• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

VietNam Breaking News

News from Vietnam

  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Society
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Tech

Apple sees sharp increase in U.S. national security requests

September 29, 2017 by

Apple Inc has received more than four times as many national-security related requests from the U.S. government in the first half of this year versus a year ago, according to a company report on Thursday.

Apple, national-security, U.S. government

A 3D printed Apple logo is seen in front of a displayed cyber code in this illustration taken March 22, 2016. 

Apple said it had received between 13,250 and 13,499 national security requests affecting between 9,000 and 9,249 users. That compares with a range of 2,750 and 2,999 requests affecting between 2,000 and 2,249 users in the first half of 2016. 

The requests come in the form of so-called National Security Letters, or NSLs, and requests under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA. Apple and other companies report ranges because government rules prevent disclosing precise numbers.

Apple declined to comment beyond the figures it released.

The disclosures are voluntary, and firms like Microsoft Corp and Facebook Inc have yet to report any figures for 2017. In the past, those companies have issued more detailed reports, for example separating FISA requests and NSLs. The government requires they wait six months to report that level of information.

Alphabet Inc’s Google said it had received between 0 and 499 National Security Letters requesting information on between 1,000 and 1,499 user accounts in the first half of 2017. A year previously, the number of requests was the same but the government asked about only 500 to 999 accounts, according to Google’s transparency report. Its 2017 FISA request numbers were not yet available. 

It was not immediately clear what drove the increase in requests to Apple. But Andrew Crocker, a staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said that the number of government requests to technology companies has been increasing since 2014, when data first started to become available as part of a settlement between technology firms and the government.

“There’s not a huge track record here, but you can start to make a simple graph. The trend does seem to be upward,” Crocker said.

Crocker also said the higher requests to Apple could represent it coming in line with its peers. Despite Apple’s huge user base – it has sold more than 1.2 billion iPhones – the number of requests to it had been relatively low compared with firms like Google or Microsoft.

National security letters are a type of government subpoena for communications data sent to service providers. They are usually issued with a gag order, meaning the target is often unaware that records are being accessed, and they do not require a warrant.

Source: Reuters

  • Why Has China Labeled The iPhone A "National Security Threat"?
  • Apple releases details on US data requests
  • Reports: Trump national security pick Monica Crowley plagiarized huge sections of her Ph.D. thesis
  • Trump’s new national security adviser is under fire for his views on Russia, his business ties to Turkey — and his tweets
  • Insiders say Trump keeps clashing with his national security adviser
  • Trump’s national security adviser reportedly thinks Susan Rice did nothing wrong
  • Sebastian Gorka, Trump’s combative new national security aide, is widely disdained within his own field
  • It looks like Trump may pay the price for alienating dozens of national security elites
  • Trump’s defense secretary presided over investigation into his national security adviser for disclosing classified secrets
  • A far-right Austrian leader who just signed a pact with Putin says he met with Trump’s national security adviser in New York
  • Here’s everything Trump has said about his fired national security adviser Mike Flynn
  • Report: Trump’s national security adviser will recommend Trump make a big move against Russia
Apple sees sharp increase in U.S. national security requests have 575 words, post on at September 29, 2017. This is cached page on VietNam Breaking News. If you want remove this page, please contact us.

Filed Under: world-news what is the national security agency, us national security agency, united nations security council, united nation security council, National Security and Intelligence Service, the national security agency, US National Security Council, United Nations Security Council Resolutions, The National Security Council, The United Nations Security Council, increase social security, increase social security benefits

Primary Sidebar

RSS Recent Stories

  • Seminar on Xieng Khouang – Plain of Jars Defensive Campaign held in Nghe An
  • General Staff leader observes exercise in military academy
  • Room remains for boosting HCM City – Cuba cooperation
  • Viettel and Khanh Hoa sign cooperation agreement on digital transformation
  • More lessons learnt from Xieng Khouang – Plain of Jars Victory in 1972
  • SEA Games 31: Vietnam grabs gold medal in men’s singles table tennis

Sponsored Links

  • Major crash led to suspension of its Tesla Model 3 by taxi company
  • After Tesla, SpaceX workers come forward to speak on sexual harassment
  • Wi-Fi range extender to strengthen network coverage and internet speeds
  • apple: How to capture screenshot on Apple iPhone just by tapping back panel
  • EU Parliament backs tough new rules to rein in US tech giants
  • Carville: ‘Strap in People’ — January 6 Probe Will Expose Trump Was Behind a ‘Massive Criminal Act’
  • Warren: SCOTUS ‘Has Lost the Respect of the American People’ — We Need More Justices
  • Summers: Combatting Inflation Will ‘Require Substantially More’ Than What Fed Is Doing
  • Bratton: Lax District Attorneys, ‘Most of Them Funded by George Soros’ ‘Are Destroying the Criminal Justice System’
  • WATCH: Sheriff’s Deputies in Maryland Rescue Woman from Frigid Waters
Copyright © 2022 VietNam Breaking News. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story