USA TODAY US Edition

Google extends ‘right to be forgotten’

Will now block certain searches on non-European sites

- Elizabeth Weise @eweise USA TODAY

Google will ex-SAN FRANCIS CO tend the platforms that will block links of people who have successful­ly lobbied European regulators for their “right to be forgotten.”

The search giant will block links on all its internatio­nal platforms, including the U.S. search platform google.com, for searches coming from the country of the person who requested the block, according to a person familiar with the new policy.

In simpler terms, this is how the change will work: If a person in Austria were to successful­ly petition to have a link about themselves blocked, it would be blocked when someone searched using any of Google’s European domains — and also when someone in Austria searches Google.com, Google.cn or Google.jp.

The link would still be visible to anyone outside of Austria who searched those sites.

Blocking searches on non-European sites represents a change from its previous policy, when only its European-based sites would block links.

Google notified the European Union’s Data Protection Agency of the coming change two weeks ago. It is expected to go into effect soon, the person said.

The Menlo Park, Calif.-based company has been fighting the EU on the breadth of what it must block under European data privacy law for two years. The change came because of ongoing pressure from European courts and policymake­rs in several EU countries, the person said.

The news was first reported by EFE, a Spanish news agency based in Madrid.

“In addition to our current practice of removing links from European domains, we will soon begin removing those links in all Google domains, for people searching from the applicant’s country,” Google told the news service.

Under European privacy law, individual­s have the right to ask their country’s Data Protection Agency for removal of search engine results that link to informatio­n that is inaccurate, inadequate, irrelevant or excessive.

The original Right to be Forgotten ruling came in 2014. It was the result of a Spanish man’s request to delete a legal notice in a Spanish newspaper’s online archive about the 1998 repossessi­on of his home. The notice popped up when his name was searched in Google.

He said that because the proceeding had happened years ago and was now irrelevant, it should be removed from the newspaper’s searchable archive.

The Spanish court ruled the paper could keep the page up on its own site but that Google and other search engines must remove the listing from their search indexes to protect the man’s privacy.

Since that ruling, Google and other search engines have been blocking links when Europeans successful­ly petition to have informatio­n “forgotten.”

However those blocks only applied to the European sites of the search engines, such as Google.de in Germany or Google.fr in France. Searchers in Europe could easily get around the blocks by going to Google.com.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES ?? Google has fought the EU about the law for two years.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES Google has fought the EU about the law for two years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States