fbpx
Wikipedia

Right to be forgotten

The right to be forgotten (RTBF[1]) is the right to have private information about a person be removed from Internet searches and other directories under some circumstances. The concept has been discussed and put into practice in several jurisdictions, including Argentina,[2][3] the European Union (EU), and the Philippines.[4] The issue has arisen from desires of individuals to "determine the development of their life in an autonomous way, without being perpetually or periodically stigmatized as a consequence of a specific action performed in the past".[5]: 231 

The right to be forgotten "reflects the claim of an individual to have certain data deleted so that third persons can no longer trace them".[6]: 121  It has been defined as "the right to silence on past events in life that are no longer occurring".[7] The right to be forgotten leads to allowing individuals to have information, videos, or photographs about themselves deleted from certain Internet records so that they cannot be found by search engines.[6] As of 2011, there were few protections against the harm caused by incidents such as revenge porn sharing, or by pictures uploaded due to poor judgment.[8]

The right to be forgotten is distinct from the right to privacy. The right to privacy constitutes information that is not publicly known, whereas the right to be forgotten involves removing information that was publicly known at a certain time and not allowing third parties to access the information.[6]: 122 [9]

There has been controversy about the practicality of establishing a right to be forgotten (in respect to access of information) as an international human right. This is partly due to the vagueness of current rulings attempting to implement such a right.[10][self-published source] Furthermore, there are concerns about its impact on the right to freedom of expression, its interaction with the right to privacy, and whether creating a right to be forgotten would decrease the quality of the Internet through censorship and the rewriting of history.[11] Those in favor of the right to be forgotten cite its necessity due to issues such as revenge porn sites appearing in search engine listings for a person's name, as well as instances of these results referencing petty crimes individuals may have committed in the past. The central concern lies in the potentially undue influence that such results may exert upon a person's online reputation almost indefinitely if not removed.[12]

Limitations of application in a jurisdiction include the inability to require removal of information held by companies outside the jurisdiction. There is no global framework to allow individuals control over their online image. However, Professor Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, an expert from Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, said that Google cannot escape compliance with the law of France implementing the decision of the European Court of Justice in 2014 on the right to be forgotten. Mayer-Schönberger said nations, including the US, had long maintained that their local laws have "extra-territorial effects".[13]

Recognition by jurisdiction edit

Argentina edit

Argentina has seen lawsuits by celebrities against Google and Yahoo! in which the plaintiffs demand the removal of certain search results, and require removal of links to photographs.[14] One case, brought by artist Virginia da Cunha, involved photographs which had originally been taken with her permission and uploaded with her permission, however she alleged that the search results improperly associated her photographs with pornography.[15] De Cunha's case achieved initial success resulting in Argentina search engines not showing images of the particular celebrity, however, this decision is on appeal.[16]

Virginia Simari, the judge in favor of De Cunha, stated that people have the right to control their image and avert others from "capturing, reproducing, broadcasting, or publishing one's image without permission."[17] In addition, Simari used a treatise written by Julio César Rivera, a Buenos Aires lawyer, author, and law professor "the right to control one's personal data includes the right to prevent others from using one's image."[17] Since the 1990s, Argentina has also been a part of the habeas data movement in which they "adopted a constitutional provision that is part freedom-of-government-information law and part data privacy law."[17] Their version is known as Amparo. Article 43[17] explains it:

"Any person shall file this action to obtain information on the data about himself and their purpose, registered in public records or databases, or in private ones intended to supply information; and in case of false data or discrimination, this action may be filed to request the suppression, rectification, confidentiality or updating of said data."[17]

Argentina's efforts to protect their people's right to be forgotten has been called "the most complete"[by whom?] because individuals are able to correct, delete, or update information about themselves. Overall, their information is bound to remain confidential.

China edit

In May 2016, Chinese courts in Beijing determined citizens do not have the right to be forgotten when a judge ruled in favor of Baidu in a lawsuit over removing search results.[18] It was the first of such cases to be heard in Chinese court.[18] In the suit, Ren Jiayu sued Chinese search engine Baidu over search results that associated him with a previous employer, Wuxi Taoshi Biotechnology.[18] Ren argued that by posting the search results, Baidu had infringed upon his right of name and right of reputation, both protected under Chinese law.[18] Because of these protections, Ren believed he had a right to be forgotten by removing these search results.[18] The court ruled against Ren, claiming his name is a collection of common characters and as a result the search results were derived from relevant words.[18]

Nowhere in China's civil code are the concepts of privacy or the right to be forgotten discussed.[19] There is no data protection authority, nor a specific state agency in place to monitor the protection of citizens' personal data. In China today[when?], data protection regulation is aimed at consumers, on an individual level, in contrast to the EU's right to privacy, in which the individual is considered a "data subject", with the right to be protected.[20] Chinese legislative progress towards supporting the right to be forgotten is slow. The topic has been debated for more than 10 years now,[when?] and continues to be a challenge. Small provisions have been implemented related to personal data processing, but do not amount to a comprehensive data protection regime.[20] The European Union Directorate-General for Internal Policies has issued policy recommendations on a realistic, rather than a legalistic basis for data protection as to the transfer of data between the EU and China vis-a-vis the latter's lack of compatible regulation in this area.[20]

European Union edit

Europe's data protection laws do not implement a "right to be forgotten", but a more limited "right to [data] erasure". Variations on the concept a right to be forgotten have existed in Europe for many years, including:

  • In the United Kingdom, such as under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act of 1974 there is the idea that after a certain period of time many criminal convictions are "spent", meaning that information regarding said person should not be considered when obtaining insurance or seeking employment.
  • In France le droit à l'oubli (the right to be forgotten)[21] was enacted in French Law in 2010.[22]

Views on the right to be forgotten differ greatly between the United States and EU countries. In the United States, transparency, the right of free speech according to the First Amendment, and the "right to know" are typically favored over removing or increasing difficulty to access truthfully published information regarding individuals and corporations. Although the term "right to be forgotten" is a relatively new idea, the European Court of Justice legally solidified that the "right to be forgotten" is a human right when they ruled against Google in the Costeja case on May 13, 2014.[23]

In 1995, the European Union adopted the European Data Protection Directive (Directive 95/46/EC) to regulate the processing of personal data.[24] This is now considered a component of human rights law.[25] The new European General Data Protection Regulation provides protection and exemption for companies listed as "media" companies, like newspapers and other journalistic work. However, Google purposely opted out of being classified as a "media" company, therefore the company is not protected. Judges in the European Union ruled that because the international corporation, Google, is a collector and processor of data it should be classified as a "data controller" under the meaning of the EU data protection directive. These "data controllers" are required under EU law to remove data that is "inadequate, irrelevant, or no longer relevant", making this directive of global importance.[21]

In Article 12 of the Directive 95/46/EC the EU gave a legal basis to Internet protection for individuals.[5]: 233  In 2012 the European Commission disclosed a draft European Data Protection Regulation to supersede the directive, which included specific protection in the right to be forgotten in Article 17.[26] A right to be forgotten was replaced by a more limited right of erasure in Article 17 of the version of the GDPR that was adopted by the European Parliament in March 2014 and which became EU law in April 2016.

To exercise the right to be forgotten and request removal from a search engine, one must complete a form through the search engine's website. Google's removal request process requires the applicant to identify their country of residence, personal information, a list of the URLs to be removed along with a short description, and - in some cases - attachment of legal identification.[27] The applicant receives an email from Google confirming the request but the request must be assessed before it is approved for removal. If the request is approved, searches using the individual's name will no longer result in the content appearing in search results. The content remains online and is not erased.[28] After a request is filled, their removals team reviews the request, weighing "the individual's right to privacy against the public's right to know", deciding if the website is "inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant, or excessive in relation to the purposes for which they were processed".[29] Google has formed an Advisory Council of various professors, lawyers, and government officials from around Europe to provide guidelines for these decisions.[30] However, the review process is still a mystery to the general public. Guidelines set by EU regulators were not released until November 2014, but Google began to take action on this much sooner than that, which (according to one author) allowed them "to shape interpretation to [their] own ends".[30] In May 2015, eighty academics called for more transparency from Google in an open letter.[31]

The form asks people to select one of the 28 countries that make up the European Union, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland.[32] "The form allows an individual or someone representing an individual to put in a request" for the removal of any URLs believed to be a violation of the individual's privacy.[33] Regardless of who is submitting the form, some form of photo identification of the person the form is being submitted for must be present. This is meant to serve as proof that the person for whom the request was made for does in fact approve.

If Google refuses a request to delink material, Europeans can appeal to their local data protection agency.[34] As of May 2015, the British Data Protection Agency had treated 184 such complaints, and overturned Google's decision in about a quarter of those.[35] If Google fails to comply with a Data Protection Agency decision, it can face legal action.[36]

In July 2014, in the early stages of Google's effort to comply with the court ruling, legal experts questioned whether Google's widely publicized delistings of a number of news articles violated the UK and EU Data Protection Directive, since in implementing the Directive, Google is required to weigh the damage to the person making the request against any public interest in the information being available.[37] Google indeed acknowledged that some of its search result removals, affecting articles that were of public interest, were incorrect, and reinstated the links a week later.[12][38] Commentators like Charles Arthur, technology editor of The Guardian, and Andrew Orlowski of The Register noted that Google is not required to comply with removal requests at all, as it can refer requests to the information commissioner in the relevant country for a decision weighing the respective merits of public interest and individual rights.[12][37][39]

Google notifies websites that have URLs delinked, and various news organizations, such as BBC, have published lists of delinked articles. Complainants have been named in news commentary regarding those delinkings. In August 2015 the British Data Protection Agency issued an enforcement action requiring Google to delink some of these more recent articles from searches for a complainant's name, after Google refused to do so.[40] Google complied with the request.[41] Some academics have criticized news organizations and Google for their behavior.[42][43]

In July 2015, Google accidentally revealed data on delinkings that "shows 95% of Google privacy requests are from citizens out to protect personal and private information – not criminals, politicians and public figures."[44]

This data leak caused serious social consequences for Google as the public expressed their outrage and fear over the information that was recently made public. Though only 5% of requests were made by criminals, politicians, and public figures, the content removed was what sparked the most fear.[45] In particular, one request for data removal was from a British doctor requesting to have 50 links removed on past botched medical procedures. Google agreed to remove three search results containing his personal information.[45] The public voiced their outrage stating that removing such information can be used for manipulation and could lead to innocent people making uninformed decisions. Google responded to the public outrage by saying that when removing content they consider both the right of the individual and public interest.[45]

The European Union has been pushing for the delinkings requested by EU citizens to be implemented by Google not just in European versions of Google (as in google.co.uk, google.fr, etc.), but on google.com and other international subdomains. Regulators want delinkings to be implemented so that the law cannot be circumvented in any way. Google has refused the French Data Protection Agency's demand to apply the right internationally.[46] Due in part to their refusal to comply with the recommendation of the privacy regulating board Google has become the subject of a four-year-long antitrust investigation by the European Commission.[47] In September 2015, the French Data Protection Agency dismissed Google's appeal.[48]

The French Data Protection Agency appealed to the EU courts to seek action on Google for failing to delink across its global servers. In September 2019 the Court of Justice for the EU issued its decision, finding that Google is not required to delink on sites external to the EU, concluding that "Currently, there is no obligation under EU law, for a search engine operator who grants a request for de-referencing made by a data subject ... to carry out such a de-referencing on all the versions of its search engine."[49][50]

As of September 2015, the most delinked site is www.facebook.com. Three of Google's own sites, groups.google.com, plus.google.com and www.youtube.com are among the ten most delinked sites.[41] In addition to Google, Yahoo and Bing have also put up forms for making delinking requests.

In September 2019, the European Court of Justice ruled that the Right to be Forgotten did not apply outside of its member states.[51] The ruling meant that Google did not have to delete the names of individuals from all of its international versions.

In December 2022, the judges in Luxembourg further extended the Right to be Forgotten in the case C-460/20 TU, RE vs Google LLC. The case relates to two managers of a group of investment companies, who argued that three unflattering news articles should be ‘de-referenced’ from the search engine results of Google, when searching for their names. They claimed that the information presented in the articles was factually wrong, which raised the question whether search engine operators need to check the accuracy of the information. Additionally, the applicants required that photographs showing them on preview images — or thumbnails — when carrying out a search, ought to be removed. In this judgment the European Court of Justice largely agreed with the request of the applicants. Search engine operators such as Google are required to de-reference the respective information, if a person who seeks de-referencing submits 'relevant and sufficient' evidence capable of substantiating his or her request, and thereby manifests the inaccuracy of the information found (para. 72). For thumbnails an independent assessment must be carried out, but essentially the same thinking applies.[52]

Caselaw in Spain edit

In May 2014, the European Court of Justice ruled against Google in Costeja, a case brought by a Spanish man, Mario Costeja González, who requested the removal of a link to a digitized 1998 article in La Vanguardia newspaper about an auction for his foreclosed home, for a debt that he had subsequently paid.[53] He initially attempted to have the article removed by complaining to the Spanish Agency of data protection, which rejected the claim on the grounds that it was lawful and accurate, but accepted a complaint against Google and asked Google to remove the results.[54] Google sued in the Spanish Audiencia Nacional (National High Court) which referred a series of questions to the European Court of Justice.[55] The court ruled in Costeja that search engines are responsible for the content they point to and thus, Google was required to comply with EU data privacy laws.[56][57][58] On its first day of compliance only (May 30, 2014), Google received 12,000 requests to have personal details removed from its search engine.[59]

Caselaw in Germany edit

On October 27, 2009, lawyers for Wolfgang Werlé who—together with Manfred Lauber—was convicted of murdering Walter Sedlmayr sent the Wikimedia Foundation a cease and desist letter requesting that Werlé's name be removed from the English language Wikipedia article Walter Sedlmayr, citing a 1973 Federal Constitutional Court decision that allows the suppression of a criminal's name in news accounts once he is released from custody.[60][61][62] Previously, Alexander H. Stopp, attorney for Werlé and Lauber, had won a default judgment in German court, on behalf of Lauber, against the Wikimedia Foundation.[60] According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Werlé's lawyers also challenged an Internet service provider in Austria which published the names of the convicted killers.[63]

Wikimedia is based in the United States, where the First Amendment protects freedom of speech and freedom of the press. In Germany, the law seeks to protect the name and likenesses of private persons from unwanted publicity.[64] On January 18, 2008, a court in Hamburg supported the personality rights of Werlé, which under German law includes removing his name from archive coverage of the case.[65]

On November 12, 2009, The New York Times reported that Wolfgang Werlé had a case pending against the Wikimedia Foundation in a German court. The editors of the German-language Wikipedia article about Sedlmayr removed the names of the murderers,[60] which have since then been restored to the article. The Guardian observed that the lawsuit has led to the Streisand effect, an upsurge in publicity for the case resulting from the legal action.[66]

On December 15, 2009, the German Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof) in Karlsruhe ruled that German websites do not have to check their archives in order to provide permanent protection of personality rights for convicted criminals. The case occurred after the names of the brothers were found on the website of Deutschlandradio, in an archive article dating from July 2000.[67] The presiding judge Gregor Galke stated "This is not a blank check", and pointed out that the right to rehabilitation of offenders had been taken into consideration.[68][69]

On November 28, 2019, the German constitutional court in Karlsruhe ruled that German murderer Paul Termann has the right to be forgotten.[70]

General Data Protection Regulation edit

The 2012 draft European Data Protection Regulation Article 17 detailed the "right to be forgotten and to erasure".[71] Under Article 17 individuals to whom the data appertains are granted the right to "obtain from the controller the erasure of personal data relating to them and the abstention from further dissemination of such data, especially in relation to personal data which are made available by the data subject while he or she was a child or where the data is no longer necessary for the purpose it was collected for, the subject withdraws consent, the storage period has expired, the data subject objects to the processing of personal data or the processing of data does not comply with other regulation".[71]

The EU defines "data controllers" as "people or bodies that collect and manage personal data".[72] The EU General Data Protection Regulation requires data controllers who have been informed that an individual has requested the deletion of any links to or copies of information must "take all reasonable steps, including technical measures, in relation to data for the publication of which the controller is responsible, to inform third parties which are processing such data, that a data subject requests them to erase any links to, or copy or replication of that personal data. Where the controller has authorized a third party publication of personal data, the controller shall be considered responsible for that publication".[71] In the situation that a data controller does not take all reasonable steps then they will be fined heavily.[73]

The European Parliament was once "expected to adopt the proposals in first reading in the April 2013 Plenary session".[74] The right to be forgotten was replaced by a more limited right to erasure in the version of the GDPR adopted by the European Parliament in March 2014.[75][76] Article 17 provides that the data subject has the right to request erasure of personal data related to him on any one of a number of grounds including non-compliance with article 6.1 (lawfulness) that includes a case (f) where the legitimate interests of the controller is overridden by the interests or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject which require protection of personal data (see also Costeja).[77][78]

The European Union is a highly influential group of states, and this movement towards the right to be forgotten in the EU is a step towards its global recognition as a right. To support this, in 2012 the Obama Administration released a "Privacy Bill of Rights" to protect consumers online, and while this is not quite the strength of the EU law, it is a step towards recognition of the right to be forgotten.[79]

India edit

In April 2016, the Delhi High Court began to examine the issue after a Delhi banker requested to have his personal details removed from search results following a marital dispute.[80] In this case, due to the dispute being settled, the banker's request is valid.[80] The High Court has asked for a reply from Google and other search engine companies by September 19, upon which the court will continue to investigate the issue.[81]

In January 2017 the Karnataka High Court upheld the right to be forgotten, in a case involving a woman who originally went to court in order to get a marriage certificate annulled, claiming to have never been married to the man on the certificate.[82] After the two parties came to an agreement, the woman's father wanted her name to be removed from search engines regarding criminal cases in the high court.[82] The Karnataka High Court approved the father's request, stating that she had a right to be forgotten. According to the court, its ruling would align with western countries' decisions, which typically approve of the right to be forgotten when dealing with cases "involving women in general and highly sensitive cases involving rape or affecting the modesty and reputation of the person concerned."[82] The woman in this specific case was worried that the search results would affect her standing with her husband, as well as her reputation in society.[82]

As of February 2017, the Delhi High Court is hearing a case involving a man requesting to have information regarding his mother and wife to be removed from a search engine.[83] The man believes that having his name linked to the search is hindering his employment options.[83] The Delhi High Court is still working on the case, along with the issue of whether or not a right to be forgotten should be a legal standard in India.[83] Currently, there is no legal standard for the right to be forgotten, but if implemented, this would mean that citizens no longer need to file a case in order to request for information from search engines to be removed.[83] This case could have significant impacts on the right to be forgotten and search engines in India.

South Korea edit

In May 2016, South Korea's Communications Commission (KCC) announced citizens will be able to request search engines and website administrators to restrict their own postings from being publicly accessible.[84] The KCC released "Guidelines on the Right to Request Access Restrictions on Personal Internet Postings",[85] which took effect in June 2016 and do not apply to third party contents.[84] To the extent that the right to be forgotten concerns a data subject's right to limit the searchability of third party postings about him/her, the Guideline does not constitute a right to be forgotten.[86] Also, as to the right to withdraw one's own posting, critics have noted that people have been able to delete their own postings before the Guideline as long as they have retained their login credentials, and that people who have misplaced their login credentials were permitted to retrieve or receive new ones.[87] The only services significantly affected by the Guideline are Wiki-type services where people's contributions make logical sense only in response to or in conjunction with one another's contributions and therefore the postings are made permanent part of the mass-created content, but KCC made sure that the Guideline applies to these services only when the posting identifies the authors.[88]

The guidelines created by the KCC include that data subjects can remove content that includes the URL links, and any evidence consisting of personal information. The commission included different amendments to the guideline. This includes describing the Guidelines as a "minimum" and "preliminary"[89] precaution regarding privacy rights in vague areas of existing laws. The guideline encompasses foreign Internet companies that provide translation services for South Korean consumers. In order to have a person's information "forgotten" he or she has to go through a three step process:[90] the issue posted with the URL, proof of ownership of the post, grounds for the request. There are restrictions on each step. When posting the URL, the web operator has the right to preserve the posting issue. The second being that if the post is relevant to public interest, web operators will process this request on the terms of relevance.

Switzerland edit

The right to be forgotten was added in the constitution of the Canton of Geneva in the new article 21A[91] right to digital integrity voted on June 18, 2023.

United States edit

In law edit

Consideration of the right to be forgotten can be seen in US case law, specifically in Melvin v. Reid, and in Sidis v. FR Publishing Corp.[92]

In Melvin v. Reid (1931), an ex-prostitute was charged with murder and then acquitted; she subsequently tried to assume a quiet and anonymous place in society. However, the 1925 film The Red Kimono revealed her history, and she successfully sued the producer.[93][94] The court reasoned that "any person living a life of rectitude has that right to happiness which includes a freedom from unnecessary attacks on his character, social standing or reputation."[95]

In Sidis v. FR Publishing Corp. (1940), the plaintiff, William James Sidis, was a former child prodigy who wished to spend his adult life quietly, without recognition; however, this was disrupted by an article in The New Yorker.[96] The court held here that there were limits to the right to control one's life and facts about oneself, and held that there is social value in published facts, and that a person cannot ignore their celebrity status merely because they want to.[96]

There is opposition to further recognition of the right to be forgotten in the United States as commentators argue[who?] that it will contravene the right to freedom of speech and freedom of expression, or will constitute censorship, thus potentially breaching peoples' constitutionally protected right to freedom of expression in the United States Constitution.[97] These criticisms are consistent with the proposal that the only information that can be removed by user's request is content that they themselves uploaded.[clarification needed][97][98]

In a June 2014 opinion piece in Forbes, columnist Joseph Steinberg noted that "many privacy protections that Americans believe that they enjoy – even some guaranteed by law – have, in fact, been eroded or even obliterated by technological advances." Steinberg, in explaining the need for legislation guaranteeing the "right to be forgotten", noted that existing laws require adverse information be removed from credit reports after a period of time, and that allowing the sealing or expunging of criminals records are effectively undermined by the ability of prospective lenders or employers to forever find the removed information in a matter of seconds by doing a web search.[99]

On March 11, 2015, Intelligence Squared US, an organization that stages Oxford-Style debates, held an event centered on the question, "Should the U.S. adopt the 'Right to be Forgotten' online?" The side against the motion won with a 56% majority of the voting audience.[100]

While opinions among experts are divided in the U.S., one survey indicated that 9 in 10 Americans want some form of the right to be forgotten.[101] The consumer rights organization Consumer Watchdog has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission for Americans to obtain the right as well.[102]

In March 2017, New York state senator Tony Avella and assemblyman David Weprin introduced a bill proposing that individuals be allowed to require search engines and online speakers to remove information that is "inaccurate", "irrelevant", "inadequate", or "excessive", that is "no longer material to current public debate or discourse" and is causing demonstrable harm to the subject.[103]

By private entities edit

In January 2021, the Boston Globe announced a program to allow subjects of relatively inconsequential stories to have the stories contextualized, removed from Google searches or anonymized.[104]

Connection to international relations edit

The regulatory differences in the protection of personal data between countries has real impact on international relations. The right to be forgotten, specifically, is a matter of EU-US relations when applied to cross-border data flow, as it raises questions about territorial sovereignty. The structure of the Westphalian international system assumes that the reach of a country's jurisdiction is limited to its geographic territory.[105] However, online interactions are independent of geographic location and present across multiple locations, rendering the traditional concept of territorial sovereignty moot.[105] Therefore, the EU and the United States are forced to confront their regulatory differences and negotiate on a set of regulations that apply to all foreign companies processing and handling data of European citizens and residents.[105]

The regulatory differences on the right to be forgotten along with numerous other data protection rights have shaped discussions and negotiations on trans-Atlantic data privacy regulations. A case in point is the EU and the United States' endeavors to develop the Safe Harbor agreement, a data transfer pact that enables the transfer of data between the EU and US companies in a manner consistent with the EU's data protection schemes.[106] Article 25 of the Data Protection Directive articulates that cross-border transfer of data can take place only if the "third country in question ensures an adequate level of protection," meaning that the country meets the EU's minimum standards of data protection.[106] The standards include, among many provisions, a component that protects the right to "opt out" of further processing or transmission of personal data, under the assumption that data may not be further processed in ways inconsistent with the intent for which they were collected.[106]

Given the inconsistencies between the EU and the United States on numerous digital privacy regulations, including the right to be forgotten, Article 25 poses a threat to trans-Atlantic data flows. Therefore, the EU and the United States entered into negotiations to mediate the differences through the Safe Harbor agreement, which as a result of debate and discussion between the two parties, requires companies to provide individuals with the choice or opportunity to "opt out" and afford other protections.[106]

Under the pressures of the mass surveillance carried out by the US government on European citizens' data, the Safe Harbor agreement has been invalidated by the European Union Court of Justice in its Schrems case. The Safe Harbor agreement has now been replaced by the Privacy Shield principles.

Response and criticism edit

Response by reputation management firms edit

Businesses that manage their clients' online reputations have responded to the European Court ruling by exercising the right to be forgotten as a means to remove unfavorable information.[107] One technique used by reputation consulting firms is to submit multiple requests for each link, written with different angles in an attempt to get links removed. Google, for example, does not limit the number of requests that can be submitted on the removal of a given link.[108]

Criticism edit

Major criticisms stem from the idea that the right to be forgotten would restrict the right to freedom of speech.[109][110][111] Many nations, and the United States in particular (with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution), have very strong domestic freedom of speech laws, which would be challenging to reconcile with the right to be forgotten.[112] Some academics see that only a limited form of the right to be forgotten would be reconcilable with US constitutional law; the right of an individual to delete data that he or she has personally submitted.[97][98][113] In this limited form of the right individuals could not have material removed that has been uploaded by others, as demanding the removal of information could constitute censorship and a reduction in the freedom of expression in many countries.[114] Sandra Coliver of the Open Society Justice Initiative argues that not all rights must be compatible and this conflict between the two rights is not detrimental to the survival of either.[115]

The draft General Data Protection Regulation was written broadly and this has caused concern.[10] It has attracted criticism that its enactment would require data controlling companies to go to great lengths to identify third parties with the information and remove it.[116] The proposed regulation has also attracted criticism due to the fact that this could produce a censoring effect in that companies, such as Facebook or Google, will wish to not be fined under the act, and will therefore be likely to delete wholesale information rather than facing the fine, which could produce a "serious chilling effect."[116] In addition to this, there are concerns about the requirement to take down information that others have posted about an individual; the definition of personal data in Article 4(2) includes "any information relating to" the individual.[117] This, critics have claimed, would require companies to take down any information relating to an individual, regardless of its source, which would amount to censorship, and result in the big data companies eradicating a lot of data to comply with this.[118] Such removal can impact the accuracy and ability of businesses and individuals to carry out business intelligence, particularly due diligence to comply with anti bribery, anticorruption, and know your customer laws.[119] The right to be forgotten was invoked to remove from Google searches 120 reports about company directors published by Dato Capital, a Spanish company which compiles such reports about private company directors, consisting entirely of information they are required by law to disclose;[119][120] Fortune magazine examined the 64 reports relating to UK directorships, finding that in 27 (42%) the director was the only person named, in the remaining only the director and co-directors were named, and 23 (36%) involve directorships started since 2012.[120]

Other criticism revolves around the principle of accountability.[121]

There were concerns that the proposed General Data Protection Regulation would result in Google and other Internet search engines not producing neutral search results, but rather producing biased and patchy results, and compromising the integrity of Internet-based information.[116] To balance out this criticism, the proposed General Data Protection Regulation included an exception "for the processing of personal data carried out solely for journalistic purposes or the purpose of artistic or literary expression in order to reconcile the right to the protection of personal data with the rules governing freedom of expression."[71] Article 80 upheld freedom of speech, and while not lessening obligations on data providers and social media sites, nevertheless due to the wide meaning of "journalistic purposes" allows more autonomy and reduces the amount of information that is necessary to be removed.[5]: 9  When Google agreed to implement the ruling, European Commission Vice-President Viviane Reding said, "The Court also made clear that journalistic work must not be touched; it is to be protected."[122] However, Google was criticized for taking down (under the Costeja precedent) a BBC News blog post about Stan O'Neal by economics editor Robert Peston (eventually, Peston reported that his blog post has remained findable in Google after all).[123][124] Despite these criticisms and Google's action, the company's CEO, Larry Page worries that the ruling will be "used by other governments that aren't as forward and progressive as Europe to do bad things", though has since distanced himself from that position.[125] For example, pianist Dejan Lazic cited the "Right To Be Forgotten" in trying to remove a negative review about his performance from The Washington Post. He claimed that the critique was "defamatory, mean-spirited, opinionated, offensive and simply irrelevant for the arts".[126][127] and the St. Lawrence parish of the Roman Catholic church in Kutno, Poland asked Google to remove the Polish Wikipedia page about it,[128] (in Polish) without any allegations mentioned therein as of that date.

Index on Censorship claimed that the Costeja ruling "allows individuals to complain to search engines about information they do not like with no legal oversight. This is akin to marching into a library and forcing it to pulp books. Although the ruling is intended for private individuals it opens the door to anyone who wants to whitewash their personal history… The Court's decision is a retrograde move that misunderstands the role and responsibility of search engines and the wider Internet. It should send chills down the spine of everyone in the European Union who believes in the crucial importance of free expression and freedom of information."[129]

In 2014, the Gerry Hutch page on the English Wikipedia was among the first Wikipedia pages to be removed by several search engines' query results in the European Union.[130][131] The Daily Telegraph said, on 6 August 2014, that Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales "described the EU's Right to be Forgotten as deeply immoral, as the organisation that operates the online encyclopedia warned the ruling will result in an Internet riddled with memory holes".[132] Other commentators have disagreed with Wales, pointing to problems such as Google including links to revenge porn sites in its search results,[12][133] and have accused Google of orchestrating a publicity campaign to escape the burdensome obligation to comply with the law.[37][39] Julia Powles, a law and technology researcher at the University of Cambridge, made a rebuttal to Wales' and the Wikimedia Foundation concerns in an editorial published by Guardian, opining that "There is a public sphere of memory and truth, and there is a private one...Without the freedom to be private, we have precious little freedom at all."[134]

In response to the criticism, the EU has released a factsheet to address what it considers myths about the right to be forgotten.[135] In addition to this, for further clarification of the law, the factsheet provides information about the pivotal court case C-131/12 and frequently asked questions regarding Google, the purpose of the law, and how it works.[136]

Other criticisms involving the right to be forgotten revolves around the policies for data removal regarding minors. The U.S. has laws in place that protect the privacy of minors. The California Minor Eraser Law is a law that allows California residents under the age of 18 to request to have information removed that they posted on an online server. The law "applies to websites, social media sites, mobile apps and other online services"[137] and follows "Europe's recognition of the 'right to be forgotten'".[137] This law was put into effect on January 1, 2015 and remains in existence today. Online "service"[138] operators that have services "directed toward minors"[138] must update their privacy policies to include the option to remove data if requested by a minor that is posted on a service.

In the UK, the 2017 Conservative manifesto[139] included a pledge to allow social media platform users to remove outdated information that was posted when they were under the age of 18. "A Tory victory on the 8th of June will lead to those youthful indiscretions on Facebook and Twitter being open to erasure. But there are also plans to fine social media firms for not moving at the speed of political opportunism over extreme content."[139] The United Kingdom has not yet fully adopted the ruling of the European Court of Justice regarding the right to be forgotten and argued to keep it from going into EU law.[citation needed] However, in the upcoming elections in the UK laws could be passed to allow minors to remove embarrassing posts or photos on social media that could come back to affect job applications or public image in later life.

Theresa May, then Prime Minister of the UK, has pushed to extend privacy rights for minors in allowing them to have a right to delete information. The intentions for this extension of privacy are based on the fact that social media sites store years of data that affect minors lives' much later after the information is posted.[140] May gave her stance on privacy when she said, "'The Internet has brought a wealth of opportunity but also significant new risks which have evolved faster than society's response to them'".[140] The Conservative Party, which was headed by May from 2016 to 2019, has pushed for policies that aggressively remove illegal material from the Internet and fine firms that do not take action in removing said material.[140]

In 2015, Commission nationale de l'informatique et des libertés (CNIL) asked Google to remove data from all versions available in any part of the world. Google and other entities argued that European data regulators should not be allowed to decide what Internet users around the world find when they use a search engine.[141]

Research edit

 
Conceptual overview of Oblivion

Security researchers from CISPA, Saarland University[142] and the University of Auckland[143] proposed a framework, called Oblivion,[144] to support the automation of the right to be forgotten in a scalable, provable and privacy-preserving manner. Oblivion is a program that helps to "automate" the process of attempting to verify someone's personal information that could be found in a Google search result.[145] Google gets many take-down requests in a short amount of time, and Oblivion might help with this problem. Researchers and authors behind Oblivion say that "it is essential to develop techniques that at least partly automate this process and are scalable to Internet size."[145] Oblivion helps the humans who review the forms at Google ensure that antagonistic users cannot "blacklist links to Internet sources that do not affect them".[145] For example, tests have proven that Oblivion handles requests at a rate of 278 per second.[145] The software allows Google, the government, and the user to work together to get content removed quickly and for just cause. In order to ensure that the program works quickly, is secure for its users and is impervious to fake take-down requests, Oblivion uses a three-part system.

In the first part, Oblivion requires a user to submit identification about themselves – not limited to "name, age, and nationality".[145] Oblivion then enables a user to automatically find and tag his or her disseminated personal information using natural language processing and image recognition techniques and file a request in a privacy-preserving manner. Oblivion will scan the article for attributes that match information that has been submitted by the user. Second, Oblivion provides indexing systems with an automated and provable eligibility mechanism, asserting that the author of a request is indeed affected by an online resource. The author of a request is then issued an "ownership token"[145] that confirms the articles they submitted for evaluation include sensitive personal information. The automated eligibility proof ensures censorship-resistance so that only legitimately affected individuals can request the removal of corresponding links from search results. In the third and last phase, this "ownership token" is submitted to Google, accompanied by the user's concerns as to what information should be deleted.[145] Google's staff is then allowed to decide for themselves if they want to delete this information or not – but thanks to Oblivion, they know that the information in question is valid.

Researchers with Oblivion, however, have noted that it comes with some limitations. The software lacks a human element, therefore it cannot decide on its own "whether or not a piece of information is public interest and should therefore not be removed from Google search results".[145] Researchers have conducted comprehensive evaluations, showing that Oblivion is suitable for large-scale deployment once it is fine-tuned.[145]

Data deletion protocols around the death of a user is another consideration.[146]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Vaas, Lisa (25 September 2019). "Google wins landmark case: Right to be forgotten only applies in EU". Naked Security. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  2. ^ Sreeharsha, Vinod (19 August 2010). "Google and Yahoo Win Appeal in Argentine Case". New York Times.
  3. ^ "El derecho al olvido en Internet se deberá aplicar también en la Capital Federal". La Nación (in Spanish). 17 October 2014.
  4. ^ "Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Data Privacy Act of 2012". www.privacy.gov.ph. August 24, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Mantelero, Alessandro (2013). "The EU Proposal for a General Data Protection Regulation and the roots of the 'right to be forgotten'". Computer Law & Security Review. 29 (3): 229–235. doi:10.1016/j.clsr.2013.03.010.
  6. ^ a b c Weber, Rolf H. (2011). "The right to be forgotten: more than a Pandora's Box?". Journal of Intellectual Property, Information Technology and E-Commerce Law. 2: 120–130.
  7. ^ Pino, G. (2000). "The right to personal identity in Italian private law: Constitutional interpretation and judge-made rights". In Van Hoecke, M.; Ost, F. (eds.). The harmonization of private law in Europe. Oxford: Hart. pp. 225–237.
  8. ^ Hill, Kashmir (July 6, 2011). "Revenge Porn With A Facebook Twist". Forbes. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  9. ^ Crovitz, L. Gordon (2010-11-15). "Crovitz: Forget any 'Right to Be Forgotten'". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  10. ^ a b Fleischer, Peter (2011-03-09). "Privacy...?: Foggy thinking about the Right to Oblivion". Peterfleischer.blogspot.co.nz. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  11. ^ Mayes, Tessa (2014-05-21). "We have no right to be forgotten online". The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  12. ^ a b c d Arthur, Charles (4 July 2014). "What is Google deleting under the 'right to be forgotten' - and why? What if there were a page on a 'revenge porn' site about you - would you want to use Google's 'right to be forgotten' to get it taken out of search?". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  13. ^ Villamar, Lawrence (September 22, 2015). "Expert: Google Cannot Escape French Law on Right to Be Forgotten". Yibada. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  14. ^ "La Justicia Argentina Sobreseyó a Adriana Noreña, Directora General de Google". Infotechnology.com. 2012-09-21. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  15. ^ Carter, Edward L. "Argentina's Right to Be Forgotten." Emory International Law Review. 27 (2013): pg 23.
  16. ^ "Search engines not responsible for content". Buenos Aires Herald. 2013-09-05. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  17. ^ a b c d e Carter, Edward (January 2013). "Argentina's Right to be Forgotten". Emory International Law Review. 27 (1): 23.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Sixth Tone (2016-05-05). "Chinese Have No Right to Be Forgotten, Court Rules". Sixth Tone. Retrieved 2016-05-23.
  19. ^ Jingchun, Cao. "Protecting the Right to Privacy in China" (PDF).
  20. ^ a b c Hert, Paul; Papakonstantinou, Vagelis. "Policy Department Citizen's Right and Constitutional Affairs" (PDF).
  21. ^ a b Arthur, Charles (14 May 2014). "Explaining the 'right to be forgotten' – the newest cultural shibboleth". The Guardian.
  22. ^ Charte sur la publicité ciblée et la protection des internautes [Code of Good Practice on Targeted Advertising and the Protection of Internet Users] (PDF) (in French), Secrétariat d'Etat chargé de la Prospective et du Développement de l'économie numérique, 2010
  23. ^ Lynskey, Orla (May 2015). "Control over Personal Data in a Digital Age: Google Spain v AEPD and Mario Costeja Gonzalez" (PDF). Modern Law Review. 78 (3): 522–534. doi:10.1111/1468-2230.12126. S2CID 143317787.
  24. ^ Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data. EU Directive 1995.
  25. ^ Mitrou, Lilian; Karyda, Maria (2012). "EU's Data Protection Reform and the right to be forgotten—A legal response to a technological challenge?". 5th International Conference of Information Law and Ethics: 29–30. SSRN 2165245.
  26. ^ European Commission. Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Protection of Individuals with Regard to the Processing of Personal Data and On the Free Movement of Such Data (General Data Protection Regulation). 2012/0011 (COD). Article 17. Right to be forgotten and To Erasure
  27. ^ "EU Privacy Removal". www.google.com.
  28. ^ "How Google's New "Right To Be Forgotten" Form Works: An Explainer". Search Engine Land. 30 May 2014.
  29. ^ Brindle, Beth (4 March 2015). "How can Google forget you?". How Stuff Works. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  30. ^ a b Powles, Julia; Chaparro, Enrique. "How Google determined our right to be forgotten". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  31. ^ Kiss, Jemima (14 May 2015). "Dear Google: open letter from 80 academics on 'right to be forgotten'". The Guardian.
  32. ^ "Search Removal Request Under Data Protection Law in Europe". Google. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  33. ^ Sullivan, Danny (30 May 2014). "How Google's New 'Right to be Forgotten' Form Works: An Explainer". Search Engine Land. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  34. ^ Arthur, Charles (27 June 2014). "Google removing 'right to be forgotten' search links in Europe". The Guardian.
  35. ^ Martin, Alexander J. "'Right to be forgotten' festers as ICO and Google come to blows". The Register.
  36. ^ Dean, James. "Google could face legal action over 'right to be forgotten' rejections". The Times.
  37. ^ a b c Orlowski, Andrew (4 July 2014). "Google de-listing of BBC article 'broke UK and Euro public interest laws' - So WHY do it?". www.theregister.co.uk. The Register. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  38. ^ Drummond, David (10 July 2014). "We need to talk about the right to be forgotten". The Guardian.
  39. ^ a b Orlowski, Andrew (17 June 2014). "Slippery Google greases up, aims to squirm out of EU privacy grasp. Will the huge advertising firm manage to spin its way free of the law?". www.theregister.co.uk. The Register. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  40. ^ Gibbs, Samuel (20 August 2015). "Google ordered to remove links to 'right to be forgotten' removal stories". The Guardian.
  41. ^ a b "Transparency Report. European privacy requests for search removals". Google. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  42. ^ Powles, Julia (July 2015). "Why the BBC is wrong to republish 'right to be forgotten' links". The Guardian.
  43. ^ Boiten, Eerke. "Privacy watchdog takes first step against those undermining right to be forgotten". The Conversation.
  44. ^ Tippmann, Sylvia; Powles, Julia (14 July 2015). "Google accidentally reveals data on 'right to be forgotten' requests". The Guardian.
  45. ^ a b c Tippmann, Sylvia; Powles, Julia (2015-07-14). "Google accidentally reveals data on 'right to be forgotten' requests". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2016-02-29.
  46. ^ Hern, Alex (30 July 2015). "Google says non to French demand to expand right to be forgotten worldwide". The Guardian.
  47. ^ "EU wants 'right to be forgotten' applied globally". CNET. CBS Interactive.
  48. ^ Gibbs, Samuel (21 September 2015). "French data regulator rejects Google's right-to-be-forgotten appeal". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  49. ^ Chee, Foo Yun (24 September 2019). "Google wins landmark case limiting 'right to be forgotten' to Europe". Reuters. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  50. ^ "Press Release No112/19" (PDF). Court of Justice of the European Union. 24 September 2019. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  51. ^ Corfield, Gareth. "EU court rules Right To Be Forgotten doesn't apply outside member states". www.theregister.com. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  52. ^ Gstrein, Oskar Josef (2022). "The Right to be Forgotten in 2022-Luxembourg judges keep surfing the legislative void". Verfassungsblog: On Matters Constitutional. doi:10.17176/20221220-121718-0. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  53. ^ Powles, Julia (15 May 2014). . Wired.co.uk. Archived from the original on 16 May 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  54. ^ Solon, Olivia (13 May 2014). . Wired.co.uk. Conde Nast Digital. Archived from the original on 14 May 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  55. ^ European Court of Justice (13 May 2014). "Judgment of the Court of Justice in Case C-131/12: An internet search engine operator is responsible for the processing that it carries out of personal data which appear on web pages published by third parties" (Press release). Luxembourg. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  56. ^ "EU court backs 'right to be forgotten' in Google case". BBC News. 13 May 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  57. ^ "EU court rules Google must tweak search results in test of 'right to be forgotten'". CBS News. 13 May 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  58. ^ Streitfeld, David (13 May 2014). "European Court Lets Users Erase Records on Web". New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  59. ^ . Europe News.Net. Archived from the original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  60. ^ a b c Schwartz, John (November 12, 2009). "Two German Killers Demanding Anonymity Sue Wikipedia's Parent". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-11-13. Wolfgang Werlé and Manfred Lauber became infamous for killing a German actor in 1990. Now they are suing to force Wikipedia to forget them.
  61. ^ Kravets, David (November 11, 2009). "Convicted Murderer Sues Wikipedia, Demands Removal of His Name". Wired News. Wikipedia is under a censorship attack by a convicted murderer who is invoking Germany's privacy laws in a bid to remove references to his killing of a Bavarian actor in 1990.
  62. ^ "Cease and Desist letter" (PDF), Wired News, 2009
  63. ^ "Wikipedia sued for publishing convicted murderer's name". The Register.
  64. ^ Granick, Jennifer (10 November 2009). "Convicted Murderer To Wikipedia: Shhh!". Electronic Frontier Foundation. Who killed Sedlmayr? Its [sic] a matter of public record, but if one of the men and his German law firm gets their way, Wikipedia (and EFF) will not be allowed to tell you. A few days ago, the online encyclopedia received a cease and desist letter from one of the convicts—represented by the aptly named German law firm Stopp and Stopp—demanding that the perpetrator's name be taken off of the Sedlmayr article page.
  65. ^ "Abwägung bei einem Unterlassungsanspruch zwischen dem Recht auf freie Meinungsäußerung und dem Persönlichkeitsrecht (Resozialisierung) bei elektronischen Pressearchiven einen Mordfall betreffend" (in German). Hamburger Justiz. 18 January 2008. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  66. ^ Arthur, Charles (November 13, 2009). "Wikipedia sued by German killers in privacy claim". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  67. ^ "Vor 10 Jahren – Walter Sedlmayr ermordet". Deutschlandradio (in German). 14 July 2000. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
  68. ^ "Namen der Sedlmayr-Mörder bleiben online". Süddeutsche Zeitung. Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  69. ^ "BGH-Urteil – Keine ständige Kontrolle von Online-Archiven" (in German). Focus. December 15, 2009. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  70. ^ "Bundesverfassungsgericht - Entscheidungen - Auch bei gleichzeitiger Geltung der Unionsgrundrechte prüft das Bundesverfassungsgericht primär die deutschen Grundrechte *** Online-Pressearchive können zu Schutzvorkehrungen gegen die zeitlich unbegrenzte Verbreitung personenbezogener Berichte durch Suchmaschinen verpflichtet sein". 6 November 2019.
  71. ^ a b c d Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (General Data Protection Regulation) (PDF), European Commission, 2012, Article 17 "Right to be forgotten and to erasure"
  72. ^ "Who can collect and process personal data? - Justice". Ec.europa.eu. 2014-06-26. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  73. ^ "European Parliament gives overwhelming backing to new EU data protection laws". Out-law.com. March 12, 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  74. ^ "EUROPA - Press Releases - Press release - Data Protection Day 2014: Full Speed on EU Data Protection Reform". Europa.eu. January 27, 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  75. ^ Baldry, Tony; Hyams, Oliver (15 May 2014). "The Right to Be Forgotten". 1 Essex Court.
  76. ^ "European Parliament legislative resolution of 12 March 2014 on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (General Data Protection Regulation)". European Parliament.
  77. ^ Powles, Julia (21 May 2014). "What did the media miss with the 'right to be forgotten' coverage?". The Guardian.
  78. ^ "Factsheet on the 'Right to be Forgotten' ruling (case C-131/12)" (PDF). European Commission.
  79. ^ "Fact Sheet: Plan to Protect Privacy in the Internet Age by Adopting a Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights | The White House". whitehouse.gov. 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2014-08-09 – via National Archives.
  80. ^ a b "Delhi banker seeks 'right to be forgotten' online". The Times of India. May 2016. Retrieved 2016-05-23.
  81. ^ "What is the Right to be Forgotten and how it could affect you?". CatchNews.com. Retrieved 2016-05-23.
  82. ^ a b c d "In A First An Indian Court Upholds The 'Right To Be Forgotten' [Read Order] | Live Law". Live Law. 2017-02-03. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  83. ^ a b c d "Right to be forgotten: How a prudent Karnataka HC judgment could pave the way for privacy laws in India". Firstpost. 2017-02-07. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  84. ^ a b "South Korea Releases Right to Be Forgotten Guidance". bna.com. Retrieved 2016-05-23.
  85. ^ Guidelines on the Right to Request Access Restrictions on Personal Internet Postings"
  86. ^ "방통위, '잊혀질 권리 가이드라인' 제정". 2016-03-25. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  87. ^ 심재석 (2016-04-01). "[심재석의 입장] 방통위의 이상한 '잊혀질 권리 가이드라인'". Byline Network. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  88. ^ "'네이버 지식iN' 질문 글, 개인정보 남아 있을 때만 '잊혀질 권리' 적용". Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  89. ^ Lim, James. "South Korea Releases Right to Be Forgotten Guidance". Bloomberg BNA.
  90. ^ Yulchon LLC. "Korea Communications Commission Releases Guidelines On "The Right to Be Forgotten"". Mondaq.
  91. ^ Loi constitutionnelle modifiant la constitution de la République et canton de Genève (Cst-GE) (Pour une protection forte de l’individu dans l’espace numérique) (12945), ([1])
  92. ^ Melvin v. Reid, 112 Cal.App. 285, 297 P. 91 (1931); Sidis v F-R Publishing Corporation 311 U.S. 711 61 S. Ct. 393 85 L. Ed. 462 1940 U.S.
  93. ^ Melvin v. Reid, 112 Cal.App. 285, 297 P. 91 (1931)
  94. ^ Friedman, Lawrence Meir (2007). "The Red Kimono [sic]: The Saga of Gabriel Darley Melvin". Guarding Life's Dark Secrets: Legal and Social Controls over Reputation, Propriety, and Privacy. Stanford University Press. pp. 217–225. ISBN 978-0-8047-5739-3.
  95. ^ Melvin v. Reid, 112 Cal.App. 285, 297 P. 91 (1931) at 852-853
  96. ^ a b Sidis v F-R Publishing Corporation 311 U.S. 711 61 S. Ct. 393 85 L. Ed. 462 1940 U.S.
  97. ^ a b c Hendel, John (2012-01-25). "Why Journalists Shouldn't Fear Europe's 'Right to be Forgotten'". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  98. ^ a b Walker, Robert K. "The Right to be forgotten." 64 Hastings Law Journal 257, 2012. Pg 257.
  99. ^ Steinberg, Joseph (2014-06-02). "Your Privacy Is Now At Risk From Search Engines -- Even If The Law Says Otherwise". Forbes. Retrieved 2014-06-03.
  100. ^ "The U.S. Should Adopt the 'Right to Be Forgotten' Online". intelligencesquaredus.org.
  101. ^ Coffee, Patrick. "Hey Google: 9 in 10 Americans Want the 'Right to Be Forgotten'". Adweek.
  102. ^ Eng, James. "Consumer Watchdog: Google Should Extend 'Right To Be Forgotten' to U.S." NBC News.
  103. ^ "N.Y. bill would require people to remove 'inaccurate,' 'irrelevant,' 'inadequate' or 'excessive' statements about others". Washington Post. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  104. ^ "The Globe's Fresh Start initiative: Submit your appeal - The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com.
  105. ^ a b c Kobrin, Stephen J. (2004). "Safe harbours are hard to find: the trans-Atlantic data privacy dispute, territorial jurisdiction and global governance". Review of International Studies. 30: 111–131. doi:10.1017/S0260210504005856. S2CID 145063263.
  106. ^ a b c d The Council: Common Position (EC) no. 95
  107. ^ "The Inevitable Happened: First Company Provides "Right To Be Forgotten" Removal Service". Search Engine Land. 2014-06-25. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  108. ^ Scott, Mark (2014-07-08). "European Companies See Opportunity in the 'Right to Be Forgotten'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  109. ^ Volokh, Eugene (2000). "Freedom of Speech, Information Privacy, and the Troubling Implications of a Right to Stop People from Speaking about You". Stanford Law Review. 52 (5): 1049–1124. doi:10.2307/1229510. JSTOR 1229510.
  110. ^ Solove, Daniel J. (2003). "The Virtues of Knowing Less: Justifying Privacy Protections against Disclosure". Duke Law Journal. 53 (3): 967–1065 [p. 976]. JSTOR 1373222.
  111. ^ Mayes, Tessa (18 March 2011). "We have no right to be forgotten online". The Guardian.
  112. ^ Whitman, James Q. (2004). "The Two Western Cultures of Privacy: Dignity Versus Liberty". Yale Law Journal. 113 (6): 1151–1221 [p. 1161–2]. doi:10.2307/4135723. JSTOR 4135723.
  113. ^ Ryan, Timothy (2011-05-02). "The Right To Be Forgotten: Questioning The Nature Of Online Privacy". PSFK. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  114. ^ Bernal, Paul Alexander (2011). . European Journal of Law and Technology. 2 (2). Archived from the original on 2019-12-07. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
  115. ^ Coliver, Sandra. Editor. "Striking a Balance. Hate Speech, Freedom of Expression and Non-Discrimination." Article 19. (1992) International Centre against Censorship. Human Rights Centre. University of Essex.
  116. ^ a b c Rosen, Jeffrey (February 13, 2012). "The Right to Be Forgotten". Stanford Law Review. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  117. ^ "Document 52012PC0011 — Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (General Data Protection Regulation)". Eur-lex.europa.eu. 3.4.1. Chapter I - General Provisions, Article 4. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  118. ^ "Privacy laws: Private data, public rules". The Economist. 2012-01-28. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  119. ^ a b Wright, Jason (19 January 2015). "Some Things Should Not Be 'Forgotten'". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 16 February 2015. Consider the necessity for accurate business intelligence. Antibribery laws and "know your customer" regulations often require companies and individuals to do due-diligence checks on entities they want to do business with… The requirement for proper due diligence instils confidence, helps to prevent fraud and corruption, and informs businesses about potential risks… Several cases already illustrate how the "right to be forgotten" impedes business intelligence. Fortune magazine reported last year on Dato Capital, a company that compiles reports on the directors of private companies based in the United Kingdom and Spain… Dato's reports contained information that companies and directors are often required by law to disclose publicly, such as debt and financial history. Bleaching this from search results has made it more difficult for potential investors and business partners to understand the profile and history of individuals with whom they were considering doing business.
  120. ^ a b Parloff, Roger (21 October 2014). "Company directors are deep-sixing Google links citing 'right to be forgotten'". Fortune. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  121. ^ Zittrain, Jonathan (13 July 2014). "The right to be forgotten ruling leaves nagging doubts". Financial Times. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  122. ^ "'Right to be forgotten' and online search engines ruling" (Press release). European Commission. 2014-06-03. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
  123. ^ Peston, Robert (2 July 2014). "Why has Google cast me into oblivion?". BBC News. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
  124. ^ Scheer, Peter Z. (July 2, 2014). "The 'Right to Be Forgotten' Is Already Messing Up Journalism". Truthdig. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
  125. ^ Gibbs, Samuel (24 July 2014). "Google hauled in by Europe over 'right to be forgotten' reaction". The Guardian.
  126. ^ "Musician attempts use EU Right To Be Forgotten to hide a bad review". Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  127. ^ Dewey, Caitlin. "Pianist asks The Washington Post to remove a concert review under the E.U.'s 'right to be forgotten' ruling". The Washington Post. from the original on 14 November 2014.
  128. ^ "Notice of removal from Google Search" (PDF). WikiMedia Foundation. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  129. ^ "Index blasts EU court ruling on "right to be forgotten"". Index on Censorship. 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  130. ^ Chubb, Karla. "Request made to remove Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch from EU search results". Newstalk. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  131. ^ Curties, Sophie; Philipson, Alice (6 August 2014). "Wikipedia founder: EU's Right to be Forgotten is 'deeply immoral'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  132. ^ "Wikipedia founder: EU's Right to be Forgotten is 'deeply immoral'". The Telegraph. 6 August 2014. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  133. ^ Edwards, Lilian (29 July 2014). "Revenge porn: why the right to be forgotten is the right remedy". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  134. ^ Powles, Julia (8 August 2014). "Jimmy Wales is wrong: we do have a personal right to be forgotten". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  135. ^ . European Commission's Directorate General for Justice and Consumers. 18 September 2014. Archived from the original on 24 September 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2018 – via archive.org.
  136. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-12-12. Retrieved 2020-03-02.
  137. ^ a b "California enacts "Right to be Forgotten" for Minors - Data Protection Report". Data Protection Report. 2015-01-14. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  138. ^ a b Lewis, Morgan; Kapoor, Bockius LLP-Rahul; Hirsch, W. Reece; Yaghoubi, Shokoh H. (12 July 2016). "Get to Know California's 'Online Eraser' Law | Lexology". Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  139. ^ a b "UK Election 2017 - Tories offer under-18s the Right to be Forgotten, threaten big fines for social media firms". diginomica. 2017-05-15. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  140. ^ a b c "May Tells Facebook to Offer Kids the Right to Delete Information". Bloomberg.com. 2017-05-12. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  141. ^ "France tries to impose 'Right to be Forgotten' globally. Google fights". September 17, 2018.
  142. ^ "CISPA: The Center for IT-Security, Privacy, and Accountability".
  143. ^ "School of Computer Science - The University of Auckland". www.auckland.ac.nz.
  144. ^ Simeonovski, Milivoj; Bendun, Fabian; Asghar, Muhammad Rizwan; Backes, Michael; Marnau, Ninja; Druschel, Peter (2015). "Oblivion: Mitigating Privacy Leaks by Controlling the Discoverability of Online Information". arXiv:1506.06033 [cs.CR].
  145. ^ a b c d e f g h i "'Oblivion' Is the Software That Could Automate the 'Right to Be Forgotten'". Motherboard. 22 June 2015. Retrieved 2016-02-29.
  146. ^ Lott-Lavigna, Ruby (17 February 2019). "The weird rise of cyber funerals". Wired UK. Retrieved 19 February 2019.

Further reading edit

Articles edit

  • Ausloos, Jef (2012). "The 'Right to be forgotten'—Worth remembering?". Computer Law & Security Review. 28 (2): 143–152. doi:10.1016/j.clsr.2012.01.006.
  • Bennett, Steven C. "Right to be forgotten: Reconciling EU and US Perspectives, The." Berkeley J. Int'l L. 30 (2012): 161.
  • Blackman, Josh. "Omniveillance, Google, Privacy in Public, and the Right to Your Digital Identity: A Tort for Recording and Disseminating an Individual's Image over the Internet." Santa Clara L. Rev. 49 (2009): 313.
  • Bolton, Robert, "The Right to Be Forgotten: Forced Amnesia in a Technological Age," 31 J. Marshall J. Info. Tech. & Privacy L. 133 (2015).
  • Castellano, Pere Simón. "The right to be forgotten under European Law: a Constitutional debate." (2012).
  • Gstrein, Oskar Josef (2020). "Right to be forgotten: european data imperialism, national privilege, or universal human right?". Review of European Administrative Law. 13 (1): 125–152. doi:10.7590/187479820X15881424928426. hdl:11370/c0c30877-189b-4fd0-b10e-5ab821bd58d3. S2CID 219133835. SSRN 3530995.
  • Koops, E. J. "Forgetting footprints, shunning shadows: A critical analysis of the 'right to be forgotten' in big data practice." SCRIPTed 8, no. 3 (2011): 229-256.
  • Palazzi, Pablo. "El reconocimiento en Europa del derecho al olvido en Internet." La Ley 10 de junio de 2014: (2014).
  • Palazzi, Pablo. "Derecho al olvido en Internet e información sobre condenas penales (a propósito de un reciente fallo holandés)." La Ley 17 de diciembre de 2014: (2014).
  • Rosen, Jeffrey. "The right to be forgotten." Stanford law review online 64 (2012): 88.
  • Simeonovski, Milivoj; Bendun, Fabian; Asghar, Muhammad Rizwan; Backes, Michael; Marnau, Ninja; Druschel, Peter. "Oblivion: Mitigating Privacy Leaks by Controlling the Discoverability of Online Information." The 13th International Conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security (ACNS 2015).
  • Gallo Sallent, Juan Antonio; "El Derecho al Olvido en Internet: Del Caso Google al Big Data" (2015) (ed.): CreateSpace,, Barcelona, España. ISBN 978-1511412124.
  • Tsesis, Alexander. "The Right to Erasure: Privacy and the Indefinite Retention of Data", 49 Wake Forest Law Review 433 (2014).

Books edit

  • Jones, Meg Leta (2016). Ctrl + Z: The Right to Be Forgotten. NYU Press. ISBN 978-1479881703.
  • Ausloos, Jef (2020). The Right to Erasure in EU Data Protection Law. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198847977.

Cases edit

Legislation edit

  • Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data. EU Directive 1995.
  • European Commission. Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Protection of Individuals with Regard to the Processing of Personal Data and On the Free Movement of Such Data (General Data Protection Regulation). 2012/0011 (COD). Article 3. "Territorial Scope."

External links edit

  • Google's 'Search removal request under European Data Protection law' form
  • Yahoo's Right to be Forgotten Request page
  • Bing's European Privacy Request form
  • List of European Data Protection Authorities (for appeals)
  • Guidelines on the implementation of the Court of Justice of the European Union judgment on Google Spain and inc v. Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD) and Mario Costeja González
  • Factsheet on the "Right to be Forgotten" ruling (C-131/12)
  • Google's Transparency Report (statistics and examples)
  • Report of the Advisory Council to Google on the Right to be Forgotten
  • Google's responses to the Questionnaire addressed to Search Engines by the Article 29 Working Party
  • List of BBC web pages which have been removed from Google's search results
  • Telegraph stories affected by EU 'right to be forgotten'
  • The Right to Be Forgotten: Forced Amnesia in a Technological Age
  • The Right to be Forgotten 2019-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • Understand Your Privacy Rights

right, forgotten, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, right, vanish, redirects, here, right, vanish, wikipedia. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Right to vanish redirects here For the right to vanish on Wikipedia see Wikipedia Courtesy vanishing For current Wikimedia practice see meta Right to vanish The right to be forgotten RTBF 1 is the right to have private information about a person be removed from Internet searches and other directories under some circumstances The concept has been discussed and put into practice in several jurisdictions including Argentina 2 3 the European Union EU and the Philippines 4 The issue has arisen from desires of individuals to determine the development of their life in an autonomous way without being perpetually or periodically stigmatized as a consequence of a specific action performed in the past 5 231 The right to be forgotten reflects the claim of an individual to have certain data deleted so that third persons can no longer trace them 6 121 It has been defined as the right to silence on past events in life that are no longer occurring 7 The right to be forgotten leads to allowing individuals to have information videos or photographs about themselves deleted from certain Internet records so that they cannot be found by search engines 6 As of 2011 update there were few protections against the harm caused by incidents such as revenge porn sharing or by pictures uploaded due to poor judgment 8 The right to be forgotten is distinct from the right to privacy The right to privacy constitutes information that is not publicly known whereas the right to be forgotten involves removing information that was publicly known at a certain time and not allowing third parties to access the information 6 122 9 There has been controversy about the practicality of establishing a right to be forgotten in respect to access of information as an international human right This is partly due to the vagueness of current rulings attempting to implement such a right 10 self published source Furthermore there are concerns about its impact on the right to freedom of expression its interaction with the right to privacy and whether creating a right to be forgotten would decrease the quality of the Internet through censorship and the rewriting of history 11 Those in favor of the right to be forgotten cite its necessity due to issues such as revenge porn sites appearing in search engine listings for a person s name as well as instances of these results referencing petty crimes individuals may have committed in the past The central concern lies in the potentially undue influence that such results may exert upon a person s online reputation almost indefinitely if not removed 12 Limitations of application in a jurisdiction include the inability to require removal of information held by companies outside the jurisdiction There is no global framework to allow individuals control over their online image However Professor Viktor Mayer Schonberger an expert from Oxford Internet Institute University of Oxford said that Google cannot escape compliance with the law of France implementing the decision of the European Court of Justice in 2014 on the right to be forgotten Mayer Schonberger said nations including the US had long maintained that their local laws have extra territorial effects 13 Contents 1 Recognition by jurisdiction 1 1 Argentina 1 2 China 1 3 European Union 1 3 1 Caselaw in Spain 1 3 2 Caselaw in Germany 1 3 3 General Data Protection Regulation 1 4 India 1 5 South Korea 1 6 Switzerland 1 7 United States 1 7 1 In law 1 7 2 By private entities 2 Connection to international relations 3 Response and criticism 3 1 Response by reputation management firms 3 2 Criticism 3 3 Research 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 6 1 Articles 6 2 Books 6 3 Cases 6 4 Legislation 7 External linksRecognition by jurisdiction editArgentina edit Argentina has seen lawsuits by celebrities against Google and Yahoo in which the plaintiffs demand the removal of certain search results and require removal of links to photographs 14 One case brought by artist Virginia da Cunha involved photographs which had originally been taken with her permission and uploaded with her permission however she alleged that the search results improperly associated her photographs with pornography 15 De Cunha s case achieved initial success resulting in Argentina search engines not showing images of the particular celebrity however this decision is on appeal 16 Virginia Simari the judge in favor of De Cunha stated that people have the right to control their image and avert others from capturing reproducing broadcasting or publishing one s image without permission 17 In addition Simari used a treatise written by Julio Cesar Rivera a Buenos Aires lawyer author and law professor the right to control one s personal data includes the right to prevent others from using one s image 17 Since the 1990s Argentina has also been a part of the habeas data movement in which they adopted a constitutional provision that is part freedom of government information law and part data privacy law 17 Their version is known as Amparo Article 43 17 explains it Any person shall file this action to obtain information on the data about himself and their purpose registered in public records or databases or in private ones intended to supply information and in case of false data or discrimination this action may be filed to request the suppression rectification confidentiality or updating of said data 17 Argentina s efforts to protect their people s right to be forgotten has been called the most complete by whom because individuals are able to correct delete or update information about themselves Overall their information is bound to remain confidential China edit In May 2016 Chinese courts in Beijing determined citizens do not have the right to be forgotten when a judge ruled in favor of Baidu in a lawsuit over removing search results 18 It was the first of such cases to be heard in Chinese court 18 In the suit Ren Jiayu sued Chinese search engine Baidu over search results that associated him with a previous employer Wuxi Taoshi Biotechnology 18 Ren argued that by posting the search results Baidu had infringed upon his right of name and right of reputation both protected under Chinese law 18 Because of these protections Ren believed he had a right to be forgotten by removing these search results 18 The court ruled against Ren claiming his name is a collection of common characters and as a result the search results were derived from relevant words 18 Nowhere in China s civil code are the concepts of privacy or the right to be forgotten discussed 19 There is no data protection authority nor a specific state agency in place to monitor the protection of citizens personal data In China today when data protection regulation is aimed at consumers on an individual level in contrast to the EU s right to privacy in which the individual is considered a data subject with the right to be protected 20 Chinese legislative progress towards supporting the right to be forgotten is slow The topic has been debated for more than 10 years now when and continues to be a challenge Small provisions have been implemented related to personal data processing but do not amount to a comprehensive data protection regime 20 The European Union Directorate General for Internal Policies has issued policy recommendations on a realistic rather than a legalistic basis for data protection as to the transfer of data between the EU and China vis a vis the latter s lack of compatible regulation in this area 20 European Union edit It has been suggested that this article should be split into a new article titled Right to be forgotten in the European Union discuss May 2022 This section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Europe s data protection laws do not implement a right to be forgotten but a more limited right to data erasure Variations on the concept a right to be forgotten have existed in Europe for many years including In the United Kingdom such as under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act of 1974 there is the idea that after a certain period of time many criminal convictions are spent meaning that information regarding said person should not be considered when obtaining insurance or seeking employment In France le droit a l oubli the right to be forgotten 21 was enacted in French Law in 2010 22 Views on the right to be forgotten differ greatly between the United States and EU countries In the United States transparency the right of free speech according to the First Amendment and the right to know are typically favored over removing or increasing difficulty to access truthfully published information regarding individuals and corporations Although the term right to be forgotten is a relatively new idea the European Court of Justice legally solidified that the right to be forgotten is a human right when they ruled against Google in the Costeja case on May 13 2014 23 In 1995 the European Union adopted the European Data Protection Directive Directive 95 46 EC to regulate the processing of personal data 24 This is now considered a component of human rights law 25 The new European General Data Protection Regulation provides protection and exemption for companies listed as media companies like newspapers and other journalistic work However Google purposely opted out of being classified as a media company therefore the company is not protected Judges in the European Union ruled that because the international corporation Google is a collector and processor of data it should be classified as a data controller under the meaning of the EU data protection directive These data controllers are required under EU law to remove data that is inadequate irrelevant or no longer relevant making this directive of global importance 21 In Article 12 of the Directive 95 46 EC the EU gave a legal basis to Internet protection for individuals 5 233 In 2012 the European Commission disclosed a draft European Data Protection Regulation to supersede the directive which included specific protection in the right to be forgotten in Article 17 26 A right to be forgotten was replaced by a more limited right of erasure in Article 17 of the version of the GDPR that was adopted by the European Parliament in March 2014 and which became EU law in April 2016 To exercise the right to be forgotten and request removal from a search engine one must complete a form through the search engine s website Google s removal request process requires the applicant to identify their country of residence personal information a list of the URLs to be removed along with a short description and in some cases attachment of legal identification 27 The applicant receives an email from Google confirming the request but the request must be assessed before it is approved for removal If the request is approved searches using the individual s name will no longer result in the content appearing in search results The content remains online and is not erased 28 After a request is filled their removals team reviews the request weighing the individual s right to privacy against the public s right to know deciding if the website is inadequate irrelevant or no longer relevant or excessive in relation to the purposes for which they were processed 29 Google has formed an Advisory Council of various professors lawyers and government officials from around Europe to provide guidelines for these decisions 30 However the review process is still a mystery to the general public Guidelines set by EU regulators were not released until November 2014 but Google began to take action on this much sooner than that which according to one author allowed them to shape interpretation to their own ends 30 In May 2015 eighty academics called for more transparency from Google in an open letter 31 The form asks people to select one of the 28 countries that make up the European Union as well as Iceland Liechtenstein Norway and Switzerland 32 The form allows an individual or someone representing an individual to put in a request for the removal of any URLs believed to be a violation of the individual s privacy 33 Regardless of who is submitting the form some form of photo identification of the person the form is being submitted for must be present This is meant to serve as proof that the person for whom the request was made for does in fact approve If Google refuses a request to delink material Europeans can appeal to their local data protection agency 34 As of May 2015 the British Data Protection Agency had treated 184 such complaints and overturned Google s decision in about a quarter of those 35 If Google fails to comply with a Data Protection Agency decision it can face legal action 36 In July 2014 in the early stages of Google s effort to comply with the court ruling legal experts questioned whether Google s widely publicized delistings of a number of news articles violated the UK and EU Data Protection Directive since in implementing the Directive Google is required to weigh the damage to the person making the request against any public interest in the information being available 37 Google indeed acknowledged that some of its search result removals affecting articles that were of public interest were incorrect and reinstated the links a week later 12 38 Commentators like Charles Arthur technology editor of The Guardian and Andrew Orlowski of The Register noted that Google is not required to comply with removal requests at all as it can refer requests to the information commissioner in the relevant country for a decision weighing the respective merits of public interest and individual rights 12 37 39 Google notifies websites that have URLs delinked and various news organizations such as BBC have published lists of delinked articles Complainants have been named in news commentary regarding those delinkings In August 2015 the British Data Protection Agency issued an enforcement action requiring Google to delink some of these more recent articles from searches for a complainant s name after Google refused to do so 40 Google complied with the request 41 Some academics have criticized news organizations and Google for their behavior 42 43 In July 2015 Google accidentally revealed data on delinkings that shows 95 of Google privacy requests are from citizens out to protect personal and private information not criminals politicians and public figures 44 This data leak caused serious social consequences for Google as the public expressed their outrage and fear over the information that was recently made public Though only 5 of requests were made by criminals politicians and public figures the content removed was what sparked the most fear 45 In particular one request for data removal was from a British doctor requesting to have 50 links removed on past botched medical procedures Google agreed to remove three search results containing his personal information 45 The public voiced their outrage stating that removing such information can be used for manipulation and could lead to innocent people making uninformed decisions Google responded to the public outrage by saying that when removing content they consider both the right of the individual and public interest 45 The European Union has been pushing for the delinkings requested by EU citizens to be implemented by Google not just in European versions of Google as in google co uk google fr etc but on google com and other international subdomains Regulators want delinkings to be implemented so that the law cannot be circumvented in any way Google has refused the French Data Protection Agency s demand to apply the right internationally 46 Due in part to their refusal to comply with the recommendation of the privacy regulating board Google has become the subject of a four year long antitrust investigation by the European Commission 47 In September 2015 the French Data Protection Agency dismissed Google s appeal 48 The French Data Protection Agency appealed to the EU courts to seek action on Google for failing to delink across its global servers In September 2019 the Court of Justice for the EU issued its decision finding that Google is not required to delink on sites external to the EU concluding that Currently there is no obligation under EU law for a search engine operator who grants a request for de referencing made by a data subject to carry out such a de referencing on all the versions of its search engine 49 50 As of September 2015 the most delinked site is www facebook com Three of Google s own sites groups google com plus google com and www youtube com are among the ten most delinked sites 41 In addition to Google Yahoo and Bing have also put up forms for making delinking requests In September 2019 the European Court of Justice ruled that the Right to be Forgotten did not apply outside of its member states 51 The ruling meant that Google did not have to delete the names of individuals from all of its international versions In December 2022 the judges in Luxembourg further extended the Right to be Forgotten in the case C 460 20 TU RE vs Google LLC The case relates to two managers of a group of investment companies who argued that three unflattering news articles should be de referenced from the search engine results of Google when searching for their names They claimed that the information presented in the articles was factually wrong which raised the question whether search engine operators need to check the accuracy of the information Additionally the applicants required that photographs showing them on preview images or thumbnails when carrying out a search ought to be removed In this judgment the European Court of Justice largely agreed with the request of the applicants Search engine operators such as Google are required to de reference the respective information if a person who seeks de referencing submits relevant and sufficient evidence capable of substantiating his or her request and thereby manifests the inaccuracy of the information found para 72 For thumbnails an independent assessment must be carried out but essentially the same thinking applies 52 Caselaw in Spain edit In May 2014 the European Court of Justice ruled against Google in Costeja a case brought by a Spanish man Mario Costeja Gonzalez who requested the removal of a link to a digitized 1998 article in La Vanguardia newspaper about an auction for his foreclosed home for a debt that he had subsequently paid 53 He initially attempted to have the article removed by complaining to the Spanish Agency of data protection which rejected the claim on the grounds that it was lawful and accurate but accepted a complaint against Google and asked Google to remove the results 54 Google sued in the Spanish Audiencia Nacional National High Court which referred a series of questions to the European Court of Justice 55 The court ruled in Costeja that search engines are responsible for the content they point to and thus Google was required to comply with EU data privacy laws 56 57 58 On its first day of compliance only May 30 2014 Google received 12 000 requests to have personal details removed from its search engine 59 Caselaw in Germany edit On October 27 2009 lawyers for Wolfgang Werle who together with Manfred Lauber was convicted of murdering Walter Sedlmayr sent the Wikimedia Foundation a cease and desist letter requesting that Werle s name be removed from the English language Wikipedia article Walter Sedlmayr citing a 1973 Federal Constitutional Court decision that allows the suppression of a criminal s name in news accounts once he is released from custody 60 61 62 Previously Alexander H Stopp attorney for Werle and Lauber had won a default judgment in German court on behalf of Lauber against the Wikimedia Foundation 60 According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation Werle s lawyers also challenged an Internet service provider in Austria which published the names of the convicted killers 63 Wikimedia is based in the United States where the First Amendment protects freedom of speech and freedom of the press In Germany the law seeks to protect the name and likenesses of private persons from unwanted publicity 64 On January 18 2008 a court in Hamburg supported the personality rights of Werle which under German law includes removing his name from archive coverage of the case 65 On November 12 2009 The New York Times reported that Wolfgang Werle had a case pending against the Wikimedia Foundation in a German court The editors of the German language Wikipedia article about Sedlmayr removed the names of the murderers 60 which have since then been restored to the article The Guardian observed that the lawsuit has led to the Streisand effect an upsurge in publicity for the case resulting from the legal action 66 On December 15 2009 the German Federal Court of Justice Bundesgerichtshof in Karlsruhe ruled that German websites do not have to check their archives in order to provide permanent protection of personality rights for convicted criminals The case occurred after the names of the brothers were found on the website of Deutschlandradio in an archive article dating from July 2000 67 The presiding judge Gregor Galke stated This is not a blank check and pointed out that the right to rehabilitation of offenders had been taken into consideration 68 69 On November 28 2019 the German constitutional court in Karlsruhe ruled that German murderer Paul Termann has the right to be forgotten 70 General Data Protection Regulation edit Main article General Data Protection Regulation This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2018 The 2012 draft European Data Protection Regulation Article 17 detailed the right to be forgotten and to erasure 71 Under Article 17 individuals to whom the data appertains are granted the right to obtain from the controller the erasure of personal data relating to them and the abstention from further dissemination of such data especially in relation to personal data which are made available by the data subject while he or she was a child or where the data is no longer necessary for the purpose it was collected for the subject withdraws consent the storage period has expired the data subject objects to the processing of personal data or the processing of data does not comply with other regulation 71 The EU defines data controllers as people or bodies that collect and manage personal data 72 The EU General Data Protection Regulation requires data controllers who have been informed that an individual has requested the deletion of any links to or copies of information must take all reasonable steps including technical measures in relation to data for the publication of which the controller is responsible to inform third parties which are processing such data that a data subject requests them to erase any links to or copy or replication of that personal data Where the controller has authorized a third party publication of personal data the controller shall be considered responsible for that publication 71 In the situation that a data controller does not take all reasonable steps then they will be fined heavily 73 The European Parliament was once expected to adopt the proposals in first reading in the April 2013 Plenary session 74 The right to be forgotten was replaced by a more limited right to erasure in the version of the GDPR adopted by the European Parliament in March 2014 75 76 Article 17 provides that the data subject has the right to request erasure of personal data related to him on any one of a number of grounds including non compliance with article 6 1 lawfulness that includes a case f where the legitimate interests of the controller is overridden by the interests or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject which require protection of personal data see also Costeja 77 78 The European Union is a highly influential group of states and this movement towards the right to be forgotten in the EU is a step towards its global recognition as a right To support this in 2012 the Obama Administration released a Privacy Bill of Rights to protect consumers online and while this is not quite the strength of the EU law it is a step towards recognition of the right to be forgotten 79 India edit See also Personal Data Protection Bill 2019 In April 2016 the Delhi High Court began to examine the issue after a Delhi banker requested to have his personal details removed from search results following a marital dispute 80 In this case due to the dispute being settled the banker s request is valid 80 The High Court has asked for a reply from Google and other search engine companies by September 19 upon which the court will continue to investigate the issue 81 In January 2017 the Karnataka High Court upheld the right to be forgotten in a case involving a woman who originally went to court in order to get a marriage certificate annulled claiming to have never been married to the man on the certificate 82 After the two parties came to an agreement the woman s father wanted her name to be removed from search engines regarding criminal cases in the high court 82 The Karnataka High Court approved the father s request stating that she had a right to be forgotten According to the court its ruling would align with western countries decisions which typically approve of the right to be forgotten when dealing with cases involving women in general and highly sensitive cases involving rape or affecting the modesty and reputation of the person concerned 82 The woman in this specific case was worried that the search results would affect her standing with her husband as well as her reputation in society 82 As of February 2017 the Delhi High Court is hearing a case involving a man requesting to have information regarding his mother and wife to be removed from a search engine 83 The man believes that having his name linked to the search is hindering his employment options 83 The Delhi High Court is still working on the case along with the issue of whether or not a right to be forgotten should be a legal standard in India 83 Currently there is no legal standard for the right to be forgotten but if implemented this would mean that citizens no longer need to file a case in order to request for information from search engines to be removed 83 This case could have significant impacts on the right to be forgotten and search engines in India South Korea edit In May 2016 South Korea s Communications Commission KCC announced citizens will be able to request search engines and website administrators to restrict their own postings from being publicly accessible 84 The KCC released Guidelines on the Right to Request Access Restrictions on Personal Internet Postings 85 which took effect in June 2016 and do not apply to third party contents 84 To the extent that the right to be forgotten concerns a data subject s right to limit the searchability of third party postings about him her the Guideline does not constitute a right to be forgotten 86 Also as to the right to withdraw one s own posting critics have noted that people have been able to delete their own postings before the Guideline as long as they have retained their login credentials and that people who have misplaced their login credentials were permitted to retrieve or receive new ones 87 The only services significantly affected by the Guideline are Wiki type services where people s contributions make logical sense only in response to or in conjunction with one another s contributions and therefore the postings are made permanent part of the mass created content but KCC made sure that the Guideline applies to these services only when the posting identifies the authors 88 The guidelines created by the KCC include that data subjects can remove content that includes the URL links and any evidence consisting of personal information The commission included different amendments to the guideline This includes describing the Guidelines as a minimum and preliminary 89 precaution regarding privacy rights in vague areas of existing laws The guideline encompasses foreign Internet companies that provide translation services for South Korean consumers In order to have a person s information forgotten he or she has to go through a three step process 90 the issue posted with the URL proof of ownership of the post grounds for the request There are restrictions on each step When posting the URL the web operator has the right to preserve the posting issue The second being that if the post is relevant to public interest web operators will process this request on the terms of relevance Switzerland edit The right to be forgotten was added in the constitution of the Canton of Geneva in the new article 21A 91 right to digital integrity voted on June 18 2023 United States edit In law edit Consideration of the right to be forgotten can be seen in US case law specifically in Melvin v Reid and in Sidis v FR Publishing Corp 92 In Melvin v Reid 1931 an ex prostitute was charged with murder and then acquitted she subsequently tried to assume a quiet and anonymous place in society However the 1925 film The Red Kimono revealed her history and she successfully sued the producer 93 94 The court reasoned that any person living a life of rectitude has that right to happiness which includes a freedom from unnecessary attacks on his character social standing or reputation 95 In Sidis v FR Publishing Corp 1940 the plaintiff William James Sidis was a former child prodigy who wished to spend his adult life quietly without recognition however this was disrupted by an article in The New Yorker 96 The court held here that there were limits to the right to control one s life and facts about oneself and held that there is social value in published facts and that a person cannot ignore their celebrity status merely because they want to 96 There is opposition to further recognition of the right to be forgotten in the United States as commentators argue who that it will contravene the right to freedom of speech and freedom of expression or will constitute censorship thus potentially breaching peoples constitutionally protected right to freedom of expression in the United States Constitution 97 These criticisms are consistent with the proposal that the only information that can be removed by user s request is content that they themselves uploaded clarification needed 97 98 In a June 2014 opinion piece in Forbes columnist Joseph Steinberg noted that many privacy protections that Americans believe that they enjoy even some guaranteed by law have in fact been eroded or even obliterated by technological advances Steinberg in explaining the need for legislation guaranteeing the right to be forgotten noted that existing laws require adverse information be removed from credit reports after a period of time and that allowing the sealing or expunging of criminals records are effectively undermined by the ability of prospective lenders or employers to forever find the removed information in a matter of seconds by doing a web search 99 On March 11 2015 Intelligence Squared US an organization that stages Oxford Style debates held an event centered on the question Should the U S adopt the Right to be Forgotten online The side against the motion won with a 56 majority of the voting audience 100 While opinions among experts are divided in the U S one survey indicated that 9 in 10 Americans want some form of the right to be forgotten 101 The consumer rights organization Consumer Watchdog has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission for Americans to obtain the right as well 102 In March 2017 New York state senator Tony Avella and assemblyman David Weprin introduced a bill proposing that individuals be allowed to require search engines and online speakers to remove information that is inaccurate irrelevant inadequate or excessive that is no longer material to current public debate or discourse and is causing demonstrable harm to the subject 103 By private entities edit In January 2021 the Boston Globe announced a program to allow subjects of relatively inconsequential stories to have the stories contextualized removed from Google searches or anonymized 104 Connection to international relations editThe regulatory differences in the protection of personal data between countries has real impact on international relations The right to be forgotten specifically is a matter of EU US relations when applied to cross border data flow as it raises questions about territorial sovereignty The structure of the Westphalian international system assumes that the reach of a country s jurisdiction is limited to its geographic territory 105 However online interactions are independent of geographic location and present across multiple locations rendering the traditional concept of territorial sovereignty moot 105 Therefore the EU and the United States are forced to confront their regulatory differences and negotiate on a set of regulations that apply to all foreign companies processing and handling data of European citizens and residents 105 The regulatory differences on the right to be forgotten along with numerous other data protection rights have shaped discussions and negotiations on trans Atlantic data privacy regulations A case in point is the EU and the United States endeavors to develop the Safe Harbor agreement a data transfer pact that enables the transfer of data between the EU and US companies in a manner consistent with the EU s data protection schemes 106 Article 25 of the Data Protection Directive articulates that cross border transfer of data can take place only if the third country in question ensures an adequate level of protection meaning that the country meets the EU s minimum standards of data protection 106 The standards include among many provisions a component that protects the right to opt out of further processing or transmission of personal data under the assumption that data may not be further processed in ways inconsistent with the intent for which they were collected 106 Given the inconsistencies between the EU and the United States on numerous digital privacy regulations including the right to be forgotten Article 25 poses a threat to trans Atlantic data flows Therefore the EU and the United States entered into negotiations to mediate the differences through the Safe Harbor agreement which as a result of debate and discussion between the two parties requires companies to provide individuals with the choice or opportunity to opt out and afford other protections 106 Under the pressures of the mass surveillance carried out by the US government on European citizens data the Safe Harbor agreement has been invalidated by the European Union Court of Justice in its Schrems case The Safe Harbor agreement has now been replaced by the Privacy Shield principles Response and criticism editResponse by reputation management firms edit Businesses that manage their clients online reputations have responded to the European Court ruling by exercising the right to be forgotten as a means to remove unfavorable information 107 One technique used by reputation consulting firms is to submit multiple requests for each link written with different angles in an attempt to get links removed Google for example does not limit the number of requests that can be submitted on the removal of a given link 108 Criticism edit This section needs to be updated The reason given is the General Data Protection Regulation is no longer in draft Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2018 Major criticisms stem from the idea that the right to be forgotten would restrict the right to freedom of speech 109 110 111 Many nations and the United States in particular with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution have very strong domestic freedom of speech laws which would be challenging to reconcile with the right to be forgotten 112 Some academics see that only a limited form of the right to be forgotten would be reconcilable with US constitutional law the right of an individual to delete data that he or she has personally submitted 97 98 113 In this limited form of the right individuals could not have material removed that has been uploaded by others as demanding the removal of information could constitute censorship and a reduction in the freedom of expression in many countries 114 Sandra Coliver of the Open Society Justice Initiative argues that not all rights must be compatible and this conflict between the two rights is not detrimental to the survival of either 115 The draft General Data Protection Regulation was written broadly and this has caused concern 10 It has attracted criticism that its enactment would require data controlling companies to go to great lengths to identify third parties with the information and remove it 116 The proposed regulation has also attracted criticism due to the fact that this could produce a censoring effect in that companies such as Facebook or Google will wish to not be fined under the act and will therefore be likely to delete wholesale information rather than facing the fine which could produce a serious chilling effect 116 In addition to this there are concerns about the requirement to take down information that others have posted about an individual the definition of personal data in Article 4 2 includes any information relating to the individual 117 This critics have claimed would require companies to take down any information relating to an individual regardless of its source which would amount to censorship and result in the big data companies eradicating a lot of data to comply with this 118 Such removal can impact the accuracy and ability of businesses and individuals to carry out business intelligence particularly due diligence to comply with anti bribery anticorruption and know your customer laws 119 The right to be forgotten was invoked to remove from Google searches 120 reports about company directors published by Dato Capital a Spanish company which compiles such reports about private company directors consisting entirely of information they are required by law to disclose 119 120 Fortune magazine examined the 64 reports relating to UK directorships finding that in 27 42 the director was the only person named in the remaining only the director and co directors were named and 23 36 involve directorships started since 2012 120 Other criticism revolves around the principle of accountability 121 There were concerns that the proposed General Data Protection Regulation would result in Google and other Internet search engines not producing neutral search results but rather producing biased and patchy results and compromising the integrity of Internet based information 116 To balance out this criticism the proposed General Data Protection Regulation included an exception for the processing of personal data carried out solely for journalistic purposes or the purpose of artistic or literary expression in order to reconcile the right to the protection of personal data with the rules governing freedom of expression 71 Article 80 upheld freedom of speech and while not lessening obligations on data providers and social media sites nevertheless due to the wide meaning of journalistic purposes allows more autonomy and reduces the amount of information that is necessary to be removed 5 9 When Google agreed to implement the ruling European Commission Vice President Viviane Reding said The Court also made clear that journalistic work must not be touched it is to be protected 122 However Google was criticized for taking down under the Costeja precedent a BBC News blog post about Stan O Neal by economics editor Robert Peston eventually Peston reported that his blog post has remained findable in Google after all 123 124 Despite these criticisms and Google s action the company s CEO Larry Page worries that the ruling will be used by other governments that aren t as forward and progressive as Europe to do bad things though has since distanced himself from that position 125 For example pianist Dejan Lazic cited the Right To Be Forgotten in trying to remove a negative review about his performance from The Washington Post He claimed that the critique was defamatory mean spirited opinionated offensive and simply irrelevant for the arts 126 127 and the St Lawrence parish of the Roman Catholic church in Kutno Poland asked Google to remove the Polish Wikipedia page about it 128 in Polish without any allegations mentioned therein as of that date Index on Censorship claimed that the Costeja ruling allows individuals to complain to search engines about information they do not like with no legal oversight This is akin to marching into a library and forcing it to pulp books Although the ruling is intended for private individuals it opens the door to anyone who wants to whitewash their personal history The Court s decision is a retrograde move that misunderstands the role and responsibility of search engines and the wider Internet It should send chills down the spine of everyone in the European Union who believes in the crucial importance of free expression and freedom of information 129 In 2014 the Gerry Hutch page on the English Wikipedia was among the first Wikipedia pages to be removed by several search engines query results in the European Union 130 131 The Daily Telegraph said on 6 August 2014 that Wikipedia co founder Jimmy Wales described the EU s Right to be Forgotten as deeply immoral as the organisation that operates the online encyclopedia warned the ruling will result in an Internet riddled with memory holes 132 Other commentators have disagreed with Wales pointing to problems such as Google including links to revenge porn sites in its search results 12 133 and have accused Google of orchestrating a publicity campaign to escape the burdensome obligation to comply with the law 37 39 Julia Powles a law and technology researcher at the University of Cambridge made a rebuttal to Wales and the Wikimedia Foundation concerns in an editorial published by Guardian opining that There is a public sphere of memory and truth and there is a private one Without the freedom to be private we have precious little freedom at all 134 In response to the criticism the EU has released a factsheet to address what it considers myths about the right to be forgotten 135 In addition to this for further clarification of the law the factsheet provides information about the pivotal court case C 131 12 and frequently asked questions regarding Google the purpose of the law and how it works 136 Other criticisms involving the right to be forgotten revolves around the policies for data removal regarding minors The U S has laws in place that protect the privacy of minors The California Minor Eraser Law is a law that allows California residents under the age of 18 to request to have information removed that they posted on an online server The law applies to websites social media sites mobile apps and other online services 137 and follows Europe s recognition of the right to be forgotten 137 This law was put into effect on January 1 2015 and remains in existence today Online service 138 operators that have services directed toward minors 138 must update their privacy policies to include the option to remove data if requested by a minor that is posted on a service In the UK the 2017 Conservative manifesto 139 included a pledge to allow social media platform users to remove outdated information that was posted when they were under the age of 18 A Tory victory on the 8th of June will lead to those youthful indiscretions on Facebook and Twitter being open to erasure But there are also plans to fine social media firms for not moving at the speed of political opportunism over extreme content 139 The United Kingdom has not yet fully adopted the ruling of the European Court of Justice regarding the right to be forgotten and argued to keep it from going into EU law citation needed However in the upcoming elections in the UK laws could be passed to allow minors to remove embarrassing posts or photos on social media that could come back to affect job applications or public image in later life Theresa May then Prime Minister of the UK has pushed to extend privacy rights for minors in allowing them to have a right to delete information The intentions for this extension of privacy are based on the fact that social media sites store years of data that affect minors lives much later after the information is posted 140 May gave her stance on privacy when she said The Internet has brought a wealth of opportunity but also significant new risks which have evolved faster than society s response to them 140 The Conservative Party which was headed by May from 2016 to 2019 has pushed for policies that aggressively remove illegal material from the Internet and fine firms that do not take action in removing said material 140 In 2015 Commission nationale de l informatique et des libertes CNIL asked Google to remove data from all versions available in any part of the world Google and other entities argued that European data regulators should not be allowed to decide what Internet users around the world find when they use a search engine 141 Research edit nbsp Conceptual overview of OblivionSecurity researchers from CISPA Saarland University 142 and the University of Auckland 143 proposed a framework called Oblivion 144 to support the automation of the right to be forgotten in a scalable provable and privacy preserving manner Oblivion is a program that helps to automate the process of attempting to verify someone s personal information that could be found in a Google search result 145 Google gets many take down requests in a short amount of time and Oblivion might help with this problem Researchers and authors behind Oblivion say that it is essential to develop techniques that at least partly automate this process and are scalable to Internet size 145 Oblivion helps the humans who review the forms at Google ensure that antagonistic users cannot blacklist links to Internet sources that do not affect them 145 For example tests have proven that Oblivion handles requests at a rate of 278 per second 145 The software allows Google the government and the user to work together to get content removed quickly and for just cause In order to ensure that the program works quickly is secure for its users and is impervious to fake take down requests Oblivion uses a three part system In the first part Oblivion requires a user to submit identification about themselves not limited to name age and nationality 145 Oblivion then enables a user to automatically find and tag his or her disseminated personal information using natural language processing and image recognition techniques and file a request in a privacy preserving manner Oblivion will scan the article for attributes that match information that has been submitted by the user Second Oblivion provides indexing systems with an automated and provable eligibility mechanism asserting that the author of a request is indeed affected by an online resource The author of a request is then issued an ownership token 145 that confirms the articles they submitted for evaluation include sensitive personal information The automated eligibility proof ensures censorship resistance so that only legitimately affected individuals can request the removal of corresponding links from search results In the third and last phase this ownership token is submitted to Google accompanied by the user s concerns as to what information should be deleted 145 Google s staff is then allowed to decide for themselves if they want to delete this information or not but thanks to Oblivion they know that the information in question is valid Researchers with Oblivion however have noted that it comes with some limitations The software lacks a human element therefore it cannot decide on its own whether or not a piece of information is public interest and should therefore not be removed from Google search results 145 Researchers have conducted comprehensive evaluations showing that Oblivion is suitable for large scale deployment once it is fine tuned 145 Data deletion protocols around the death of a user is another consideration 146 See also editArticle 29 Working Party Fundamental rights Information privacy International human rights law Internet privacy Martin v Hearst Corporation Right to disconnect Search engine privacy Thomas Goolnik Tiziana CantoneReferences edit Vaas Lisa 25 September 2019 Google wins landmark case Right to be forgotten only applies in EU Naked Security Retrieved 9 May 2021 Sreeharsha Vinod 19 August 2010 Google and Yahoo Win Appeal in Argentine Case New York Times El derecho al olvido en Internet se debera aplicar tambien en la Capital Federal La Nacion in Spanish 17 October 2014 Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Data Privacy Act of 2012 www privacy gov ph August 24 2016 a b c Mantelero Alessandro 2013 The EU Proposal for a General Data Protection Regulation and the roots of the right to be forgotten Computer Law amp Security Review 29 3 229 235 doi 10 1016 j clsr 2013 03 010 a b c Weber Rolf H 2011 The right to be forgotten more than a Pandora s Box Journal of Intellectual Property Information Technology and E Commerce Law 2 120 130 Pino G 2000 The right to personal identity in Italian private law Constitutional interpretation and judge made rights In Van Hoecke M Ost F eds The harmonization of private law in Europe Oxford Hart pp 225 237 Hill Kashmir July 6 2011 Revenge Porn With A Facebook Twist Forbes Retrieved 2014 08 09 Crovitz L Gordon 2010 11 15 Crovitz Forget any Right to Be Forgotten The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2014 08 09 a b Fleischer Peter 2011 03 09 Privacy Foggy thinking about the Right to Oblivion Peterfleischer blogspot co nz Retrieved 2014 08 09 Mayes Tessa 2014 05 21 We have no right to be forgotten online The Guardian Retrieved 2014 08 09 a b c d Arthur Charles 4 July 2014 What is Google deleting under the right to be forgotten and why What if there were a page on a revenge porn site about you would you want to use Google s right to be forgotten to get it taken out of search The Guardian Retrieved 11 August 2014 Villamar Lawrence September 22 2015 Expert Google Cannot Escape French Law on Right to Be Forgotten Yibada Retrieved October 20 2020 La Justicia Argentina Sobreseyo a Adriana Norena Directora General de Google Infotechnology com 2012 09 21 Retrieved 2014 08 09 Carter Edward L Argentina s Right to Be Forgotten Emory International Law Review 27 2013 pg 23 Search engines not responsible for content Buenos Aires Herald 2013 09 05 Retrieved 2014 08 09 a b c d e Carter Edward January 2013 Argentina s Right to be Forgotten Emory International Law Review 27 1 23 a b c d e f Sixth Tone 2016 05 05 Chinese Have No Right to Be Forgotten Court Rules Sixth Tone Retrieved 2016 05 23 Jingchun Cao Protecting the Right to Privacy in China PDF a b c Hert Paul Papakonstantinou Vagelis Policy Department Citizen s Right and Constitutional Affairs PDF a b Arthur Charles 14 May 2014 Explaining the right to be forgotten the newest cultural shibboleth The Guardian Charte sur la publicite ciblee et la protection des internautes Code of Good Practice on Targeted Advertising and the Protection of Internet Users PDF in French Secretariat d Etat charge de la Prospective et du Developpement de l economie numerique 2010 Lynskey Orla May 2015 Control over Personal Data in a Digital Age Google Spain v AEPD and Mario Costeja Gonzalez PDF Modern Law Review 78 3 522 534 doi 10 1111 1468 2230 12126 S2CID 143317787 Directive 95 46 EC on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data EU Directive 1995 Mitrou Lilian Karyda Maria 2012 EU s Data Protection Reform and the right to be forgotten A legal response to a technological challenge 5th International Conference of Information Law and Ethics 29 30 SSRN 2165245 European Commission Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Protection of Individuals with Regard to the Processing of Personal Data and On the Free Movement of Such Data General Data Protection Regulation 2012 0011 COD Article 17 Right to be forgotten and To Erasure EU Privacy Removal www google com How Google s New Right To Be Forgotten Form Works An Explainer Search Engine Land 30 May 2014 Brindle Beth 4 March 2015 How can Google forget you How Stuff Works Retrieved 22 May 2015 a b Powles Julia Chaparro Enrique How Google determined our right to be forgotten The Guardian Retrieved 22 May 2015 Kiss Jemima 14 May 2015 Dear Google open letter from 80 academics on right to be forgotten The Guardian Search Removal Request Under Data Protection Law in Europe Google Retrieved 22 May 2015 Sullivan Danny 30 May 2014 How Google s New Right to be Forgotten Form Works An Explainer Search Engine Land Retrieved 22 May 2015 Arthur Charles 27 June 2014 Google removing right to be forgotten search links in Europe The Guardian Martin Alexander J Right to be forgotten festers as ICO and Google come to blows The Register Dean James Google could face legal action over right to be forgotten rejections The Times a b c Orlowski Andrew 4 July 2014 Google de listing of BBC article broke UK and Euro public interest laws So WHY do it www theregister co uk The Register Retrieved 4 July 2014 Drummond David 10 July 2014 We need to talk about the right to be forgotten The Guardian a b Orlowski Andrew 17 June 2014 Slippery Google greases up aims to squirm out of EU privacy grasp Will the huge advertising firm manage to spin its way free of the law www theregister co uk The Register Retrieved 11 August 2014 Gibbs Samuel 20 August 2015 Google ordered to remove links to right to be forgotten removal stories The Guardian a b Transparency Report European privacy requests for search removals Google Retrieved 10 September 2015 Powles Julia July 2015 Why the BBC is wrong to republish right to be forgotten links The Guardian Boiten Eerke Privacy watchdog takes first step against those undermining right to be forgotten The Conversation Tippmann Sylvia Powles Julia 14 July 2015 Google accidentally reveals data on right to be forgotten requests The Guardian a b c Tippmann Sylvia Powles Julia 2015 07 14 Google accidentally reveals data on right to be forgotten requests The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2016 02 29 Hern Alex 30 July 2015 Google says non to French demand to expand right to be forgotten worldwide The Guardian EU wants right to be forgotten applied globally CNET CBS Interactive Gibbs Samuel 21 September 2015 French data regulator rejects Google s right to be forgotten appeal The Guardian Retrieved 23 September 2015 Chee Foo Yun 24 September 2019 Google wins landmark case limiting right to be forgotten to Europe Reuters Retrieved 24 September 2019 Press Release No112 19 PDF Court of Justice of the European Union 24 September 2019 Retrieved 2019 09 25 Corfield Gareth EU court rules Right To Be Forgotten doesn t apply outside member states www theregister com Retrieved 2020 11 10 Gstrein Oskar Josef 2022 The Right to be Forgotten in 2022 Luxembourg judges keep surfing the legislative void Verfassungsblog On Matters Constitutional doi 10 17176 20221220 121718 0 Retrieved 2023 01 14 Powles Julia 15 May 2014 What we can salvage from right to be forgotten ruling Wired co uk Archived from the original on 16 May 2014 Retrieved 16 May 2014 Solon Olivia 13 May 2014 People have the right to be forgotten rules EU court Wired co uk Conde Nast Digital Archived from the original on 14 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2014 European Court of Justice 13 May 2014 Judgment of the Court of Justice in Case C 131 12 An internet search engine operator is responsible for the processing that it carries out of personal data which appear on web pages published by third parties Press release Luxembourg Retrieved 13 May 2014 EU court backs right to be forgotten in Google case BBC News 13 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2014 EU court rules Google must tweak search results in test of right to be forgotten CBS News 13 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2014 Streitfeld David 13 May 2014 European Court Lets Users Erase Records on Web New York Times Retrieved 14 August 2014 Removal of Google personal information could become work intensive Europe News Net Archived from the original on 21 October 2014 Retrieved 2 June 2014 a b c Schwartz John November 12 2009 Two German Killers Demanding Anonymity Sue Wikipedia s Parent New York Times Retrieved 2009 11 13 Wolfgang Werle and Manfred Lauber became infamous for killing a German actor in 1990 Now they are suing to force Wikipedia to forget them Kravets David November 11 2009 Convicted Murderer Sues Wikipedia Demands Removal of His Name Wired News Wikipedia is under a censorship attack by a convicted murderer who is invoking Germany s privacy laws in a bid to remove references to his killing of a Bavarian actor in 1990 Cease and Desist letter PDF Wired News 2009 Wikipedia sued for publishing convicted murderer s name The Register Granick Jennifer 10 November 2009 Convicted Murderer To Wikipedia Shhh Electronic Frontier Foundation Who killed Sedlmayr Its sic a matter of public record but if one of the men and his German law firm gets their way Wikipedia and EFF will not be allowed to tell you A few days ago the online encyclopedia received a cease and desist letter from one of the convicts represented by the aptly named German law firm Stopp and Stopp demanding that the perpetrator s name be taken off of the Sedlmayr article page Abwagung bei einem Unterlassungsanspruch zwischen dem Recht auf freie Meinungsausserung und dem Personlichkeitsrecht Resozialisierung bei elektronischen Pressearchiven einen Mordfall betreffend in German Hamburger Justiz 18 January 2008 Retrieved January 13 2012 Arthur Charles November 13 2009 Wikipedia sued by German killers in privacy claim The Guardian London Retrieved 2009 11 15 Vor 10 Jahren Walter Sedlmayr ermordet Deutschlandradio in German 14 July 2000 Retrieved 2009 12 17 Namen der Sedlmayr Morder bleiben online Suddeutsche Zeitung Retrieved 2009 12 15 BGH Urteil Keine standige Kontrolle von Online Archiven in German Focus December 15 2009 Retrieved 2012 01 13 Bundesverfassungsgericht Entscheidungen Auch bei gleichzeitiger Geltung der Unionsgrundrechte pruft das Bundesverfassungsgericht primar die deutschen Grundrechte Online Pressearchive konnen zu Schutzvorkehrungen gegen die zeitlich unbegrenzte Verbreitung personenbezogener Berichte durch Suchmaschinen verpflichtet sein 6 November 2019 a b c d Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data General Data Protection Regulation PDF European Commission 2012 Article 17 Right to be forgotten and to erasure Who can collect and process personal data Justice Ec europa eu 2014 06 26 Retrieved 2014 08 09 European Parliament gives overwhelming backing to new EU data protection laws Out law com March 12 2014 Retrieved 2014 08 09 EUROPA Press Releases Press release Data Protection Day 2014 Full Speed on EU Data Protection Reform Europa eu January 27 2014 Retrieved 2014 08 09 Baldry Tony Hyams Oliver 15 May 2014 The Right to Be Forgotten 1 Essex Court European Parliament legislative resolution of 12 March 2014 on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data General Data Protection Regulation European Parliament Powles Julia 21 May 2014 What did the media miss with the right to be forgotten coverage The Guardian Factsheet on the Right to be Forgotten ruling case C 131 12 PDF European Commission Fact Sheet Plan to Protect Privacy in the Internet Age by Adopting a Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights The White House whitehouse gov 2012 02 23 Retrieved 2014 08 09 via National Archives a b Delhi banker seeks right to be forgotten online The Times of India May 2016 Retrieved 2016 05 23 What is the Right to be Forgotten and how it could affect you CatchNews com Retrieved 2016 05 23 a b c d In A First An Indian Court Upholds The Right To Be Forgotten Read Order Live Law Live Law 2017 02 03 Retrieved 2017 03 03 a b c d Right to be forgotten How a prudent Karnataka HC judgment could pave the way for privacy laws in India Firstpost 2017 02 07 Retrieved 2017 03 03 a b South Korea Releases Right to Be Forgotten Guidance bna com Retrieved 2016 05 23 Guidelines on the Right to Request Access Restrictions on Personal Internet Postings 방통위 잊혀질 권리 가이드라인 제정 2016 03 25 Retrieved 2016 09 18 심재석 2016 04 01 심재석의 입장 방통위의 이상한 잊혀질 권리 가이드라인 Byline Network Retrieved 2016 09 18 네이버 지식iN 질문 글 개인정보 남아 있을 때만 잊혀질 권리 적용 Retrieved 2016 09 18 Lim James South Korea Releases Right to Be Forgotten Guidance Bloomberg BNA Yulchon LLC Korea Communications Commission Releases Guidelines On The Right to Be Forgotten Mondaq Loi constitutionnelle modifiant la constitution de la Republique et canton de Geneve Cst GE Pour une protection forte de l individu dans l espace numerique 12945 1 Melvin v Reid 112 Cal App 285 297 P 91 1931 Sidis v F R Publishing Corporation 311 U S 711 61 S Ct 393 85 L Ed 462 1940 U S Melvin v Reid 112 Cal App 285 297 P 91 1931 Friedman Lawrence Meir 2007 The Red Kimono sic The Saga of Gabriel Darley Melvin Guarding Life s Dark Secrets Legal and Social Controls over Reputation Propriety and Privacy Stanford University Press pp 217 225 ISBN 978 0 8047 5739 3 Melvin v Reid 112 Cal App 285 297 P 91 1931 at 852 853 a b Sidis v F R Publishing Corporation 311 U S 711 61 S Ct 393 85 L Ed 462 1940 U S a b c Hendel John 2012 01 25 Why Journalists Shouldn t Fear Europe s Right to be Forgotten The Atlantic Retrieved 2014 08 09 a b Walker Robert K The Right to be forgotten 64 Hastings Law Journal 257 2012 Pg 257 Steinberg Joseph 2014 06 02 Your Privacy Is Now At Risk From Search Engines Even If The Law Says Otherwise Forbes Retrieved 2014 06 03 The U S Should Adopt the Right to Be Forgotten Online intelligencesquaredus org Coffee Patrick Hey Google 9 in 10 Americans Want the Right to Be Forgotten Adweek Eng James Consumer Watchdog Google Should Extend Right To Be Forgotten to U S NBC News N Y bill would require people to remove inaccurate irrelevant inadequate or excessive statements about others Washington Post Retrieved 17 March 2017 The Globe s Fresh Start initiative Submit your appeal The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com a b c Kobrin Stephen J 2004 Safe harbours are hard to find the trans Atlantic data privacy dispute territorial jurisdiction and global governance Review of International Studies 30 111 131 doi 10 1017 S0260210504005856 S2CID 145063263 a b c d The Council Common Position EC no 95 The Inevitable Happened First Company Provides Right To Be Forgotten Removal Service Search Engine Land 2014 06 25 Retrieved 2017 03 03 Scott Mark 2014 07 08 European Companies See Opportunity in the Right to Be Forgotten The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2017 03 03 Volokh Eugene 2000 Freedom of Speech Information Privacy and the Troubling Implications of a Right to Stop People from Speaking about You Stanford Law Review 52 5 1049 1124 doi 10 2307 1229510 JSTOR 1229510 Solove Daniel J 2003 The Virtues of Knowing Less Justifying Privacy Protections against Disclosure Duke Law Journal 53 3 967 1065 p 976 JSTOR 1373222 Mayes Tessa 18 March 2011 We have no right to be forgotten online The Guardian Whitman James Q 2004 The Two Western Cultures of Privacy Dignity Versus Liberty Yale Law Journal 113 6 1151 1221 p 1161 2 doi 10 2307 4135723 JSTOR 4135723 Ryan Timothy 2011 05 02 The Right To Be Forgotten Questioning The Nature Of Online Privacy PSFK Retrieved 2014 08 09 Bernal Paul Alexander 2011 A right to delete European Journal of Law and Technology 2 2 Archived from the original on 2019 12 07 Retrieved 2014 05 14 Coliver Sandra Editor Striking a Balance Hate Speech Freedom of Expression and Non Discrimination Article 19 1992 International Centre against Censorship Human Rights Centre University of Essex a b c Rosen Jeffrey February 13 2012 The Right to Be Forgotten Stanford Law Review Retrieved 2014 08 09 Document 52012PC0011 Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data General Data Protection Regulation Eur lex europa eu 3 4 1 Chapter I General Provisions Article 4 Retrieved 2014 08 09 Privacy laws Private data public rules The Economist 2012 01 28 Retrieved 2014 08 09 a b Wright Jason 19 January 2015 Some Things Should Not Be Forgotten The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 16 February 2015 Consider the necessity for accurate business intelligence Antibribery laws and know your customer regulations often require companies and individuals to do due diligence checks on entities they want to do business with The requirement for proper due diligence instils confidence helps to prevent fraud and corruption and informs businesses about potential risks Several cases already illustrate how the right to be forgotten impedes business intelligence Fortune magazine reported last year on Dato Capital a company that compiles reports on the directors of private companies based in the United Kingdom and Spain Dato s reports contained information that companies and directors are often required by law to disclose publicly such as debt and financial history Bleaching this from search results has made it more difficult for potential investors and business partners to understand the profile and history of individuals with whom they were considering doing business a b Parloff Roger 21 October 2014 Company directors are deep sixing Google links citing right to be forgotten Fortune Retrieved 17 February 2015 Zittrain Jonathan 13 July 2014 The right to be forgotten ruling leaves nagging doubts Financial Times Retrieved 19 July 2015 Right to be forgotten and online search engines ruling Press release European Commission 2014 06 03 Retrieved 2014 07 03 Peston Robert 2 July 2014 Why has Google cast me into oblivion BBC News Retrieved 2014 07 03 Scheer Peter Z July 2 2014 The Right to Be Forgotten Is Already Messing Up Journalism Truthdig Retrieved 2014 07 03 Gibbs Samuel 24 July 2014 Google hauled in by Europe over right to be forgotten reaction The Guardian Musician attempts use EU Right To Be Forgotten to hide a bad review Retrieved 11 November 2014 Dewey Caitlin Pianist asks The Washington Post to remove a concert review under the E U s right to be forgotten ruling The Washington Post Archived from the original on 14 November 2014 Notice of removal from Google Search PDF WikiMedia Foundation Retrieved 23 November 2014 Index blasts EU court ruling on right to be forgotten Index on Censorship 2014 05 13 Retrieved 2014 08 09 Chubb Karla Request made to remove Gerry The Monk Hutch from EU search results Newstalk Retrieved 6 August 2014 Curties Sophie Philipson Alice 6 August 2014 Wikipedia founder EU s Right to be Forgotten is deeply immoral The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 6 August 2014 Wikipedia founder EU s Right to be Forgotten is deeply immoral The Telegraph 6 August 2014 Retrieved 7 August 2014 Edwards Lilian 29 July 2014 Revenge porn why the right to be forgotten is the right remedy The Guardian Retrieved 11 August 2014 Powles Julia 8 August 2014 Jimmy Wales is wrong we do have a personal right to be forgotten The Guardian Retrieved 11 August 2014 Mythbuster The Court of Justice of the EU and the Right to be Forgotten European Commission s Directorate General for Justice and Consumers 18 September 2014 Archived from the original on 24 September 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2018 via archive org Factsheet on the Right to be Forgotten ruling PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2019 12 12 Retrieved 2020 03 02 a b California enacts Right to be Forgotten for Minors Data Protection Report Data Protection Report 2015 01 14 Retrieved 2017 05 31 a b Lewis Morgan Kapoor Bockius LLP Rahul Hirsch W Reece Yaghoubi Shokoh H 12 July 2016 Get to Know California s Online Eraser Law Lexology Retrieved 2017 05 31 a b UK Election 2017 Tories offer under 18s the Right to be Forgotten threaten big fines for social media firms diginomica 2017 05 15 Retrieved 2017 05 31 a b c May Tells Facebook to Offer Kids the Right to Delete Information Bloomberg com 2017 05 12 Retrieved 2017 05 31 France tries to impose Right to be Forgotten globally Google fights September 17 2018 CISPA The Center for IT Security Privacy and Accountability School of Computer Science The University of Auckland www auckland ac nz Simeonovski Milivoj Bendun Fabian Asghar Muhammad Rizwan Backes Michael Marnau Ninja Druschel Peter 2015 Oblivion Mitigating Privacy Leaks by Controlling the Discoverability of Online Information arXiv 1506 06033 cs CR a b c d e f g h i Oblivion Is the Software That Could Automate the Right to Be Forgotten Motherboard 22 June 2015 Retrieved 2016 02 29 Lott Lavigna Ruby 17 February 2019 The weird rise of cyber funerals Wired UK Retrieved 19 February 2019 Further reading editArticles edit Ausloos Jef 2012 The Right to be forgotten Worth remembering Computer Law amp Security Review 28 2 143 152 doi 10 1016 j clsr 2012 01 006 Bennett Steven C Right to be forgotten Reconciling EU and US Perspectives The Berkeley J Int l L 30 2012 161 Blackman Josh Omniveillance Google Privacy in Public and the Right to Your Digital Identity A Tort for Recording and Disseminating an Individual s Image over the Internet Santa Clara L Rev 49 2009 313 Bolton Robert The Right to Be Forgotten Forced Amnesia in a Technological Age 31 J Marshall J Info Tech amp Privacy L 133 2015 Castellano Pere Simon The right to be forgotten under European Law a Constitutional debate 2012 Gstrein Oskar Josef 2020 Right to be forgotten european data imperialism national privilege or universal human right Review of European Administrative Law 13 1 125 152 doi 10 7590 187479820X15881424928426 hdl 11370 c0c30877 189b 4fd0 b10e 5ab821bd58d3 S2CID 219133835 SSRN 3530995 Koops E J Forgetting footprints shunning shadows A critical analysis of the right to be forgotten in big data practice SCRIPTed 8 no 3 2011 229 256 Palazzi Pablo El reconocimiento en Europa del derecho al olvido en Internet La Ley 10 de junio de 2014 2014 Palazzi Pablo Derecho al olvido en Internet e informacion sobre condenas penales a proposito de un reciente fallo holandes La Ley 17 de diciembre de 2014 2014 Rosen Jeffrey The right to be forgotten Stanford law review online 64 2012 88 Simeonovski Milivoj Bendun Fabian Asghar Muhammad Rizwan Backes Michael Marnau Ninja Druschel Peter Oblivion Mitigating Privacy Leaks by Controlling the Discoverability of Online Information The 13th International Conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security ACNS 2015 Gallo Sallent Juan Antonio El Derecho al Olvido en Internet Del Caso Google al Big Data 2015 ed CreateSpace Barcelona Espana ISBN 978 1511412124 Tsesis Alexander The Right to Erasure Privacy and the Indefinite Retention of Data 49 Wake Forest Law Review 433 2014 Books edit Jones Meg Leta 2016 Ctrl Z The Right to Be Forgotten NYU Press ISBN 978 1479881703 Ausloos Jef 2020 The Right to Erasure in EU Data Protection Law Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198847977 Cases edit Melvin v Reid 112 Cal App 285 297 P 91 1931 Sidis v F R Publishing Corporation 311 U S 711 61 S Ct 393 85 L Ed 462 1940 U S Google Spain S L Google Inc y Agencia Espanola de Proteccion de Datos AEPD Mario Costeja Gonzalez ECLI EU C 2014 317Legislation edit Directive 95 46 EC on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data EU Directive 1995 European Commission Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Protection of Individuals with Regard to the Processing of Personal Data and On the Free Movement of Such Data General Data Protection Regulation 2012 0011 COD Article 3 Territorial Scope External links editGoogle s Search removal request under European Data Protection law form Yahoo s Right to be Forgotten Request page Bing s European Privacy Request form List of European Data Protection Authorities for appeals Guidelines on the implementation of the Court of Justice of the European Union judgment on Google Spain and inc v Agencia Espanola de Proteccion de Datos AEPD and Mario Costeja Gonzalez Factsheet on the Right to be Forgotten ruling C 131 12 Google s Transparency Report statistics and examples Report of the Advisory Council to Google on the Right to be Forgotten Google s responses to the Questionnaire addressed to Search Engines by the Article 29 Working Party List of BBC web pages which have been removed from Google s search results Telegraph stories affected by EU right to be forgotten The Right to Be Forgotten Forced Amnesia in a Technological Age The Right to be Forgotten Archived 2019 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Understand Your Privacy Rights Portals nbsp Freedom of speech nbsp Internet nbsp European Union Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Right to be forgotten amp oldid 1188221020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.