When Yahoo Gives User Data to Governments, Mapped

Yahoo!'s Marissa Mayer

Yahoo!'s Marissa Mayer Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Company was the only tech firm to fight NSA order to proved sweeping access.

Yahoo, the only technology company to fight the NSA's order to provide sweeping access to customer accounts, released its first report detailing government requests for user information, covering January to June of this year. The United States issued the most requests, which isn't a surprise. But it's not the country that had the most success.

In a post at the company's website (replete with snazzy / terrible new logo), it explains how it approaches a government's requests.

Yahoo has joined no program to volunteer user data to governments. Our legal department demands that government data requests be made through lawful means and for lawful purposes. We regularly push back against improper requests for user data, including fighting requests that are unclear, improper, overbroad or unlawful. In addition, we mounted a two-year legal challenge to the 2008 amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and recently won a motion requiring the U.S. Government to consider further declassifying court documents from that case.

(Yahoo will mention that court battle in every one of these reports forever, justifiably.)

The company breaks down the data for each country in which it has a separate presence (excluding those countries where government made fewer than nine such requests). At right is a graph showing the results of the 12,444 requests made in the United States. Blue slices indicate the company gave some data to the United States (either content or "NCD" — metadata); the dark gray, the requests it refused. As you can see, Yahoo was compelled to provide a lot of information. (If you're curious / nervous, these requests didn't yet include data on Tumblr.)

And 12,444 is a lot of requests! It is 69 requests a day, nearly three an hour. Those requests sought information on over three times as many accounts — 40,322 in total. The United States requested data from more accounts than the rest of the world combined. And then nearly doubled.

Read the full story and see the maps at TheAtlanticWire.com.

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