The disclosure and use provisions of the CCSPA only include protections for confidential information right now. That's partially because, again, the act was constructed in such a way that it only contemplated the collection of technical information, information related to commercial interests, and that type of thing.
Similar to what I explained earlier, the way the law is set up is that because it only intends to collect that type of information, it defers responsibility for, say, personal information to existing statutes—for example, the charter and the Privacy Act and the requirements therein. Then, as well, for any of the statutory requirements that may be found in the acts of the agencies that are involved in the administration of the act, there are many safeguards built in there.
One of the challenges here is that it introduces two new concepts to part 2: the de-identified information and the personal information that the government would need to consider when disclosing this. Taken together, the consequences of accepting this amendment could be that information regarding the protection of critical cyber-systems is not shared because it does apparently raise the statutory requirement to share that information.