At least on the surface, Cisco appears to be trying to do the right thing. Not Amazon, who’s CEO, Jeff Bezos, is happily giving a giant middle finger to all of his customers.

ZDNet reports that:

Amazon remains the only US internet giant in the Fortune 500 that has not yet released a report detailing how many demands for data it receives from the US government.

Although people are starting to notice, the retail and cloud giant has no public plans to address these concerns.

Word first spread last week when the ACLU’s Christopher Soghoian, who’s spent years publicly denouncing companies for poor privacy practices, told attendees at a Seattle town hall event that he’s “hit a wall with Amazon,” adding that it’s “just really difficult to reach people there.”

So we got on the phone with Amazon to ask why it hasn’t disclosed its figures yet.

After a brief exchange, spokesperson Ty Rogers did not return a request for comment. Bill Way, the company’s associate general counsel for privacy, did not return an email asking for comment.

We reached out to nearly 30 people who are currently or formerly associated with the company. After two days of cold-emails, one person who declined to be named said they and others were “under confidentiality obligations” not to discuss such matters. We weren’t getting anywhere.

Amazon hasn’t budged on its privacy stance in years. Because of its lack of clarity on how it handles data requests, Amazon has for the past four years running ranked as one of the lowest companies in the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s (EFF) annual privacy reports.

“Amazon has a tremendous amount of user data, both from its direct retail businesses and from its hosting services through Amazon Web Services, but it fails to let users, and potential users, evaluate their policies and understand how law enforcement seeks to gain access to data stored with them,” the privacy group wrote in its most recent report.

So, why won’t Amazon do it?

We don’t know, and nobody wants to talk. It’s been widely speculated before (though not necessarily naively) that the US government may have asked Amazon to hold back on reporting those figures.