The report didn't provide specifics about the number of orders that Google has been receiving through a confidential US court set up under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to fight terrorism.
Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo all are suing for the right to share more detailed information about the FISA demands made by the National Security Agency and the FBI. The technology companies believe that more forthrightness will ease privacy concerns raised by NSA documents that depicted them as willing participants in a US spying program dubbed PRISM.
The Obama administration is opposing the transparency-seeking lawsuits, maintaining that more detailed disclosures would make it more difficult to sniff out terrorist plots.
Governments zero in on Google because its services have become staples of our digital-driven lives. Besides running the internet's most dominant search engine, Google owns the popular video site YouTube, operates blogging and email services and distributes Android, the top operating system on mobile phones. Google says its social network, Plus, now has 540 million active users.
Google's latest disclosures show that the Mountain View, California, company is rejecting a higher percentage of government demands than it was when it began releasing the figures three years ago. That trend reflects Google's belief that the governments frequently don't have a legal justification for obtaining the requested information.
In the first half of this year, Google provided some of the information sought in 83 percent of the government requests in the U.S. During the same period in 2010, the compliance rate was 93 percent.
Worldwide compliance rates were lower, but showed a similar downward trend.
After the US, the governments peppering Google with the most requests were in India (2,691), Germany (2,311) and France (2,011).
Google's latest report "illustrates the government's steadily growing appetite for more data from more users," said Leslie Harris, president of the Center for Democracy & Technology, a civil rights group.
-AP