1934年通信法案是否包含隐藏的互联网终止开关

D. Opderbeck
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引用次数: 3

摘要

关于网络安全政策争论的一个关键领域是,在发生网络紧急情况或网络战争时,总统是否应该有权关闭全部或部分互联网。例如,2009年提出的《网络安全法案》(Cybersecurity Act of 2009)就包含了被批评者嘲笑为互联网“死亡开关”的内容。目前的全面网络安全改革法案《2012年网络安全法案》(cybersecurity Act of 2012)选择了一种软的公私应急计划模式,而不是“终止开关”。但是,“死亡开关”可能仍然存在。该法案的支持者认为,1934年《通信法案》第606条已经赋予了美国总统在紧急情况或战争时期管理互联网的全部权力。如果这种说法是正确的,那么对于那些主张扩大FCC对互联网管辖权的网络中立倡导者来说,这应该是特别令人不安的,因为第606条规定的行政权力与FCC对通信政策的权力是联系在一起的。本文评估了第606条的语言、历史和应用,并认为,网络安全改革应包括明确的行政紧急权力,并具有明确和适当的限制,而不是隐含地依赖于互联网诞生之前很久制定的法规的模糊和过时的条款。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does the Communications Act of 1934 Contain a Hidden Internet Kill Switch
A key area of debate over cybersecurity policy concerns whether the President should have authority to shut down all or part of the Internet in the event of a cyber-emergency or cyber-war. The proposed Cybersecurity Act of 2009, for example, contained what critics derided as an Internet “kill switch.” The current iteration of a comprehensive cybersecurity reform bill, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, opts for a soft public-private contingency plan model instead of a kill switch. But the kill switch may yet live. Sponsors of the present legislation have argued that Section 606 of the Communications Act of 1934 already gives the U.S. President plenary powers over the Internet in times of emergency or war. If this claim is correct, it should be particularly troubling to network neutrality advocates who have argued for expansive FCC jurisdiction over the Internet, since the Executive powers under Section 606 are tied to the FCC’s authority over communications policy. This paper evaluates the language, history, and application of Section 606, and argues that, instead of implicitly relying on the vague and antiquated provisions of a statute crafted long before the Internet was born, cybersecurity reform should include explicit executive emergency powers with clear and appropriate limitations.
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