AT&T To Release Transparency Report By Staff Reporter | Dec 23, 2013 10:15 AM EST AT&T on Friday announced it would become the latest wireless carrier to begin releasing transparency reports on government surveillance requests. The companyâs move came hours after rival Verizon made a similar announcement and was likely a calculated maneuver to avoid criticism against AT&T.Engadget reports that AT&Tâs decision to publish a transparency report is a sharp departure from the companyâs position only days earlier when a shareholder request for greater accountability was met with open hostility.Frankly, the text of AT&Tâs announcement is hardly encouraging. The company notes that it only provides wireless customer location data by court order, or in ârare casesâ where law enforcement agencies provide âassurance that a real emergency affecting human life exists.â âThe debate about government surveillance programs and striking the right balance between protecting personal privacy and providing national security is a healthy one,â said Wayne Watts, AT&T senior executive vice president and general counsel in a press statement. âItâs important that policymakers worldwide get it right so that people can continue to enjoy the benefits of technology and communications with confidence.âLike Verizon, AT&T will issue its first transparency report sometime in early 2014 dealing with requests made in the previous year. The report will be published semi-annually. âTo further our efforts to be as transparent as possible within the government guidelines in which we operate, like Verizon recently announced, we intend to publish a semi-annual online report that will provide information on the number of law enforcement requests for customer information that our company receives in the countries in which we do business. AT&T expects to publish the first report, covering information received in 2013, in early 2014,â Watts said. Unfortunately, AT&Tâs transparency reports will not address issues like warrantless wiretapping and the company has already stated that any decision to release classified information must be made by the government.