In the opening pages of his 1998 thriller, Net Force, author Tom Clancy aptly describes a small communications device that would be recognized today in either the world of business or government as a smart phone.
Clancy's novel envisions a new type of terrorism where the country's computer systems are taken over, leading to famine, mayhem and other destruction. His protagonist is the chief of a newly formed agency meant to guard and fight against such attacks.
Clancy's novel, published 12 years ago was, at the time, set in a futuristic 2010.
Of course, fiction, science fiction and comic strip writers, have always had a penchant for predicting the swoop of advancing technology.
It was Dick Tracy, after all, who wowed readers with his two-way wrist radio in 1946. His force of crime-fighters had hi-tech networked communications.
But Tracy's creator could little imagine the roll computers would one-day play in the world of communications and control. It would, after all, be another three decades before Al Gore would invent the Internet.
Speed forward to August of 2010 and Maine's U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, a key player on the Senate's Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, is promoting a bill that would create an agency and, presumably, a director as Clancy envisioned.
The director of the Office of Cyberspace Police, according to the legislation, would oversee all related federal cyberspace activities and harmonize government efforts to secure cyberspace.
The new director would be a cabinet-level, Senate-approved position and be responsible for all elements of cyberspace policy, including military, law enforcement, intelligence and diplomacy. Also, a host of non-government entities in business and industry that provide key infrastructure to the country — think power and water companies for starters.
Collins and co-authors Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., and Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., have been touting the legislation since June and made a renewed push for it earlier this month.
“As our national and global economies become ever more intertwined, cyber terrorists have greater potential to attack high-value targets," Collins said during a press conference on the legislation.
"From anywhere in the world, they could disrupt telecommunications systems, shut down electric power grids, and freeze financial markets," she said. "With sufficient know-how, they could cause billions of dollars in damage and put thousands of lives in jeopardy."
So far, according to Collins, the U.S. effort at cyber security has been "disjointed and uncoordinated."
In other words the virtual left hand doesn't know what the virtual right hand is doing when it comes to keeping our key computer systems secure.
“The Internet may have started out as a communications oddity some 40 years ago, but it is now a necessity of modern life and, sadly, one that is under constant attack,” Lieberman said in June. “It must be secured."
We support this legislation and hope Collins is successful in her efforts to see it become federal law. Without it, we fear the fiction envisioned by writers like Clancy and others could too easily become reality.
editorialboard@sunjournal.com

The point is
that there already is a cyberspace anti whatever team in almost every law enforcement bureau in the Federal Government. Hell, most states have something of the sort. Instead of creating a huge new bureaucracy to cover something already being done, why not choose the best from all the agencies to head up a centralized controlling agency, with the rest of the feds falling under them. You would still have FBI, NSA, etc cybercrimes division, but now reporting to a central organization. No new hires, no new office buildings, no thousands of new government employees. Just a thought.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Al Bore did not invent the
Al Bore did not invent the internet. He did perhaps have sex with Bubba & Monica, (on seperate occasions) and clearly got a jolt in Auburn when he grabbed the power line. That is the extent of his success.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.LMAO
LMAO
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Leave poor Al Gore alone
Yes Al didn't invent the internet.
However, he was the key person in congress for it. His "High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991" really put the pieces in place so the internet could develop, and key pieces, like the internet browser, were develop with funding from the bill..
So he didn't father it, but he was in the delivery room.
Oh, and who comes up with these stupid names for Gov agencies? First it was the Department of Homeland Defense, now "Office of Cyberspace Police"
Cyberspace Police? COME ON!
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... perhaps "DIVISION 1984---------(hint- the movie 1984, about total gov control through media and
destroying print that taught people )
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.It's a book, probably made into a cartoon for you, it was
written by Eric Arthur Blair. Go to the library and pick it up.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.a movie also
....i've read it in school mor-tron
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Mor-tron!!!
Now that's funny! Found a new nickname for our resident meanie!!
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.You attended school?
Doesn't show!
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.This discussion is double
This discussion is double plus un-good
And if you really want to 1984 it up, Clearly the Ministry of Information(MiniInf) would be the name.
That would be double plus good.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Office of Cyberspace
A typical GOP response create another agency!
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.You should have to prove this statement...
"It would, after all, be another three decades before Al Gore would invent the Internet."
Or everything else you say is suspect. Prove it or retract it, my challenge to the editorial board of SUN JOURNAL, you have freedom of the press but lies are lies. Snopes says it is a lie.
Gore and the Internet
Al Gore did not say he invented the internet. On 9 March 1999, during an interview with Wolf Blitzer of CNN, Gore was asked what were the differences between himself from his opponent in the race for the nomination for President in 2000. His answer was misphrased and while it might sound like he was taking credit for the internet, he was indicating that he supported economic conditions in the US that would allow such new developments as the internet to take place in American society. This site will have the complete information. www.snopes.com/quotes/internet.asp
"But he DID NOT say he "created the internet". He said he "took the initiative in creating the internet"
That statement is actually true. That U.S Military project referenced above was called ARPANET. The US military portion of ARPANET was split off in 1983 to form MILNET.
In 1988 Al Gore sponsored the National High Performance Computer Act which created a national computing plan and began connecting other Universities and Libraries to the existing ARPANET network.
Then, Al Gore began to craft the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991 (commonly referred to as "The Gore Bill") after hearing the 1988 report toward a National Research Network submitted to Congress by a group chaired by UCLA professor of computer science, Leonard Kleinrock, one of the central creators of the ARPANET (the ARPANET, first deployed by Kleinrock and others in 1969, is the predecessor of the Internet). The bill was passed on December 9, 1991 and led to the National Information Infrastructure (NII) which Gore referred to as the "information superhighway."
SO, while quite amusing to see ignorant people who know nothing about the history of the Internet perpetuate the lie that Al Gore had nothing to do with it. Al Gore did in fact take the initiative in creating the the internet.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Did_Al_Gore_really_say_he_invented_the_internet
He is actually owed quite a bit of thanks and credit for there being an internet today."
So SJ I challenge you to show me where he said it I will wait for your answer, which I am sure will come straight from FOXSNOOZE. Prove me wrong.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Yeah, and "Love Story" was
Yeah, and "Love Story" was about him and Tipper, too, right?
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.It was sarcasm ...
It was sarcasm ...
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.A Joke, Maybe?
Do you think that the SJ editors might have just decided to slip in a little levity? The bottom line is that Gore has entered urban mythology and will probably be the butt of jokes for quite some time. The media, as usual, got it totally wrong. It was really sliced bread he invented.
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.That's fine but they are writing in support of a piece of...
legislation so how can we interpret the "our view" from the SJ if it is indeed necessary legislation then their lead up to their support should not be questionable. Levity is fine but facts are what fox news misses and I really don't like seeing the sleaze that fox uses work it's way in to local print media. Most thinking people know fox is a joke, but somehow I expect more from our local newspaper. It is called freedom of press not freedom to lie. If I wanted that I would read "supermarket tabloids" like the New York Post (coincidentally owned by Rupert Murdoch of foxsnooze) or the National Enquirer. Sad what is happening now you can't trust anyone to tell you the facts anymore.
Elvis is alive and has left the building.
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but ot was sarcasm. I know that feeble, still forming brains have a tough time understanding nuances such as sarcasm, but let it go. The more you type, the further that foot slips, and we wouldn't want you to choke. (that was sarcasm also, sometimes you can practically smell it).
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