Privacy, freedom of expression, and the right to be forgotten in Europe
By: Stefan Kulk, Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius
Potential Business Impact:
Lets people remove old personal info from search.
In this chapter we discuss the relation between privacy and freedom of expression in Europe. In principle, the two rights have equal weight in Europe - which right prevails depends on the circumstances of a case. We use the Google Spain judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union, sometimes called the 'right to be forgotten' judgment, to illustrate the difficulties when balancing the two rights. The court decided in Google Spain that people have, under certain conditions, the right to have search results for their name delisted. We discuss how Google and Data Protection Authorities deal with such delisting requests in practice. Delisting requests illustrate that balancing privacy and freedom of expression interests will always remain difficult.
Similar Papers
Freedom of expression and 'right to be forgotten' cases in the Netherlands after Google Spain
Computers and Society
Lets people remove old, unwanted search results.
Google Spain v. Gonzáles: Did the Court forget about freedom of expression?
Computers and Society
Lets people remove old, bad search results.
Het 'right to be forgotten' en bijzondere persoonsgegevens: geen ruimte meer voor een belangenafweging? [The 'Right to Be Forgotten' and Sensitive Personal Data: No Room for Balancing?]
Computers and Society
Lets people remove old criminal records from searches.