Searching suspects: Data Google holds on its users is increasingly being
requested by - and given to - law enforcement and government agencies.
Tom Simonite
U.S. government and law enforcement agencies are increasingly asking
Google to hand over data on its customers to help with investigations.
The
search and ads company today released figures revealing that it was
asked to hand over user data 7,969 times by US agencies in the first six
months of 2012 - an increase of 26 percent over the previous six
months. That continues a long established trend in the figures released
in Google's twice-yearly transparency report
and charted above. The 7,969 requests asked for data from a total of
16,281 user accounts, and ninety percent of the requests were complied
with.
Google is unusual amongst Web companies in that it shares
information about the number of such requests it receives. Social
network Facebook is likely subject to a similarly high volume, for
example, but does not disclose any information on their number or
origin. Google started reporting the number of requests for its data in
2009, and the number of affected accounts in 2011. Since January 2011,
U.S. authorities have requested data pertaining to a total of 39,581
accounts.
Law enforcement and government agencies see Google and
other companies as valuable sources of data that can help with criminal
and intelligence investigations, such as the one that led to the
resignation of CIA director David Petraeus last week. Knowing what a
person searched for, who they emailed, and which IP address they logged
in from can provide evidence of a person's motivations, movements and
much more.
Some privacy activists say that the ease with which
U.S. authorities can extract information on users from Google and other
companies suggests changes in the law, and company policies are needed
to protect innocent users against the risk of unnecessary surveillance.
Data can only be handed over by a company if it exists, and some
campaigners think companies such as Google should reduce how long they
retain some information. For example, Google currently stores search query details for 9 months
before anonymizing them, a period some argue is too long. The main
target of legal campaigning about data access is against the 1986
Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which allows government and law
enforcement to obtain data from Internet companies without a warrant if
it is at least 6 months old.
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But worldwide:
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But worldwide:
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