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Indian Govt Sought 35,560 Users’ Details From Facebook In First Half Of 2020

Indian Govt Sought 35,560

SUMMARY

The requests are significantly up from 26,698 queries about users’ data in the second half of 2019

Globally, during the first six months of 2020, the government requests for user data increased by 23% from 1,40,875 to 1,73,592

US continued to submit the largest number of requests, followed by India, Germany, France and the UK

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Requests by the Indian government to seek access to Facebook users’ data further increased in the first six months of this year, second only to the US government, the social networking giant has revealed.

There were a total of 33,374 legal requests and 2,186 emergency requests from India, according to its latest biannual Transparency Report.

In total, India requested Facebook to provide data in 35,560 cases in the January-June 2020 period — significantly up from 26,698 queries about users’ data in the second half of 2019.

“We have strict guidelines in place to deal with all government data requests,” Facebook said in a statement late on Thursday.

There was also an increase in the Indian government’s request to preserve account information too, pending the receipt of the formal legal process. In the January-June 2020 period, India asked for 4,100 accounts to be preserved, from 2,500 account requests in earlier reported periods.

Globally, during the first six months of 2020, the government requests for user data increased by 23% from 1,40,875 to 1,73,592.

“Of the total volume, the US continues to submit the largest number of requests, followed by India, Germany, France, and the UK,” Facebook said.

In the US, Facebook received 61,528 requests, an increase of 20% compared to the second half of 2019. During this reporting period, the volume of content restrictions based on local law increased globally 40% from 15,826 to 22,120.

The increase was in part related to Covid-related restrictions. “In the first half of 2020, we identified 52 disruptions of Facebook services in nine countries, compared to 45 disruptions in six countries in the second half of 2019,” the company said.

During this reporting period, Facebook took down 37,16,817 pieces of content based on 6,59,444 copyright reports; 4,04,078 pieces of content based on 1,66,310 trademark reports; and 13,08,834 pieces of content based on 97,186 counterfeit reports.

For Every 10 k Views Of Content, 11 Had Hate Speech, Reveals Facebook

The prevalence of hate speech on Facebook in July-September period this year was 0.10% to 0.11%, meaning that out of every 10,000 views of content on Facebook, 10 to 11 of them included hate speech, the company has said.

Revealing the prevalence of hate speech on its platform for the first time as it faces the flak for an increase in such posts, Facebook said on Thursday that the company is proactively detecting about 95 per cent of hate speech content it removes.

“We calculate hate speech prevalence by selecting a sample of content seen on Facebook and then labeling how much of it violates our hate speech policies,” it said in a statement. “Because hate speech depends on language and cultural context, we send these representative samples to reviewers across different languages and regions”.

Facebook admitted that defining hate speech isn’t simple, as there are many differing opinions on what constitutes hate speech. “Nuance, history, language, religion and changing cultural norms are all important factors to consider as we define our policies,” it added.

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