Google delete history and other fairy tales

Google with one a press release announced today officially and once again its concerns about the right to be forgotten. It is known that the collects any information that circulates on , which has put her in the crosshairs of privacy groups and activists many times.

But what about the right to oblivion? Does today's announcement of the company seeming to be worried about the side effects of the new measure is another pre-trial trick?google

According to Google's announcement:

"European citizens have the right to request the removal of personal information from search results in cases where it is out of date or untrue. From the beginning, we have publicly expressed our concerns about the decision, however we have worked hard to comply with it, and we have done so conscientiously and in cooperation with the Data Protection Authorities. To date, we have managed διαγραφής περισσότερων από 2 search results in Europe, and removes more than 800.000 of them. In addition, we have taken great care not to delete results of public interest, as defined by the European Court of Justice. Most Data Protection Authorities have concluded that this approach ensures the right balance. "

And it continues:
"We - along with a wide range of organizations of human rightsAnd the media but also others, such as Wikimedia- we believe that this is contrary to the basic principles of international law, which require that no country should have the jurisdiction to enforce laws on citizens of other countries, especially when it comes to linking to any legal content. "The adoption of such a regulation would encourage other countries, including less democratic regimes, to try to impose their values ​​on the citizens of another country."

For History:

Let us say that the right to oblivion has already been successfully implemented, even though the new regulation establishing it has not been formally implemented.

The first company to publish an online page that allows deletion requests was Google, followed by Bing and the former Yahoo.

Initially, the deduction of results from the demands of European countries was made only in the domains of Google that were visible in Europe. Later, the removal of information was extended to all domains of the company, following warnings by the French Data Protection Authority to impose sanctions in case the search results were not removed globally (from all domains).

Where is the problem;

Will the Law apply correctly? 2018 is approaching, and the law will begin to apply explicitly. But who will control him? Law opponents have clearly very important arguments.

Most importantly, if the law is not properly enforced, it will directly and indirectly affect the freedom of expression and the press, since a part of history will be virtually deleted.
Wikipedia and many other major journalistic websites (Guardian, BBC) have raised strong concerns about the measures that are coming.

Imagine, therefore, that the huge amount of applications that companies will receive will require millions of work-hours to examine each one individually. This means huge costs, and of course there are companies that will not provide the necessary staff. This may simply satisfy requests without substantial control.

So let's say, for example, that we could see a politician who has been involved in corruption scandals, re-nominating after 10-15 years, without there being anything recorded about what he has done in the past.

The example above concerns and supports Google's claim.

But we forget something important:

Its open nature . You can't hide on the internet. After removing the links that refer to a request that receives a search, more will appear. Something that doesn't stop especially when the public suspects censorship.

By that logic, yes Google's concern does not seem to be so genuine, since it knows the internet and the principles that govern it much better than we do… After all, which company will not take care to defend its main source of income?

Yes we are talking about information… ..

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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