House funding extension tacks on two-month reprieve for key cybersecurity laws
Briefly

House funding extension tacks on two-month reprieve for key cybersecurity laws
"House appropriators unveiled a temporary funding plan on Tuesday that would keep two cornerstone cybersecurity laws alive through Nov. 21. The continuing resolution delays the Sept. 30 sunset of the 2015 Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act and the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program. The former has been deemed a bedrock law that allows companies to share cyber threat intelligence with the government with liability protections in place."
"The brief extension buys Congress time to reconcile differences between House and Senate approaches to longer-term renewals. Many industry representatives had hoped for a clean, ten-year extension of the 2015 law, though this appears to be unlikely in the near term. Earlier this month, House Homeland Security advanced ten-year extensions of both measures, but the Senate panel will debate its own bill Thursday, according to a planning memo."
""We'll take whatever the Congress decides to authorize us, wherever they see fit within their purview, to authorize and to give us our authorities to be able to use," Nick Andersen, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency's executive assistant director for cybersecurity, told reporters last week at the Billington Cyber Summit."
A short continuing resolution delays the Sept. 30 expiration of the 2015 Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act and the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program until Nov. 21. The 2015 CISA grants liability protections that enable private companies to share cyber threat intelligence with the government. The brief extension gives Congress time to reconcile competing House and Senate renewal proposals after industry calls for a clean, ten-year reauthorization proved unlikely. The House advanced ten-year renewals while the Senate panel plans its own, potentially shorter, bill that may scale back liability protections. Political disagreement and presidential pressure complicate a longer-term agreement.
Read at Nextgov.com
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