On Forgetting the Facts: Questions From the EU For Google, Other Search Engines 186
The Wall Street Journal lists 26 questions that Google and other search providers have been asked (in a meeting in Brussels earlier this week) to answer for EU regulators, to pin down what the search engine companies have done to comply with European demands to implement a "right to be forgotten." Some questions were asked directly of representatives of Microsoft, Yahoo and Google, while the regulators want answers to the others in short order. From the article:
Regulators touched on some hot-button issues in six oral questions and another 26 written ones, with answers due by next Thursday. They asked Google to describe the “legal basis” of its decision to notify publishers when it approves right-to-be-forgotten requests, something that has led to requesters’ being publicly identified in some cases. They also asked search engines to explain where they take down the results, after complaints from some regulators that Google does not filter results on google.com. That means that anyone in Europe can switch from, say, google.co.uk to Google.com to see any removed links. Among the questions: "2. Do you filter out some requests based on the location, nationality, or place of residence of the data subject? If so, what is the legal basis for excluding such requests?" and "16. Does your company refuse requests when the data subject was the author of the information he/she posted himself/herself on the web? If so, what is the basis for refusing such requests?"
Slippery Slope (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm sure there are many public figures that would love a chance to remove some of the news items about themselves.
~~
Re: (Score:2)
The European courts have set a precedent on the basis that the number of cases would be small, and that living people would thus be available to conduct detailed research on each one.
Naturally Google have been hit with something like 250,000 requests because of course people are trying to have every bit of material about them removed. And by people of course, it's a surprising number of lawyers, CEOs and companies.
Re: (Score:2)
And people ask me why I consider it immoral to vote...
Re: (Score:2)
Because you'd prefer a King who rules by Divine Right and doesn't need to try to hide his misdeeds, since there's nothing you can do about them anyway? Or are an anarchist who thinks any kind of governance is a bad thing?
The choices are unelected leaders, elected leaders or no leaders. If you find electing them immoral, then one of the others must, in your opinion, be a superior choice, since picking the best available option isn't immoral. So which one
Re: (Score:2)
Well, if I elect them, it makes it kinda immoral to shoot them...
Re:Slippery Slope (Score:5, Informative)
Know what else is a slippery slope? This [pcmag.com].
According to Reuters, one topic of conversation will be the fact that results are only censored on European versions of Google, like Google.co.uk. So EU Web users can simply go to Google.com for full results, which some argue defeats the purpose of the ruling.
So, Europe would like to be able to affect what everyone sees, not just what Europe sees. I understand the need for privacy, but how certain are we that this won't devolve into plain old censorship? Are there some case histories that have been problematic that we should be aware of? The EU seems to have Google in their sights, but I'm not sure what Google did to get them quite so riled up. I remember Google's accidental collection of wifi info (the more cynical may put "accidental" in quotes, but it looked rather inadvertent to me. Besides which, the data was in the clear to begin with). Then there's the anti-trust issue, if I recall correctly, which I never quite understood either.
Have there been other incidents? Why the hell do they hate Google so much? I'm not exactly a Google fanboy myself, but it's probably good for Microsoft and Apple to have some serious competition.
Re:Slippery Slope (Score:4, Informative)
Meanwhile, someone who isn't Google and doesn't have offices in the EU will surely make up a page of links to this information. If the page generates traffic, someone will pay for add space there.
And then the next step is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Meanwhile, someone who isn't Google and doesn't have offices in the EU will surely make up a page of links to this information. If the page generates traffic, someone will pay for add space there.
And then the next logical step is for the EU to impose some sort of sanctions on the infrastructure and payment services involved if any of them have any connection to the EU -- just as the US government has done with things like DNS and payment services that are conveniently within its jurisdiction.
I'm not sure I like where this is all going. I'm sure we can all agree that overall the Internet has been a great advance for humanity, and in recent years governments from all over the world have presumed to carve it up and control it in their own interests, almost invariably to the detriment of people somewhere else (or, in some cases, their own people).
However, we are going to have to confront some difficult philosophical and ethical differences sooner or later, because clearly we also can't have a situation where the Internet is somehow above the law, but we don't always agree on what that law should be. Frankly, the US government have been throwing their own weight around for years, and Google have been doing things that push the boundaries of typical European legal and ethical standards for a long time too. Neither has shown any particular concern or remorse about the effects of their actions abroad, and neither has suffered any significant negative consequences so far, with the possible exception of the Snowden fallout. Sooner or later the rest of the world was going to push back.
In as much as this marks a change in the general acceptance that the US can export its laws and ethics but won't be subject to anyone else's, that is probably a good direction to move in. It will force the issues of Internet governance and extra-territorial law enforcement into the open, where at least we can scrutinise and debate them honestly, instead of everyone's government doing sneaky things often without much public scrutiny and often because of coincidences involving which infrastructure happened to fall somewhere they could get at it.
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Slippery Slope (Score:4, Insightful)
""Meanwhile, someone who isn't Google and doesn't have offices in the EU will surely make up a page of links to this information. If the page generates traffic, someone will pay for add space there.""
This is my biggest question about this whole thing. Why is it Google's job? If they want to be 'forgotten' or 'taken off the internet' then they have to be taken off the internet, not the search engines. The most Google would be affected is by making sure they don't show up as 'cached' results. However, if the original article still exists, that's hardly Google's fault.
It the EU wants to make an unenforceable decision about a stupid request, I think they should at least be forced to deal with the consequences, and not just harangue search engines (i.e easy targets.)
Re: (Score:2)
If Google is censoring their results, they could do so no just on the basis of which version of Google receives the request, but on the basis of the requesting IP address.
Google blocks it by domain. Domain is specific to country by registrar. If someone in the UK goes to google.com instead of google.co.uk, it's up to the UK to dick with their ISP and DNS results to force redirect them into the UK legal sandbox where the content is controlled.
You know, just like China.
Legally forcing a commercial entity to act as part of your own implementation of "The Great Firewall of China" is not the same thing as not being censorious dicks yourself. An unfunded mandate to force someon
Re: (Score:2)
Domain is specific to country by registrar.
So, since I'm reading Slashdot in USA, I shouldn't have to worry about links to goat.cx ?
Re: (Score:2)
The adverts I see on google.com are exactly the same as the adverts I see on google.co.uk. They tend to be for British companies or companies that sell to people in the UK.
Re: (Score:2)
So, Europe would like to be able to affect what everyone sees,
You are jumping to conclusion there.
Europe would like its laws to be honoured by corporations doing business in the EU. If Google was ordered to remove X, but it is still present if I simply go to google.com instead of google.co.uk, then Google has not complied with the removal order.
It is absolutely technically possible to filter based on source IP address country. They can do it for advertisement, so there's absolutely no excuse for not doing it for legal compliance.
Re: (Score:2)
It is absolutely technically possible to filter based on source IP address country.
Not unless you disallow VPNs at the border, it isn't.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Related question... why does the USA hate Samsung so much?
I find it interesting when its the USA instead of Europe (or any other nation/entity) doing this kind of global policing that's perfectly fine with US government (and therefore by extension most Americans and American companies) but the second the shoe is on the other foot its a different matter entirely... for example not all countries have the same laws on copyright/patents but USA expects everyone to comply with their view of how the world should
Re: (Score:2)
Well, I don't hate Samsung at all, but Apple has some pretty dedicated fans, or at least a ton of folks who love their iDevices. So, when the companies do legal battle, Samsung will naturally generate some hate. And given that one is the natural "home team" versus the "away team", it probably makes sense that more will root for Apple than Samsung, all else being equal. I don't think it's any more complicated than that.
Note that I said I don't "hate" them, but that doesn't mean I "like" any of them either
Re: (Score:2)
A lot of us really don't like that president. We tend to get accused of being all sorts of things when we express how much we don't like this guy (the most common thing is being accused of being racist, and usually by Europeans ironically.)
I personally thought it was incredibly stupid that he makes the patent rules apply to Samsung but but in the exact same circumstances they don't apply to Apple.
But then again I'm also of the mind that discriminating against foreign manufacturers is bad too, which a lot of
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Or how about you stop trying to control what data is on their servers, no matter where the servers actually are? I live in the US, and I see people from other countries bitching all the time about how the US likes to play world police, and how they abuse companies and try to take information that isn't even in the US. But suddenly, when Europe does the same shit, it's okay? No, it's not okay, no matter who does it.
Re: (Score:2)
A lot of countries don't like search results found on Google.com, but none of them demand that Google filter them on the behalf of those countries. China is one such country. That said, Google can't and shouldn't bow to the censorship demands of every nation-state in the world.
If Europe doesn't like its citizens seeing content available on Google.com, then they should follow China's example and create a "Great Firewall of Europe" or something, use it to block Google.com with a message saying something to th
Re: (Score:2)
If their EU offices are incorporate in those countries and google otherwise operates outside thst subsidiary, only the portions operating in Europe needs to worry about it.
Re: Slippery Slope (Score:3)
The problem is this:
There will be a case where a factual based post, possibly with added opinions, will be posted by an American, but the subject of that post, a European, will want it removed from the search results due to the right to be forgotten. If Google removes this result from google.com, the American poster will have standing to sue google for removing their post because of foreign law. Now google being a private company, can do what they want, but what if Google wants to keep the Americans post
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
How exactly do "local" EU laws affect what an American citizen accessing google.com from within the US? Exactly what gives the EU any jurisdiction over that?
Are you suggesting that because BMW sells cars in the US that the US government can require that the cars that BMW builds in Europe for sale in Europe be built to US standards instead of European standards?
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, I think it should work exactly like that. Bring up a page that says that other results have been blocked because of local laws and a request from the search target.
Re: (Score:2)
But no information is being removed, just the search results to that information are removed.
Re:Slippery Slope (Score:5, Insightful)
But no information is being removed, just the search results to that information are removed.
In an information database as vast as the internet, what is the difference? There's enough people who will happily believe that if it doesn't exist on Google then it doesn't exist.
Re: (Score:2)
And your right to free speech is not infringed on, just your ability to reach people so they would listen is removed.
Re: (Score:2)
That argument is about as stupid as "if a tree falls and nobody is around." If the information is not indexed it won't be found.
Re: (Score:3)
I have yet to hear of a single case where a removal request revolved around incorrect information.
Mostly it's people who see their careers threatened by their own past illegal or immoral actions being known.
Re: (Score:2)
You are entitled to get incorrect information removed. That is not new and not controversial, that is why it isn't considered newsworthy.
Re: (Score:2)
May well be, but nobody is using it to get incorrect information removed.
I've only heard of it being used to get correct but unflattering information removed.
Re: (Score:2)
Others can still search for the information. They just need to use different terms.
For instance, suppose a fire was set on vacant property and it got out of control burning another property. Supposed the police accused the owner of arson for the insurance money. Now suppode that 20 years later, that owner wants it all to be forgotten. You could sesrch for yhe area, fire, time, statements made by witnesses and so on to find the information about it.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think it matters if he was wrongly accused, convicted, or found innocent of the charges. It is still news that it all happened and i do not think yhe intent of this right to be forgotten was ever to hide entire rvents. Its purpose is so that when searching for kevreeduk, it doesn't show up prejudicing my opinion of you in our separate dealings whether it be in getting a loan, job, membership to a club or something or whatever.
Your right to be forgotten doesn't seem to be the right for events to disa
Not a Slippery Slope (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't a slippery slope, this is simply a cliff. There is no right to be forgotten, because it would mean I don't have a right to remember and thus share that memory.
Think about it, if I printed a memoir in the 1960s, and have, perhaps negative, anecdotes of various people, would that book have had to be recalled from the shelves a few years later just because the right to forget kicked in? Oh right, internet. Changes everything.
The human species is going to have to grow up a little. First as an audience and consumer of the net, and realize that just because it's on the internet (or even wikipedia) doesn't mean it's true. It also has to realize what people said in the past doesn't always pose a true reflection of their current selves - that people change and evolve. Especially from a younger age like 13.
Second, it will have to grow up as individuals and realize, when you put it out there, you put it out there. And no nanny state can fix it.
They can only provide the illusion of fixing it. Because search engines outside the EU are going to ignore this. And savvy people inside the EU will be able to access those with ease, while the heavy handed censorship will only provide the drones with comfort they are taken care of.
Guess what a person's right to be forgotten would turn into in the US? Corporations, who are people, would jump in it.
Why is this being pushed so hard now anyway? Well, Germany got it's hand caught in the cookie jar along with the NSA. It's BundesNachrichtenDienst (BND) works alongside with and is just as if not more invasive than the NSA.
Of course, Merkel gets to put on her show and dance about being outraged her phone is tapped, but she says nothing about how complicit she is in tapping everyone elses phones in her country.
And don't think the EU countries are any more innocent in this.
So instead of really protecting the right to privacy, by people who want privacy in the here and now, by pushing bulletproof encryption standards without backdoors and other actual net positives for their citizens, they just put up this debate of this none-issue that feels really good but does nothing except what government is typically good at - banning certain behaviors from private entities and censoring hot potatoes from public eyes. Ony it's third speciality, making a tax for this, is missing and probably coming. Perhaps an ISP tax that will "help monitor and enforce your privacy online", which is code for another 1000 workers at the BND trading people's naked selfies.
So putting this as some slippery slope is unhelpful. It implies that this is an actual issue that needs to be hammered out. No. It's just bullshit sand-in-the-face for those who don't see what's really going on.
Re: (Score:2)
Second, it will have to grow up as individuals and realize, when you put it out there, you put it out there. And no nanny state can fix it.
It is mostly not about stuff people put out there themselves. There are people out there who can't get a job because they were wrongfully accused of molesting a child 10 years ago, and the searches turn up the accusations, but not the acquittal (mostly because press rarely writes about it).
Of course, Merkel gets to put on her show and dance about being outraged her phone is tapped, but she says nothing about how complicit she is in tapping everyone elses phones in her country.
While you are right on this, I doubt it has much to do with this law. This law has been in the works since 1995 and was passed in 2012 if I recall correctly (many EU laws go into effect delayed, or require national laws t
Target Welcomes Snowden (Score:2)
It was on the table long before anyone knew the name Snowden
Target knew in the mid-1990s. Target Welcomes Snowden [target.com]
Re: (Score:2)
There is no right to be forgotten, because it would mean I don't have a right to remember and thus share that memory.
That's not what the right to be forgotten is. It would more accurately be described as the "right to be forgotten by commercial entities".
In the EU we have data protection laws that affect anyone collecting personal data for business use. For example a company with a client database must take steps to ensure that it is protected and people's personal data is not leaked, and that it isn't sold for profit without consent. There are rules concerning things like credit reference agencies keeping data on things
Re: (Score:2)
It doesn't matter if the information is a matter of public record.
Yeah, it kind of does. Striking something from the public record is state-sponsored censorship, and that not only leads to evil, it's an evil in and of itself.
Who is commercial? (Score:2)
It would more accurately be described as the "right to be forgotten by commercial entities". [...] You are not required to forgot or remove information from your personal web site.
But where does a "personal web site" end and "by commercial entities" begin? At the use of modest ads to pay for the cost of hosting?
Re: (Score:2)
And google does not hold the information, they index the information and point you to the site holding the information.
"Note that your personal right to remember is completely unaffected. You are not required to forgot or remove information from your personal web site." Which is very much affected when nobody can see that information because it cannot be indexed.
I've read comments suggesting that newspapers are exempt from this law. Every newspaper I've ever heard of is a commercial enterprise. Why are they
Re: (Score:3)
The fact is that information is, today, more valuable than money. Indeed, look around you, companies are perfectly willing to take people's information in lieu of money. They know that they can alwa
Re: (Score:3)
It's not as simple as you think. You haven't thought of the other side of the coin. When others put it out there (about you), it's out there too. And Laws must fix it. This is nothing new. Do you think the Jews put out stories in the world that they themselves are evil, are thieves, have crooked noses, and live like rats in filthy houses, shitting in their own kitchens while they eat? They did not, the Nazis did. And because the Nazis put it out there, it became true. As true as necessary to make ordinary people believe it, and do their bidding.
You should do things considering that it may get put out there. Why should I not be able to know that someone I may be hiring makes bad decisions just because they dont want me to know they did something stupid? Your latter argument is poor, as there are alre
Re: (Score:2)
The problem is that this is not just humans versus corporations/machine, this is human rights vs human rights. Free Speech Vs the Right to be Forgotten, why does the latter, which is no where codified, larger then the first which has been for centuries?
It isn't "larger." We've always accepted there must be some limits on free speech. In the U.S., you can't incite people to riot lawlessly, for example. In much of the EU, there are stronger restrictions, like not being able to publicly insult someone else's reputation (e.g. in Germany), an idea that goes back quite some time. (Even in the US, it used to be justification for a duel, a practice which I believe had its roots in medieval Germanic trial practices which could involve combat.)
This seemingly
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Public figure mostly excluded (Score:2)
It was NEVER meant for a
Re: (Score:2)
A non forgetting society is a harsh society which I refuse. So excuse me if I think the slope was slippery before, when nothing was forgotten. Having a right to be forgotten remove a bit of that slope and make it more horizontal.
Society is just as harsh in your proposed solution - you just make it harder for them to act that way by denying it information.
You could just as easily go the opposite route. Just post defaming information online about everybody who ever lived, in copious amounts, so that it is impossible for anybody to figure out what information is real and what information is not. Then, heaven forbid, people will actually have to get to know people instead of just blacklisting them because of some photos on Facebook o
Existing law (Score:2)
Correct yet misleading (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Then companies that routinely exclude qualified candidates because "shit some HR lady found on google" will start to suffer and die as their stupid hiring process systematically excludes 99% of all people alive?
You know what? Smart companies, like Google, do not determine who they hire by what they find on Google. But if someone has a burning need to work for a company that is not smart, they are welcome to upload lots of cool content about themselves and/or explanations about why their previous acts are no
Re: (Score:2)
Institutional hypocrisy (Score:2)
The EU directive gives at best a false sense of privacy, since the information itself isn't removed, but only the links, kind of like the way an OS might "remove" a file but still preserve its data ready to be "undeleted" (unless it's a filesystem that tends to overwrite unused blocks).
The EU regulators don't want to appear as "censors" (with the unsavory connotation that the word carries in a presumably democratic environment) so they don't go after the source. This reeks of institutional hypocrisy. Why no
Re: (Score:3)
Oh, don't worry, the French are already doing that [eater.com]. Fortunately, this particular case demonstrated the Striesand Effect [wikipedia.org] can still kick a bully's ass from time to time.
Re: (Score:2)
Anyone claiming that the Streisand effect somehow harmed this guy because of the original information is now widely known , doesn't understand a damn thing about the case.
The man didn't want to hide that he was once in debt to the point of having his home auctioned - had that been his only goal, starting a legal case on it would be idiotic. The point was to remove a very prominent display that implied the false impression he was still in debt, that was shown without any context to antone who Googled his
Re: (Score:2)
Could you follow that link of mine and double-check to see if we're talking about the same case? Because it sure doesn't sound like it to me.
Re: (Score:2)
One mistake by a court which doesn't set a precedent isn't indicative of the law or national policy.
Re: (Score:2)
From the article I linked to:
Arret Sur Images reports that this is the first example of an amateur, unpaid blogger having to pay damages for a negative review. Doudet sees this as part of a growing problem around freedom of speech. "Recently several writers in France were sentenced in similar proceedings for defamation, invasion of privacy, and so on. And I find it really serious if we no longer have the freedom to write," she says. "I don't see the point of criticism if it's only positive. It's clear that online, people are suspicious of places that only get positive reviews."
This is apparently the first instance of an amateur blogger being sued because of a negative review, which is sort of the definition of a legal precedent, isn't it? I agree, though, that it's probably not national policy, and I very much doubt it's in the spirit of the law. That's of little comfort to someone on the sharp end of a bad court decision though, and seems awfully likely to have a chilling effect to some degree.
Re: (Score:2)
You could also use this directive to get the source removed, but only if the publisher is based in the EU or in another country that has similar laws.
Re: (Score:2)
The EU regulators don't want to appear as "censors"
Legally speaking, they not only don't appear, they are not. The legal definition of censorship (at least here in Germany, YMMV) means pre-publication, government-agency control. Having a court (as opposed to a government agency) found something illegal and removing it has never been considered censorship in the legal sense.
so they don't go after the source
Actually, the reason they don't is that if the source is outside the EU, it is a very lengthy and uncertain process. Now while you hail Internet anarchy, consider what options the lawmake
Re: (Score:2)
And the best response that could be given would be to blackhole everything EU. They want to be forgotten, then let's forget them. Removing all links to everything EU including businesses, government and humanitarian sites would fit the bill. Restrict the crawler preventing new EU stuff from being indexed would solve the problem for the future.
The EU wants to be forgotten, let's see how the EU economy survives that.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And the best response that could be given would be to blackhole everything EU. They want to be forgotten, then let's forget them.
Let me guess, you're american and you didn't pay attention in school, so you think "Europe" is some small country somewhere on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, yes?
The EU is larger than the USA in people, economic power and basically every other metric except prison population. Blackhole the EU if you want. We may or may not come over to save the sorry remains of your economy in a couple years.
The EU wants to be forgotten, let's see how the EU economy survives that.
The trade volume between the USA and the EU is about 60 billion US$ monthly [census.gov]. However, the USA imports a lot m
Re: (Score:3)
Oh, I'm sure believing that WWI and WWII happened because of irrational hatred is a comforting thought to Germans, but it's not true.
You're such a git. If you really think that Germany alone caused WW1, you've been spoon-fed too much propaganda. Yes, Germany started WW1, totally true. But at that time, half of Europe was waiting for an opportunity to kick this or that neighbours ass, which is largely why everyone jumped at the chance to have a war. At any other time in Europe's history, the assassination of some successor of some second-rate country would've barely made front-page news, let alone cause any diplomatic trouble.
And you illustrate that many Germans still hold the same kinds of beliefs.
"git" is not
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You've heard of this thing they call "Separation of Powers"? Maybe the news hasn't reached you yet, after all it's only been around for some 350 years.
Re: (Score:2)
My understanding is that this (Separation of Powers) is explicitly defined and codified in the USA. In the rest of the world, that may be the intent, but there can often be some overlap.
You mean like the typically politically motivated appointment of the judges of the supreme court? Oh wait, that's in the USA...
who were serving members of the House of Lords (one of the houses of Parliament). [...]some degree of agency between the executive and the judiciary.
Legislative. Get your facts straight before you argue.
Re: (Score:2)
What law breakers? This new "law" that was invented by the courts with zero debate is so vague that whether someone is breaking it or not is entirely debatable and thus eminently ignorable.
Re: (Score:2)
The EU regulators don't want to appear as "censors" (with the unsavory connotation that the word carries in a presumably democratic environment)...
That is a solved problem. Call it "filtering" instead and not only will The Public not object but they will demand it. To protect the children.
Why are they asking Google? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Well they had to pass it before they could read it!
Re: Why are they asking Google? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The law was actually passed in the mid 90s. They have been trying to update it but had trouble getting consensus from all member states. I expect this will spur them on a bit.
What about my right to search? (Score:2)
I think I'll switch to google.com, my local version is crippled because of EU law.
Re: (Score:2)
What about my right to search?
There is no such right, except in your imagination. There is a right (at least in my country, probably similar ones in the EU as a whole) to get information from publicly available sources. So the government cannot stop you from searching at all. But it can intervene in the information available if that information breaks laws. For example, copyrighted content, state secrets, but also information a court has found to be libel or slander.
And quite frankly speaking, for the cases this law is intended for (let
Re: What about my right to search? (Score:2)
Well, depending on where you live there may be sme kind of right to free speech. In the US it is fairly explicit. In the UK and commonwealth countries there have been rulings that say there is an implied right to a certain degree of free speech. So is there a right to search, which is really a form of free speech? Well, there may well be.
Re: (Score:2)
So is there a right to search, which is really a form of free speech?
Searching and speaking are really not the same thing. Once again, you can say they are related and one requires the other and so on, but all of that only means that yes, there really is no "right to search", you can only construct it from other rights.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What about my right to search?
There is no such right, except in your imagination.
Freedom of association.
And quite frankly speaking, for the cases this law is intended for (let's not focus only on the abuses, as most idiot journalists do because it makes for better headlines), the right of an individual to not have their life ruined by, say, completely made-up allegations of child abuse and rape quite clearly trumps your right of finding false and misleading information.
That would be libel, and is adequately covered by existing laws. Excessively covered in the UK.
Re: (Score:2)
Freedom of association.
Is a right in itself and maybe you can derive a "right to search" from it, but in doing so you would only prove my point that a "right to search" by itself is nowhere in the law books.
Re: (Score:2)
What about my right to search?
There is no such right, except in your imagination.
It must be my imagination that people in other countries may have more rights to search the internet than me.
I realize that universal human rights are not recognized in large parts of the world, but I was hoping at least the EU would.
Re: (Score:2)
Nice hyperbole, but entirely beside the point. I already explained in my original posting what the legal situation actually is, I don't see why I should repeat it.
Of course, you can refute me easily. Find the correct EU law that contains the phrase "right to search" and post a link. I will apologize if you do.
Re: (Score:2)
So ... we need a search engine where the search results are not crippled by EU "right to be forgotten" legislation and US "no right to get your content" DMCA. Hmm. Where the heck could we find a really free search engine.
How about baidu? I mean, I at least as long as I don't plan to search for Tiananmen Square or Tibet it should give me more accurate results...
Spent convictions (Score:2)
Here in the UK (and possibly other EU jurisdictions, I don't know), if you are convicted of a crime and have served your sentence, after a defined period the conviction will cease to appear on most employment-related criminal records checks (with obvious exceptions for high-risk roles such as those working with the young/vulnerable) and no longer have to be declared. This defined period varied with the severity of the cr
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
(Disclaimer: I haven't actually looked at the law in about a couple of years. My memory may not be entirely correct. You can look this up for yourself, the act in question is the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974.)
One may declare a spent conviction on an application; an employer may ask about any spent convictions but the employee is under no obligation to give the truthful answer (i.e., one can always answer, "I have no spent convictions"), and any knowledge of spent convictions cannot (in general) be h
Re: (Score:2)
If the former:
The short version - in non-high-risk jobs, it depends if the employer chooses to carry out checks (if no, ge
Re: (Score:2)
Lazy sarcasm:
There are 7 billion people on the planet with more popping in all the time. Fuck 'em. Let them be unemployable forever if they got a speeding ticket once. There are plenty of other people who need the job.
The scary part is: Some ministers actually seem to think this way.
China likes this (Score:2)
+1
Interesting (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You can of course contact the site and ask them to remove it.
Re: (Score:2)
If you mean that it will take another generation 'til people don't believe readily what they read simply 'cause someone wrote it, then I agree.
But until people realize that 99% of what they read on the internet is bullshit, we should maybe find a way to keep people from having their lives ruined by slander.
Re: (Score:3)
Suppose I did a search for "ReekRend", and found an article that said you had been arrested for a suspected child porn offence. That might hypothetically be true, but what that article doesn't say, because it happened a bit later, is that the police dropped all charges after they found that someone else had stolen your credit card and used it to buy child porn. You probably wouldn't want the original article appearing every time someone searched for your name.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
My understanding of the judgement is such that it is pretty clear that the original source would equally be obliged to remove it (but they weren't party to the case).
Also note that not all search engines are necessarily bound by this; the whole thing is dependent on the "processing" of data (which thereby binds you to the Data Retention Directive), and it was held that Google as an advertiser processes the crawled dataset.
Re: (Score:2)
Suppose someone covers the walls all over your neighbourhood with signboards saying "See at <URL> photos of ReekRend [your real name here] picking his nose/drunk as a skunk/bathing nude at the beach that night/whatever" that is factual but inconsequential, though makes you and your loved ones ashamed of something in your past, up for anyone visiting you to see them. Would you want those to be removed, or would you be OK
Re: (Score:2)
these arrogant European do not own the world
Nor do these arrogants "USA and other countries" (merrily forgetting there is something else in the world than Europe and the USA plus its satellites) who think there is no second chance ever, and no right to ensure one's personal data are correct, and no rigth to privacy either -- to mention only some of the personal-data-related rights that are given to me by my own European country (note that, as some have said, other European countries may have these rights in a less formal way, as a result of case law
Re: (Score:2)
Nor do these arrogants "USA and other countries" (merrily forgetting there is something else in the world than Europe and the USA plus its satellites) who think there is no second chance ever, and no right to ensure one's personal data are correct, and no rigth to privacy either -- to mention only some of the personal-data-related rights that are given to me by my own European country (note that, as some have said, other European countries may have these rights in a less formal way, as a result of case law) and that I can successfully use to deter French spammers while I still have to suffer US ones. :/
You do not have the right because the government says so, but rather because you are a human being. Though that is a principle that is explicitly stated in the US constitution, it applies everywhere. However, it is a right that is made explicit in the EU and where the conditions under which the right may be infringed are perhaps more clearly stated (and better enforced) than elsewhere. There is a danger in explicitly stating rights, in that some stupid people might think you have no other rights — not
Re: (Score:2)
You do not have the right because the government says so, but rather because you are a human being.
Er... Indeed. But I don't think anyone here said this right was granted by a government. We do have separation of powers here too. :)
Though that is a principle that is explicitly stated in the US constitution, it applies everywhere.
You mean everywhere in the U.S., right? Because otherwise, it would be a case of trying to apply the US law beyond the borders of the US, which, I think, is the exact mirror of a (rightful) criticism in another comment about the EU supposedly trying to reach beyon the EU borders [actually, the question was misunderstood by the commenter, but that's another point].
However, it is a right that is made explicit in the EU and where the conditions under which the right may be infringed are perhaps more clearly stated (and better enforced) than elsewhere.
There is a danger in explicitly stating rights, in that some stupid people might think you have no other rights — not true! — but leaving them all implicit has other risks in that it becomes hard to say for sure when they've been unreasonably infringed and to get other people to help you out defending them.
Or even what