ROCHELLE STOVALL

ROCHELLE STOVALL

Tuesday, 11 June 2013

EXCLUSIVE: Google chief legal officer pushes back on NSA spy program


 
 There is a "serious misperception" about the National Security Agency's PRISM program, Google chief legal officer David Drummond said in an exclusive interview with Fox News. On Tuesday the company pushed back against the layers of secrecy surrounding the agency's alleged blanket snooping on American citizens.
“We were as shocked about those revelations as anyone,” Google’s chief legal officer David Drummond told Fox News, in an exclusive interview with Fox News' Chief Intelligence Correspondent Catherine Herridge.
On Tuesday the Internet giant wrote on its official blog that it had sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) director Robert Mueller, asking the agencies to allow Google to release more information about the national security orders it had received.
Google's request comes days after the government publicly acknowledged that secret Foreign Inteligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requests had been sent to Internet companies regarding their users' activity.
“A serious misperception has been created in the wake of the disclosures around the Verizon national security order, around phone records as well as the disclosures about the so-called PRISM program,” Drummond told Fox News.
Google is asking to be able to publish FISA court requests as part of its biannual "transparency report" in which the company lists the number and kind of user data requests it receives from the government, Drummond said.
"Google’s numbers would clearly show that our compliance with these requests falls far short of the claims being made," Drummond said in the letter.
Reports from the Guardian and the Washington Post stated that the NSA had “direct access” to the servers of Google, Facebook, and several other major internet companies. Drummond stressed that that simply wasn’t true -- but legal restrictions were preventing him from offering further details.
“There's no lockbox, there's no backdoor -- none of the other terms that you've seen in the past few days,” Drummond told Fox News. “We comply with orders, we deliver information when we receive these targeted orders."
Earlier Tuesday, Senate leaders emerged from a closed-door meeting with the NSA chief saying the story about Edward Snowden, the American who leaked details about secret U.S. surveillance programs, is enveloped in misinformation and called for public hearings.
The closed-door briefing follows a  series of news stories about federal government programs that have been collecting information about millions, if not billions, of phone calls and Internet activities by Americans.
Sources familiar with the briefing also told Fox News that lawmakers were concerned about more bombshell revelations on super-secret U.S. surveillance.
Drummond stressed that it was important to remember that Google serves hundreds of millions of users and that "only a tiny fraction of our users have ever been subject to having their data requested" through such orders.
“There's no general surveillance here. We just really want to make the point that we have nothing to hide here at Google.”
 

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