Google tweaks ‘right to be forgotten’ in EU searches

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Washington / AFP

Google has announced that it would implement changes in how it applies the so-called ‘right to be forgotten’ for online searches made in Europe.
The changes, to be implemented next week, would close a loophole that allowed Europeans to find deleted entries by using Google.com instead of the search page for their local country.
“Starting next week, in addition to our existing practice, we will also use geolocation signals (like IP addresses) to restrict access to the delisted URL on all Google Search domains, including google.com, when accessed from the country of the person requesting the removal,” said a blog post from Google’s global privacy counsel Peter Fleischer.
“We’ll apply the change retrospectively, to all delistings that we have
already done under the European Court ruling.”
A European Court of Justice ruling in May 2014 recognising the “right to be forgotten” opened the door for Google users to ask the search engine to remove results about them that are inaccurate or no longer relevant.
Google set up an online form that people in Europe can fill out to ask for information to be excluded from search results.
Now a part of the holding company Alphabet under a reorganisation, Google’s moves failed to satisfy some regulators, notably in France, because the users could get around the restriction.Google has not changed search results in other areas such as the United States. Up to now, Google had been deleting certain results from searches made on google.de, google.fr, google.co.uk and other domains within Europe.
“We’re changing our approach as a result of specific discussions that we’ve had with EU data protection regulators in recent months,” Fleischer said.
“We believe that this additional layer of delisting enables us to provide the enhanced protections that European regulators ask us for, while also upholding the rights of people in other countries to access lawfully published information.”
In its most recent update last November, Google said it had complied with less than half of the 348,000 request to remove content in Europe. The largest number of requests came from France, with more than 73,000, followed by Germany with some 60,000.
Similar processes have been put in place by Microsoft’s Bing search engine that also powers queries at Yahoo.
The European Court Of Justice ruled that EU citizens have a Right To Be Forgotten, that they could request that search engines remove links to pages deemed private, even if the pages themselves remain on the internet. The court ruling means that now anyone can ask for anything to be removed from Google.

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