15 July 2014 By Graeme Philipson
Following a European ruling that individuals have a ‘right to be forgotten’ on the Internet, Google has formed a high profile advisory council to help it remember what to do.
A ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in May found that European law gives people the right to ask search engines like Google to remove results for queries that include their name.
The ruling is tricky for Google, which uses complex algorithms to search all websites, regardless of how current or accurate they are. Since the ruling was made, Google’s European operation has received 70,000 take-down requests covering 250,000 webpages containing “all sorts of content: serious criminal records, embarrassing photos, instances of online bullying and name-calling, decades-old allegations, negative press stories, and more.”
Full Article
Google forms council on ‘right to be forgotten’
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