Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg minced few words in saying that the U.S. government did a "really bad job" balancing its responsibility to maintain national security while protecting the freedoms of citizens, the economy and companies.
"I think the government blew it," he said on stage at TechCrunch Disrupt in reference to the information that's come to light since Edward Snowden began releasing NSA documents. "I think they blew it on communicating what they were - basically the balance of what they were going for here with this."
Facebook was among a number of tech companiesimplicated when details of the NSA's Prism program started to spill, but the social network has denied giving the government direct access to user information.
"We take our role really seriously," Zuckerberg said today. "I think it's my job, and our job, to protect everyone who uses Facebook and all the information that they share with us."

Poking back

Zuckerberg said Facebook has worked behind the scenes to push for greater transparency, "and I think we've made a big difference."
It's through these efforts that Facebook could reveal it's received about 9,000 government requests in the last half a year, though the company hasn't been allowed to reveal how many requests have been granted.
Zuckerberg's ended with one more plea.
"I wish the government would be more proactive about communicating," he said.