Jeb Bush is the ultimate
anti-internet candidate
The Republican hopeful
positioned himself as pro-data collection and anti-encryption in a race where
privacy and net neutrality have never mattered more
Saturday
26 September 2015 06.45 EDT Last modified on Saturday 26 September
201509.48 EDT from theguardian.com
Do you want to live in a country where Internet Service
Providers can slow down and censor your internet traffic at will, where the NSA
has vastly more power than it does today and where end-to-end encryption may be illegal?
Then Jeb Bush is the Republican presidential contender for you: he has
positioned himself as the anti-internet candidate in an election where internet
rights have never mattered more.
A lot of the White House candidates have made worrying
comments about the future of surveillance and the internet – from Chris
Christie’s bizarre vow to track10 million people like FedEx packages, to
Hillary Clinton’s waffling on encryption backdoors – but
Jeb Bush’s deliberate campaign to roll back internet rights is the perfect
storm of awful.
The idea that ISPs shouldn’t be able to censor internet or
slow down traffic at the behest of paying corporations seems like something
everyone can agree on, right?
As Gizmodo’s Kate Knibbs put it, however, “Instead of
viewing the FCC’s net neutrality rule as a safeguard for consumers,
Bush is framing it a way to sandbag ISPs out of their rightful profit margins,
with no upside for people using their services.” Jeb Bush is apparently happy
to side with Comcast and Time Warner, two of the most hated conglomerates in
America, rather than the tens of millions of people who just want watch Netflix
every night without their internet slowing down or having to pay more.
Perhaps worst of all, Jeb Bush has ignorantly criticized the
welcome trend of tech companies like Apple implementing end-to-end encryption
in their devices to protect its millions of users from criminals and government
spying. Seemingly channeling his brother George W at an event in August, Jeb said, “If you create encryption, it makes
it harder for the American government to do its job - while protecting civil
liberties - to make sure that evildoers aren’t in our midst.”
Bush apparently doesn’t understand that encryption helps law enforcement more than it hurts,
and is vital to billions of internet users all over the globe whether we’re
talking about the economy or human rights.
Most importantly, though, strong encryption is a bulwark
against cyber attacks, which Bush claims is a “vital” issue. In his lukewarm cybersecurity plan, which really just calls for
more power for a variety of government agencies to spy on us all, he does not
mention the word “encryption” once.
Too often internet and privacy rights get relegated to the
end of the table when election season rolls around. But the issues have never
been more mainstream – NSA reform and net neutrality rules, unthinkable eight
years ago, are all of a sudden inevitable. And the idea that Jeb
Bush wants to take those rights away and saddle the internet
with yet more corporate control and government surveillance is disturbing, to
say the least.
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