and coherent national approach in
areas where the Federal interests prevail—such as national security.”328 Because cybersecurity has
been equated with national security, this deference theory could apply here.329

322 S. 2105, §111(a).
323 S. 2105, §111(b).
324 N.J. STAT. ANN. §13:1K-19.
325 MD. ENV. CODE §7-701.
326 N.Y. EXEC. LAW §713 (2011).
327 Cf. 15 U.S.C. §7707(b). In the Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act of 2003
(CAN-SPAM), P.L. 108-187, 117 Stat. 2699, Congress included a broad clause preempting all state laws from
regulating the use of electronic mail to send commercial messages, but also carved out an exception for any state statute
that prohibited “falsity or deception.” With no such exception in S. 2105, it may be inferred that Congress intended to
preempt the whole field of regulating critical infrastructures.
328 Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards, 71 Fed. Reg. 78,276, 78,293 (December 28, 2006).
329 See President Barack Obama, Remarks on Securing Our Nation’s Cyber Infrastructure (May 29. 2009) (“[I]t’s now
clear this cyber threat is one of the most serious economic and national security challenges we face as a nation.”),
(continued...)
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Cybersecurity legislation to encourage sharing of cybersecurity threat information may also
preempt state laws. For example, all fifty states have included electronic communications in their
respective wiretap laws which prohibit the interception and disclosure of certain
communications.330 However, S. 2102, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act contains an
explicit preemption clause with respect to information sharing. Section 8(b) reads:
This Act supersedes any law or requirement of a State or political subdivision of a State that
restricts or otherwise expressly regulates the provision of cybersecurity services or the
acquisition, interception, retention, use or disclosure of communications, records, or other
information by private entities to the extent such law contains requirements inconsistent with
this Act.331
The provisions of S. 2102, including this preemption clause, were also incorporated into Title VII
of S. 2105. Similarly, H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA),
contains a preemption clause providing that the bill would supersede “any statute of a State or
political subdivision of a State that restricts or otherwise expressly regulates an activity
authorized under subsection (b) [which authorizes private sector entities to use of cybersecurity
systems to identify, obtain, or share cyber threat information].”332 Likewise, H.R. 3674, the
PRECISE Act, authorizes similar conduct, “notwithstanding any other provision of law,”333 and
the SECURE IT Act provides that it supersedes any state law that restricts or otherwise expressly
regulates an activity authorized by the bill.334 All of these provisions would likely be read to
preempt the body of state wiretapping laws, to the extent that application of those laws would
prevent the sharing of cybersecurity information authorized under the proposed legislation.335
These bills could also preempt common law torts such as invasion of privacy or statutory
remedies such as California’s “Shine the Light” law, which regulates when and how a business
can share a customer’s personal information.336
State freedom of information laws are another category that would likely be preempted under
recent cybersecurity legislation being considered by Congress. Currently, states take a varied
approach to exempting security information from state FOIA requirements.337 Some states,
including Indiana338 and Alabama,339 provide for specific disclosure exemptions for certain

(...continued)
available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-securing-our-nations-cyber-infrastructure;
cf. Michael Jo, National Security Preemption: The Case of Chemical Safety Regulation, 85 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 2065, 2087
(2010).
330 NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF STATE LEGISLATURES, ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE LAW, http://www.ncsl.org/issues-
research/telecom/electronic-surveillance-laws.aspx.
331 S. 2102, §8(b). The use of “inconsistent” could be construed as “conflict” preemption language, intended only to
displace those laws that would impede DHS’s ability to create the information sharing programs.
332 H.R. 3523, §2(a).
333 H.R. 3674, §3 (new HSA §248(a)).
334 S. 2151, §102(f)(1).
335 NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF STATE LEGISLATURES, ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE LAW, http://www.ncsl.org/issues-
research/telecom/electronic-surveillance-laws.aspx.
336 CAL. CIV. CODE §1798.83.
337 See National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, Information Sharing Practices in Regulated Critical
Infrastructure States (2007), available at http://www.naruc.org/Publications/
NARUC%20CIP%20Information%20FIN.pdf.
338 IND. CODE §5-14-3-4.
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categories of information such as vulnerable assets or security plans. Others states, including
Maryland, simply provide that anything protected under the federal FOIA statute is protected
under their state statute.340 Still others have more broadly stated FOIA protections such as “in the
public interest,” as used in Arkansas.341 However, the PRECISE Act and the SECURE IT Act
explicitly provide that cybersecurity information shared with state and local governments shall
not be subject to any state or local law requiring disclosure of information or records.342 Both the
Cybersecurity Act of 2012 and CISA similarly provide that information shared with a
cybersecurity exchange designated under the bills would be exempt from FOIA “or any
comparable State law.”343

Author Contact Information

Edward C. Liu
Alissa M. Dolan
Legislative Attorney
Legislative Attorney
eliu@crs.loc.gov, 7-9166
adolan@crs.loc.gov, 7-8433
Gina Stevens
Richard M. Thompson II
Legislative Attorney
Legislative Attorney
gstevens@crs.loc.gov, 7-2581
rthompson@crs.loc.gov, 7-8449
Kathleen Ann Ruane

Legislative Attorney
kruane@crs.loc.gov, 7-9135


(...continued)
339 ALA. CODE §36-12-40.
340 MD. CODE ANN. STATE GOV’T §10-615(2).
341 ARK. CODE. ANN. §23-2-316.
342 H.R. 3674, §3; S. 2151, §102(f)(3).
343 S. 2102, §5(d); S. 2105, §704(d).
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