-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1099/100699b2.htm
 <A HREF="http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1099/100699b2.htm">White House
finds funding for security network</A>
-----
October 6, 1999
DAILY BRIEFING

White House finds funding for security network

By Bara Vaida, National Journal's Technology Daily
The House Appropriations Committee may have eliminated funding for the
Clinton Administration's proposed federal intrusion detection surveillance
system (FIDNet), but the White House found another vehicle for funding
through a $611 million mid-year fiscal 2000 budget amendment.
On Sept. 21, the White House's Office of Management and Budget sent up the
proposed request to Congress, including $39 million for enhancing computer
security and critical infrastructure protection within several agencies. The
president requested $8.4 million for FIDNet to be run by the General Services
Administration.
"The proposal would, through the use of additional staff and enhanced
technology, improve federal agencies' ability to detect computer attacks and
unauthorized instructions, share attack warnings and related information
across agencies and respond to attacks," according to the written proposal.
In July, the White House revealed its plan to create FIDNet, which is aimed
at centralizing computer intrusion detection. It immediately was criticized
by privacy and civil liberties groups and some members of Congress who were
concerned that the system would result in federal surveillance of all
computer networks. In September, House appropriators denied funding
designated for FIDNet in the Commerce, State and Justice appropriations bill
in August.
Administration officials have said that FIDNet would monitor only federal
networks, though an early draft of the plan envisioned that eventually
private networks would also be overseen, said Richard Diamond, spokesman for
House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas.
Jon Jennings, acting assistant attorney general for legislative affairs at
the Justice Department, told Armey in a Sept. 22 letter that the media had
"mischaracterized" the FIDNet proposal, but Armey's concerns have not been
assuaged.
"They have made some steps backward to address the concerns we raised over
the program, but we aren't satisfied quite yet that they are taking privacy
concerns fully… We want them to say in absolute terms that (FIDNet) will not
be used in anyway to cover private networks," Diamond said.
Armey has given the administration a deadline of Oct. 15 to respond fully to
his concerns, Diamond said.
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