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Security forces more keen on personal data

Reviewing the numbers from Google, Apple, Facebook, and Microsoft paints a not-so-pretty picture.

Law enforcement doesn’t have much trouble getting access to data from social media companies. In fact, over the first half of last year, authorities in the US made close to 118,000 requests for user information from tech companies—a number that’s more than twice the number of requests thrown at these companies since 2015. And those numbers are only continuing to skyrocket.

That’s according to numbers from Facebook, Google, Apple, and Microsoft that were first compiled by the Associated Press and confirmed by Gizmodo. All told, the four companies reported a collective 117,934 requests from U.S. law enforcement between January and June 2020, the most recent numbers available for tracking these kinds of requests. Collectively, the companies complied with 85% of requests, AP reports.

What becomes apparent if you look at these numbers over time is that these requests are piling up at an unprecedented rate; in the first half of 2015, these same four companies reported a collective 41,285 requests for user data, which is just slightly more than a third of the amount reported during the same period last year.

The exact form of data being requested can differ from request to request and from company to company. Facebook, for example, fielded the largest number of requests from U.S. authorities during the first six months of 2020: 61,528 total for both Instagram and Facebook user data, according to the company’s own numbers. Of these tens of thousands of requests, the vast majority are for what’s known as ‘legal process requests,’ which can include data like the name or address someone used to sign up for a Facebook account. While police can obtain Facebook and Instagram users’ IP addresses and message headers without a warrant, other data dug up through these requests, like photos or messages, require a search warrant, according to Facebook’s guidelines for law enforcement.

 

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