Government data requests to Google continue to rise

Governments continue to ask Google for more data about its users, with more than two-thirds of requests in the U.S. made through a subpoena, which usually doesn?t require asking a judge for a search warrant.

User data requests of all kinds have increased by more than 70 percent since 2009, Google said in its biannual ?transparency report? that tallies government requests for users? data. For the six months from July through December 2012, the company said it has received about 21,389 information requests for some 33,634 users?up slightly from 20,938 requests for 34,615 users during the first half of the year.

For the first time, Google disclosed the types of legal process that government entities used to acquire the data. Sixty-eight percent of the 8,438 data requests in the U.S. were done through subpoenas. These types of requests were for user-identifying information issued under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and subpoena requests are the easiest to get because they typically don?t require a judge?s review, Google said.

Google?s latest transparency report reveals which legal processes the US government used to place its information requests. Most were by subpoena, which doesn't require approval from a judge. (Click to enlarge.)

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