The Four Courts, Dublin
Chillingeffects.org, the tech industry supported website that records governments’, corporations’, and individuals’ attempts to alter online content, appears to be gearing up to reveal so called ‘right to be forgotten’ requests from EU citizens.
A message posted on the site on June 6, 2014 indicates that Google and others may issue notices to the site of takedown requests from EU citizens. The message reads,
A request has been made to remove one or more links from a search page under European “right to be forgotten” rules, following Google Spain SL, Google Inc. v Agencia Espanola de Proteccion de Datos, Mario Costeja Gonzalez.
This message appears to be a test, rather than an actual takedown request. However, it suggests that being forgotten from the web may not be as easy as the EU anticipates.
Chillingeffects.org usually lists take-down requests issued to online companies, such as Twitter and Google, by copyright holders under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act. It also shows requests made by governments and courts for content to be removed.
Last month the European Court of Justice decreed that EU citizens have the right to have content about them removed from search engine results. Google opposed the move, citing fears of censorship, and citizens’ right to know.
OpenAI published its proof attempts on February 14 for First Proof, a challenge put together…
We all know that a sedentary lifestyle is harmful to our health. But recent studies…
As organizations increasingly operate across hybrid and cloud-based email systems, migrating enterprise mailboxes has become…
Digital ID, programmable money like Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), and AI are paving the…
Earlier this year, Elon Musk was direct about what comes next for the global economy:…
Britive, provider of a unified privileged access management (PAM) platform, today announced its unified PAM…
View Comments
That iss 100% Free!