The search giant is getting swamped by warrantless requests for users' information."It may be easier than you think for government entities to demand the private data you've stored on Google's servers," says Andy Greenberg at Forbes. In its latest biannual Transparency Report, Google has announced yet another rise in the number of government and law enforcement requests for data on users — anything from web surfing habits to identifying who owns an email account to the content of emails — and for the first time broke down the U.S. requests by how the authorities asked for the information. In the vast majority of cases, officials didn't bother with a search warrant — the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) allows authorities to just issue subpoenas for data that's at least six months old.
The king of search complies with about 90 percent of U.S. government snooping requests, "but Google's willingness to reveal this data in the first place should be seen as a credit to the company's respect for privacy," says Greenberg, and one not shared by its peers — Microsoft and Facebook — or wireless carriers. The government authorities asking to peer into your electronic life don't inspire much confidence, either, says Matt Sledge at The Huffington Post. At a tech panel devoted to investigating how the government obtained the emails exposing former Gen. David Petraeus' career-ending extramarital affair, Google legal director Richard Salgado dropped this "depressing and revealing factoid about how law enforcement is actually using its subpoena and warrant powers to get information" about you: "I can't tell you how many requests we get for Facebook."
Here's a numerical look at how often U.S. and foreign governments try to tap into the e-lives of Google users, and how often they succeed.
21,389 = Government requests for data worldwide from July to December 2012
33,634 = User accounts targeted in those searches
66 = Percent of those requests that resulted in Google handing over at least some data
20,938 = Government requests for data from January to June 2012
70 = Percentage rise in number of requests for data since 2009
8,438 = Requests from U.S. government authorities and investigators from July to December 2012
68 = Percent of those requests that came through subpoenas instead of court-issued warrants
88 = Percent of those requests Google complied with
22 = Percent of requests that were through search warrants, usually approved by judges under the ECPA
88 = Percent of those requests Google complied with
10 = Percent of requests from "court orders issued under ECPA by judges or other processes that are difficult to categorize"
90 = Percent of those requests Google complied with
2,431 = Data requests from India
66 = Percentage of those requests Google complied with
1,693 = Data requests from France
44 = Percentage of those requests Google complied with
1,458 = Data requests from the UK
70 = Percentage of those requests Google complied with
97 = Data requests from Russia
1 = Percentage of those requests Google complied with
149 = Data requests from Turkey
0 = Percentage of those requests Google complied with
- As seen in The Week
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