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by martyvis
536 days ago
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Actually I have heard the exact opposite of what you are stating is true. Both Google and Apple fight very hard to avoid handing data to authorities. They don't want to be seen as some sort of easy conduit to government surveillance or shill. How does that benefit their reputation? I know of one case where Google spent millions on lawyers fighting government wanting access to an activist's email. Their FAQ here makes their policy pretty clear. https://support.google.com/transparencyreport/answer/9713961... |
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(Mind you; this includes device location histories due to geoip logs, unique identifiers, iMessage histories, photos, documents, everything.)
The cases they are allowed to tell you about aren’t in this category. They aren’t even allowed to say exactly how many of the secret warrantless orders they received, or exactly how many users were affectee, only 500-count ranges.
For just Apple, for just January 2023 to June 2023 (six months):
National Security - FISA Non-Content Requests
Table for National Security - FISA Non-Content Requests Data
Requests Received 0 - 499
Users/Accounts 40,500 - 40,999
National Security - FISA Content Requests
Table displaying National Security - FISA Content Requests
Requests Received 500 - 999
Users/Accounts 50,500 - 50,999
National Security Letter Requests
Table for National Security Letter Requests data
Requests Received 0 - 499
Users/Accounts 1,000 - 1,499
National Security Letters where Non-disclosure Order Lifted
0
I encourage you to read it for yourself:
https://www.apple.com/legal/transparency/us.html