Facebook received 9,000-10,000 requests for user data from US government entities in the second half of 2012. |
Leaks
by a former computer technician suggest the US electronic surveillance
programme is far larger than was known.Internet
companies - including Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Apple and Microsoft - were
reported last week to have granted the National Security Agency (NSA)
"direct access" to their servers under a data collection programme
called Prism.
The
firms denied the accusations, saying they gave no such access but did comply
with lawful requests.Several
also called on the government to grant them permission to release data about
the number of classified orders they received.
Facebook, which recently opened a massive data centre in Sweden, said it had "aggressively" protected its user data from the US government |
In
an effort to reassure its users, Facebook lawyer Ted Ullyot wrote on the company's blog that following
discussions with the relevant authorities it could for the first time report
all US national security-related requests for data.
"As
of today, the government will only authorise us to communicate about these
numbers in aggregate, and as a range," he said.
For
the six months ending 31 December 2012, the total number of user-data requests
Facebook received was between 9,000 and 10,000, relating to between 18,000 and
19,000 accounts.
"These
requests run the gamut - from things like a local sheriff trying to find a
missing child, to a federal marshal tracking a fugitive, to a police department
investigating an assault, to a national security official investigating a
terrorist threat," Mr Ullyot said.
"With
more than 1.1 billion monthly active users worldwide, this means that a tiny
fraction of 1% of our user accounts were the subject of any kind of US state,
local, or federal US government request."
Mr
Ullyot did not indicate to what extent the company had fulfilled the requests,
but said Facebook had "aggressively" protected its users' data.
"We
frequently reject such requests outright, or require the government to
substantially scale down its requests, or simply give the government much less
data than it has requested," he said.
Later,
Microsoft also published information about the volume of national security
orders during the second half of 2012, stressing that they had an impact on
only "a tiny fraction of Microsoft's global customer base".
While
praising the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation for
permitting the disclosures, Microsoft Vice-President John Frank called on them
to "take further steps".
"With
more time, we hope they will take further steps. Transparency alone may not be
enough to restore public confidence, but it's a great place to start," he wrote in a statement.
Earlier
this month, Edward Snowden, a former employee of defence contractor Booz Allen
Hamilton and former CIA technical assistant, leaked details of the Prism
programme.
The
29-year-old fled the US to Hong Kong shortly before the Guardian and Washington
Post newspapers published his revelations.
His
whereabouts are unknown, and he has vowed to fight extradition to the US should
the authorities attempt to prosecute him.
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