As we discussed in our recent podcast episode on cybersecurity and privacy legal strategy, keeping up with new laws in the space is like a game of whack-a-mole.
And the United States Chamber of Commerce is playing the game.
Its lobbying report for 2019 shows the organization spent more than $58 million lobbying in Washington D.C. during the year, and on dozens of occasions that meant lobbying for cybersecurity.
According to the federally mandated lobbying report, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce lobbied elected officials regarding more than a dozen pieces of cybersecurity-related legislation. Here is the list:
• H.R. 1731, Cybersecurity Disclosure Act of 2019
• H.R. 739, Cyber Diplomacy Act of 2019
• H.R. 1158, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020
• H.R. 1668/S. 734, IoT Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2019
• H.R. 1731/S. 592, Cybersecurity Disclosure Act of 2019
• H.R. 2500/S. 1790, National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
• H.R. 2968/S. 2474, Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2020, including provisions relating to operational cybersecurity
• H.R. 3256, Protecting and Securing Chemical Facilities from Terrorist Attacks Act of 2019
• H.R. 3270, Active Cyber Defense Certainty Act
• H.R. 3320, Securing the Homeland Security Supply Chain Act of 2019
• H.R. 3710, Cybersecurity Vulnerability Remediation Act
• H.R. 3719, CTPAT Reauthorization Act of 2019
• H.R. 4998, Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Act of 2019
• S. 602, Cyber Deterrence and Response Act of 2019
• S. 893, Secure 5G and Beyond Act of 2019
• S. 1625, United States 5G Leadership Act of 2019
• S. 2664, Cyber Shield Act of 2019
• S. 2775, Harvesting American Cybersecurity Knowledge Through Education (HACKED) Act of 2019
• S. 3045, Cybersecurity Vulnerability Identification and Notification Act of 2019
• Draft legislation titled Cyber SAFETY Act
• Draft legislation titled SECURE Small Business Act
• Draft legislation titled Cyber Collaborative operations Act
U.S. Chamber of Commerce lobbyists were also extremely busy running around Washington D.C. talking to government agencies working on cyber-related policies and committee appointments.
The Chamber's disclosure form lists the following:
This one, the BIS Entity List, relates to Huawei and affiliated companies. Listen to our podcast interview with Any Purdy, Chief Information Security Officer of Huawei USA: "Can You Trust Huawei?"
[RELATED: U.S. Chamber of Commerce 2019 Lobbying Disclosure Form]
As much movement as there is at the national level, there is an even greater legal evolution taking place at the state level when it comes to cybersecurity and privacy legislation.
If your organization is unsure how to approach this, or worse, is burying its head in the sand, listen to our podcast interview with cyber attorney Jordan Fischer.
It is a surprisingly optimistic look at where and how organizations can strategically approach so many moving targets.