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A project of Common Dreams

For Immediate Release
Contact:

Holmes Wilson, 614-465-6371,  press@fightforthefuture.org

BREAKING: Twitter Comes Out Against CISA, Joining Huge Coalition of Tech Companies Opposing the Flawed Cybersecurity Bill

Twitter is the latest major tech company to join the rising wave of opposition to CISA, a deeply controversial cybersecurity bill that could hit the Senate floor as early as today.

The company, which has 316 million active users worldwide, tweeted it's opposition to CISA from it's official policy account early this morning, saying: "Security + privacy are both priorities for us and therefor we can't support #CISA as written. We hope to see positive changes going forward."

WASHINGTON

Twitter is the latest major tech company to join the rising wave of opposition to CISA, a deeply controversial cybersecurity bill that could hit the Senate floor as early as today.

The company, which has 316 million active users worldwide, tweeted it's opposition to CISA from it's official policy account early this morning, saying: "Security + privacy are both priorities for us and therefor we can't support #CISA as written. We hope to see positive changes going forward."

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Twitter is joining a growing chorus of major technology companies that have recently come out strongly against the latest version of CISA, echoing concerns from security experts and privacy advocates that CISA would fail to prevent cyber attacks while dramatically expanding government surveillance and undermining user privacy.

Over the weekend Yelp, reddit, and Wikipedia weighed in against CISA. Last week, CCIA, an industry association representing tech giants Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Amazon, Sprint, and others, also issued a statement slamming the bill. Mozilla, imgur, Wordpress, Craigslist, Namecheap, and hundreds of other companies have opposed CISA and similar information sharing legislation in the past.

Last month, the Business Software Alliance, which represents Apple, Microsoft, and other major tech companies, clarified that it does not support any of the three information sharing bills before Congress after Fight for the Future ran a public campaign called YouBetrayedUs that spurred a flurry of angry emails from consumers targeting companies that signed a BSA letter that appeared to support CISA.

CISA's sponsors have repeatedly claimed that the bill will see the senate floor this week, but given this latest revolt from the tech industry, many watching the bill are skeptical of it moving quickly anytime soon.

Fight for the Future is a group of artists, engineers, activists, and technologists who have been behind the largest online protests in human history, channeling Internet outrage into political power to win public interest victories previously thought to be impossible. We fight for a future where technology liberates -- not oppresses -- us.

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