Google reveals that the FBI requests data on thousands of its customers every year

Mar 6, 2013 - 08:21
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Google reveals that the FBI requests data on thousands of its customers every year
Big brother: The FBI made requests for data on as many as 2,000 Google accounts last year, the Internet giant said Tuesday

The FBI made requests for data on as many as 2,000 Google accounts last year, the Inteet giant said Tuesday.

The requests were made using a controversial technique known as a 'national security letter' that allows the govement to seek financial, phone and Inteet data without a warrant. 

Google is the first Inteet company to reveal the federal govement's use of national security letters to secretly retrieve data on people.

 

Google said it received between zero and 999 letters in 2012 that sought information on between 1,000 and 1,9999 users or accounts. The FBI has been requesting information from the company on its users since at least 2009. The year with the highest number of requests was 2010, when the govement asked for data on at least 2,999 customers.

'You'll notice that we're reporting numerical ranges rather than exact numbers,'  Richard Salgado, a legal director for Google, wrote in a blog post. 'This is to address conces raised by the FBI, Justice Department and other agencies that releasing exact numbers might reveal information about investigations.'

 

 

When the FBI requests information on a specific users, Google said it will notify the users only 'when appropriate, unless prohibited by law or court order.'

'When we receive a request for user information, we review it carefully and only provide information within the scope and authority of the request,' the company said. 'We may refuse to produce information or try to narrow the request in some cases.'

 
\"Requirement:

Requirement: By law, the FBI can seek the name, address, length of service and local and long distance billing records of a subscriber to a wire or electronic communications service

By law, the FBI can seek the name, address, length of service and local and long distance billing records of a subscriber to a wire or electronic communications service. 

'The FBI can't use NSLs to obtain anything else from Google, such as Gmail content, search queries, YouTube videos or user IP addresses,' Google said. 

All Inteet companies - not just Google - can get NSLs from the federal govement.

Facebook told the Wall Street Joual last year that it interprets the law as applied to Facebook 'to require the production of only two categories of information: name and length of service.'

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Mike Gallagher Mike Gallagher is a Georgia-based freelance journalist covering local news, community developments, and regional issues that matter most to residents across the state. Writing for Georgianewsday.com since 2016, Mike has built a reputation for clear, balanced reporting and a strong connection to the communities he serves. His work spans city council decisions, school board updates, small business features, public safety reports, and statewide policy changes. In addition to local coverage, Mike occasionally reports on state politics and national headlines, offering readers context on how broader decisions impact Georgia communities. Known for his steady, fact-driven approach, Mike prioritizes accuracy, fairness, and accessibility in every story. Whether covering a town hall meeting or breaking political developments, he aims to inform readers with clarity and integrity. Outside the newsroom, Mike remains actively engaged in Georgia’s civic landscape, always seeking the next story that shapes the state’s future.