According to the report, which covers the first half of this year, Apple received 32,342 demands for user data from governments -- up 9 percent from the previous period -- spanning access to 163,823 devices. Germany made the most requests (42 percent), the majority of which were due to "stolen devices investigations," issuing 13,704 requests for data on 26,160 devices.

The US was in second place with 4,570 requests for 14,911 devices. More than half of these requests (2,397) were for users' basic account information or content, revealed Apple. The US also asked for 918 financial identifiers -- which cover suspected fraudulent credit, debit, or gift card transactions -- attributing them to iTunes gift card fraud.

In addition, Apple received 4,177 global account requests, up 25 percent from the previous period, for 40,641 devices. Apple explains that these requests include iCloud info from Apple IDs, such as account holder name and address, and can also span content, including photos, email, iOS device backups, contacts or calendars. The spike, according to Apple, was attributable to China, which asked for almost 19,908 device data requests "predominantly due to a fraud investigation."

Apple also changed the way it reports on U.S. national security requests for user data. For the first time since it began reporting data requests in 2014, it separated out FBI-issued National Security Letters and requests under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA. In the first half of 2018, Apple said it received 0 to 499 National Security Letter requests related to 1,000 to 1,499 accounts.

The report doesn't include the number of FISA requests because of a legally required six-month reporting delay. By combining the data in the past, Apple was able to publish the figures ahead of other tech companies, reports Reuters.