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Friday, 21 June 2013 05:08 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
to increase its transparency with users and the public regarding its receipt of national security requests, if any,” the Google filing said.
Google’s move comes after other tech companies, including Microsoft Corp, Facebook Inc and Apple Inc released limited information about the number of surveillance requests they receive under an agreement they struck with the US government last week.
Under that agreement, the companies were only allowed to disclose aggregate requests for data made by government agencies without showing the split between surveillance and criminal requests, and only for a six-month period.
The companies are scrambling to assert their independence after documents leaked to the Washington Post and the Guardian newspapers suggested they had given the US government “direct access” to their computers as part of a National Security Agency program called Prism.
The disclosures about Prism, and related revelations about broad-based collection of telephone records, have triggered widespread concern and congressional hearings about the scope and extent of the information-gathering.
Google said it asked the US Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation on 11 June to publish the aggregate number of national security requests, but said it was told such an act would be unlawful.