Steep rise in government data requests from India in 2018 first half: Facebook
Facebook has recorded 16,580 data requests from the Indian
government in the first six months of 2018 — a steep rise compared to a total
of 22,024 requests in the full year of 2017 and 13,613 in 2016.
In
the January-June 2018 period, Facebook
provided some data to the government in 53 per
cent of the cases, although the social networking giant did not reveal which
kind of data as it published its transparency report late on Thursday.
Facebook responds to government requests for data in accordance
with applicable law and its terms of service.
“Each
and every request we receive is carefully reviewed for legal sufficiency and we
may reject or require greater specificity on requests that appear overly broad or vague,”
the company said.
Facebook
also received 15,963 requests from India for “legal process,” 23,047 users’
requests and 617 emergency requests (half of these were met).
In
May this year, Facebook said it recorded a massive increase in the total number
of Indian government requests for 2017 — a rise of nearly 62 per cent compared
to the global average of 30 per cent.
The
social networking major also accepts government
requests to preserve account information
pending receipt of formal legal process.
“When
we receive a preservation request, we will preserve a temporary snapshot of the
relevant account information but will not disclose any of the preserved records
unless and until we receive formal and valid legal process,” said Facebook
which received 1,000 such requests from India.
Globally,
the government requests for account data increased by around 26 per cent
compared to the second half of 2017 — increasing from 82,341 to 103,815
requests.
In
the US, government requests increased by about 30 per cent, of which 56 per
cent included a non-disclosure order prohibiting Facebook from notifying the
user.
“During
the first half of 2018, the number of pieces of content we restricted based on
local law increased 7 per cent, from 14,280 to 15,337,” said Facebook.
It
also identified 48 disruptions of Facebook services in eight countries in the new
reporting period, compared to 46 disruptions in 12 countries in the second half
of 2017.
During
this period, Facebook and Instagram took down 2,999,278 pieces of content based
on 466,810 copyright reports, 203,375 pieces of content based on 69,756 trademark
reports, and 641,059 pieces of content based on 29,828 counterfeit reports.
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