As more details emerge about how the
government spies on online data, technology companies are escalating their
efforts to publicly disclose information about government data requests.
On
Monday, Yahoo and Facebook each filed suit in the secret
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to ask the government for permission to
reveal information about the number and types of national security requests for
user data that the companies receive. Meanwhile, Google and Microsoft, which
filed suit in June to ask for this permission, amended their petitions Monday
to compel the government to publish even more detail about the requests.
The legal moves are partly a public relations
effort, as new
reports have revealed the extent of the cooperation between Technology products and the government. The companies hope to show that government requests
affect just a small percentage of their users, and to bring transparency to a
very secretive process. When reports about a program called Prism and the
government’s other spying efforts first came out, tech companies had limited
ability to respond because they are not allowed to talk about even the
existence of a national security request.
“To appropriately and effectively respond
to these inaccurate news reports and the related public concerns, Facebook
seeks to be as transparent as possible regarding its receipt of orders,”
Facebook’s motion said.
Two weeks ago, the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence said it would release more data about
national security requests, a move the companies said did not go far enough.
“We believe that the U.S. government’s
important responsibility to protect public safety can be carried out without
precluding Internet companies from sharing the number of national security
requests they may receive,” Ron Bell, Yahoo’s general counsel, wrote in
a company blog post. “Ultimately, withholding such information breeds
mistrust and suspicion — both of the United States and of companies that must
comply with government legal directives.”
Still, while releasing detailed numbers of
national security requests would shed some light on the topic, it would be only
a small data point about the government’s broad spying. And despite their
public efforts to push back, privately the companies are still compelled by law
to cooperate with the government on many such data requests.
Also Monday was the first meeting of a
group President Obama formed in August to discuss technology surveillance, the
Review Group on Intelligence and Communications tech news. Representatives of
Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo and other companies attended, in addition to
experts on intelligence and privacy.
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