Thursday, 14 April 2016
Microsoft sues US government over secret data requests
It says keeping access requests secret is against the US
constitution, which states that individuals should be made
aware if the government searches or seizes their property.
Microsoft said 5,624 requests for data were made in the past
18 months, and almost half came with a court order forcing
the company to keep the demand secret.
"People do not give up their rights when they move their
private information from physical storage to the cloud,"
Microsoft said in the lawsuit, according to the Reuters news
agency.
Microsoft added that it felt the government "exploited the
transition to cloud computing as a means of expanding its
power to conduct secret investigations".
The US Department of Justice has not yet commented.
'Routine'
The case is the latest row pitting US tech giants against the
government - with Microsoft rival Apple calling for Congress
to take the lead in addressing the wider issue of balancing
privacy with national security.
Microsoft's case centres on the Electronic Communications
Privacy Act (ECPA), a 30-year-old law several tech firms feel
is outdated and being abused.
In a blog post, Microsoft's president and chief legal officer
Brad Smith said suing the US government was not something
the company took lightly.
"We believe that with rare exceptions, consumers and
businesses have a right to know when the government
accesses their emails or records," Mr Smith wrote.
"Yet it's becoming routine for the US government to issue
orders that require email providers to keep these types of
legal demands secret. We believe that this goes too far and
we are asking the courts to address the situation."
He went on to stress that Microsoft acknowledged that in
some cases investigations needed to remain secret in order
to keep people safe or prevent evidence from being
destroyed.
However, Mr Smith added: "We question whether these
orders are grounded in specific facts that truly demand
secrecy. To the contrary, it appears that the issuance of
secrecy orders has become too routine."
The ECPA is unpopular among technology companies as it
was written well before the days of widespread internet use.
The Act could soon be amended after a US congressional
panel voted through several proposed reforms.
Microsoft said it wanted "reasonable rules" added to the Act
so it could inform more customers about action related to
their data.
"If there's a good reason to justify a secrecy order initially
and that reason continues, prosecutors should be able to
extend the order based on necessity," Mr Smith said.
"If not, we should be able to tell our customer what
happened."
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which campaigns for
digital rights, supported Microsoft's move.
"We applaud Microsoft for challenging government gag
orders that prevent companies from being more transparent
with their customers about government searches of their
data," said EFF staff attorney Andrew Crocker in an email.
"In nearly all cases, indefinite gag orders are an
unconstitutional prior restraint on free speech and infringe
on First Amendment rights. Microsoft's complaint shows it
receives a staggering number of these orders.
"We look forward to assisting in this important lawsuit."
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