Google: Officials In U.S. Sought To Remove Videos 'Defaming' Police
Google's latest “transparency report,” released today, shows that the U.S. government requested
the removal of 757 items of content in the first half of this year. Google complied with 63% of the government's requests.
Google doesn't offer many specifics about the material the government
wanted to take down, except to note that among the items complained about were a YouTube clip showing police brutality and videos that “defamed” the police. The search giant rejected those
requests.
Otherwise, Google only included information about the category of complaints. Overall, the government requested that Google take down 607 allegedly defamatory pieces of content and
80 items that allegedly posed privacy or security concerns. The authorities also had some complaints about other subjects like copyright infringement, impersonation and hate speech.
Google is the only major Web company to release these kinds of statistics, so it's difficult to know how many requests the government made of other search engines or hosting services, and whether
they complied.
Certainly, however, the fact that at least one local police department tried to convince Google to take down a clip showing police brutality raises questions about how tax
dollars are being spent.
U.S. authorities also requested data about users from Google on 5,950 occasions in
the first half of this year. Google said it complied with 93% of the requests and turned over information about more than 11,000 users or accounts.