Technology giants Google and Microsoft have teamed up for a legal battle seeking clarity on secret US government requests for Internet user data after failed negotiations with the Obama administration.
The two companies filed suits in a federal court in June, arguing a right to disclose more information about user data requests made by the government under the controversial Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Their representatives met six times with US officials and agreed to extend the deadlines for the government to reply to the lawsuits, allowing time for negotiations that ended in failure, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith said.
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Setting aside their strategic competitiveness, the two Silicon Valley Internet bellwethers want to be able to provide users with better insight into what information the government gets its hands on.
"To followers of technology issues, there are many days when Microsoft and Google stand apart," Smith said.
"But today our two companies stand together...We believe we have a clear right under the US Constitution to share more information with the public."
The issue became highlighted after Edward Snowden, a former IT contractor at the National Security Agency (NSA), disclosed that the US authorities were tapping into Internet user data, sometimes using national security letters that bar companies from telling anyone about the requests.
Referring to the government's recent decision to begin publishing the total number of national security requests for user data for the past 12 months and do so going forward once a year, Smith said such a decision represents a good start.
The public deserves and the Constitution guarantees more than this first step, he added.