Dozens of companies, non-profits and trade organisations including Apple, Google and Facebook sent a letter today pushing the Obama administration and congress for more disclosures on the government's national security-related requests for user data.
General Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency, suggested he was open to the idea but that officials were trying to determine a way to disclose that information without jeopardising FBI investigations.
“We just want to make sure we do it right, that we don’t impact anything ongoing with the FBI. I think that’s the reasonable approach,” Mr Alexander told the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado, when asked about the letter.
Together with LinkedIn, Yahoo, Microsoft, Twitter and many others, the companies asked for more transparency of secret data gathering in the letter addressed to Mr Alexander as well as US president Barack Obama, attorney general Eric Holder and national security leaders in congress.
Tech companies have been scrambling to assert their independence after documents leaked last month by former US security contractor Edward Snowden raised questions about how much data on their clients they handed over to the government to aid its surveillance efforts.
The leaks have renewed a public debate over the balance between national security and privacy, and have put tech companies in an awkward position, especially because many have been assailed for their own commercial use of customer data.
Some companies, including Facebook and Apple, struck an agreement in June with the government to release some information about the number of surveillance requests they receive. But they were limited to disclosing aggregate government requests for data without showing the split between surveillance and criminal requests, and only for a six-month period.
In yesterday’s letter, they asked to be allowed to regularly report statistics on the number and scope of user data requests done under specific national security authorities and the number of individuals, accounts or devices affected by those requests.
Mr Alexander said it was important to keep in mind that companies were compelled by US law to hand over data.
“They don’t have a choice. Court order, they have to do this,” he said.
“From my perspective, what they want is the rest of the world to know that we’re not reading all of that email, so they want to give out the numbers. I think there’s some logic in doing that.”
The letter also asked congress to pass legislation that would require the federal government to make transparency reports and let companies disclose user data requests without having to ask a court for permission.
Co-signers included investors such as Boston Common Asset management and Union Square Ventures, as well as scores of associations including Human Rights Watch, Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union, Americans for Tax Reform and conservative FreedomWorks.
One of the lawmakers to whom the letter was addressed was senate judiciary committee chairman Patrick Leahy, a Democrat who has introduced a bill that would expand reporting requirements for the secret programmes, add more court reviews and move up the expiration of the authorisation for some of the data collection by 2 1/2 years.
“Americans deserve to know how much of their communications data is being swept up by government surveillance, and the government’s use of these authorities must be subject to strong oversight,” Mr Leahy said.
He said the judiciary committee would hold another hearing on the issue later this month.
The White House and Department of Justice did not immediately comment on the letter.
Reuters