One moment, please <a href=" http://profisrael.com.br/tag/estudantes/ ">pristiq 0800</a> This often happened under the benign rubric of protecting Americaรขยยs รขยยinfrastructure,รขยย and in a post-9/11 atmosphere of patriotic cooperation. In November 2002, as part of the creation of the Homeland Security Department, Congress passed legislation to รขยยpromote the voluntary sharing of cybersecurity information between the private sector and government,รขยย as Bruce Heiman, then the head of Americans for Computer Privacy, described it at the time in a letter. Another letter sent to every senator on July 22, 2002, by these same industry groups described how much help the government needed. รขยยNearly 90 percent of the nationรขยยs critical infrastructureรขยยphysical and computer networks for production and delivery of energy, food, water, telecommunications, financial services, health care, chemicals, and other raw materials, essential products and servicesรขยยare owned and controlled by the private sector,รขยย the letter said. รขยยThe new Department of Homeland Security and other agencies obviously need to know more about these facilities in order to evaluate threats and vulnerabilities, and take necessary actions. Thousands of companies want to help in this effort by sharing critical infrastructure threat and vulnerability information with the government.รขยย
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