Indian Government Requests For Facebook Data Rose 62% in 2017: Report
Indian Government Requests For Facebook Data Rose 62% in 2017: Report
In its transparency report released on Tuesday, Facebook said that it received a total of 22,024 requests from India in 2017 compared to 13,613 in 2016 - a rise of 61.7 percent.

Facebook has recorded massive increase in the total number of Indian government requests for data over the past one year -- a rise of nearly 62 percent in 2017 compared to the global average of 30 percent. In its transparency report released on Tuesday, Facebook said that it received a total of 22,024 requests from India in 2017 compared to 13,613 in 2016 - a rise of 61.7 percent. Facebook provided data for about half of the requests.

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The total number of government requests for data the social network received from around the world in 2017 was 161,231 as compared to 123,508 -- an increase of 30.5 percent. Government requests for account data increased globally by around four percent compared to the first half of 2017, increasing from 78,890 to 82,341 requests.

In the US, government requests remained roughly even at 32,742 in the second half of 2017, Facebook said in its report.

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Facebook said it responds to government requests for data in accordance with applicable law and is terms of service. The social networking major also accepts government requests to preserve account information pending receipt of formal legal process. "When we receive a reservation request, we will preserve a temporary snapshot of the relevant account information but will not disclose any of the preserved records unless and until we receive formal and valid legal process," Facebook said.

The Facebook report also showed an increase in the number of posts identified as containing graphic violence in the first of quarter of 2018. "Of every 10,000 content views, an estimate of 22 to 27 contained graphic violence, compared to an estimate of 16 to 19 last quarter," Xinhua quoted the report as saying. It said the growth was a possible result of a higher volume of graphic violence content shared on Facebook in the first three months of this year.

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