Google is becoming less likely to comply with government demands for information on its users' activities as authorities in the US and other countries get more aggressive about mining the Internet for personal data.
The latest snapshot emerged in a report that the company has released every six months for the past three years. Several other companies, including Microsoft, Apple, Facebook and Yahoo, have since followed Google's practice of disclosing government requests for personal data, which cover such things as email communications and the search queries made.
The breakdown for the first half of this year shows that Google received 25,879 legal requests for people's data from governments around the world. That represented a 21 percent increase from the six months before that. It's also more than twice the number of government requests that Google was fielding at the end of 2009.
US authorities accounted for 10,918 of the requests during the first half of the year, more than anywhere else. They came from federal authorities as well as police departments around the country. The number has nearly tripled since the end of 2009.
"And these numbers only include the requests we're allowed to publish," wrote Richard Salgado, Google's legal director of law enforcement and information security.