Not unless the NYT report is completely wrong, and the Internet companies are lying very blatantly. By all accounts PRISM is a conduit for FISA requests and responses, each of which is still approved by Internet-company lawyers. If they were servicing extremely-broad FISAs like Verizon's "send us all your phone metadata" then the distinction would be academic, but both Google and the NYT seem clear that Google hasn't accepted anything on close to that scale.
"If they were servicing extremely-broad FISAs like Verizon's "send us all your phone metadata" then the distinction would be academic, but both Google and the NYT seem clear that Google hasn't accepted anything on close to that scale."
Maybe I read it wrong but Verizon was ordered by the court to do just that and to shut up about it. I doubt they were asked to accept, just the court ordered it and it is so because it became a 'legal request.' I have to wonder what Google, Microsoft and Facebook were asked to provide to NSA in large scale. If they can have all calls to see if anyone calls certain "terrorists," why not get a log of all Skype calls, FB likes, messages, Google searches etc to see if anyone is linked to "terrorists" or searching for related materials?
Until this week’s reports, we had never heard of the broad type of order that Verizon received—an order that appears to have required them to hand over millions of users’ call records. We were very surprised to learn that such broad orders exist. Any suggestion that Google is disclosing information about our users’ Internet activity on such a scale is completely false.
Now that could conceivably be a bald lie - or I suppose they could just conceivably have lost awareness of what their FISA/NSL/warrant-handling lawyers were approving, to a spectacular extent - but otherwise they aren't handling any Verizon-scale FISA warrants. However, you're right: there's a big grey area between Verizon-scale "megawarrants" and the "specific orders about individuals" the tech companies say they process. NYT said "FISA orders can range from inquiries about specific people to a broad sweep for intelligence, like logs of certain search terms" while the tech companies largely reasserted that they only process "specific orders about individuals". It seems that only one source can be accurate here.
BTW I assume that Verizon wasn't really just forced into handing over all its metadata: there was probably a bit of a gentleman's agreement in the government producing an omnibus FISA order and Verizon agreeing not to contest its legality. Everyone spends less time processing FISA orders, the government gets all the metadata it wants, and Verizon gets a sicknote to cover it legally.