Difference between revisions of "Right to be Forgotten"

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Before the expansion of the internet and search engines such as Google and Yahoo, the right to be forgotten didn't come into conception until recently. In the Pre-internet era, data was not as easily accessible due to its physical nature and public records were difficult to obtain which lead to "practical obscurity" of people's data. This means that the data is effectively protected due to the practical difficulty to access it. Following the digitization of records as well as the expansion of digital libraries for search engines, data became more easily accessible and the right to be forgotten began to come into conception. In 2014, a landmark case of Google vs. Costeja made the right to be forgotten a well known concept.
 
Before the expansion of the internet and search engines such as Google and Yahoo, the right to be forgotten didn't come into conception until recently. In the Pre-internet era, data was not as easily accessible due to its physical nature and public records were difficult to obtain which lead to "practical obscurity" of people's data. This means that the data is effectively protected due to the practical difficulty to access it. Following the digitization of records as well as the expansion of digital libraries for search engines, data became more easily accessible and the right to be forgotten began to come into conception. In 2014, a landmark case of Google vs. Costeja made the right to be forgotten a well known concept.
 
===Google vs. Costeja===
 
===Google vs. Costeja===
 
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In 2010, a resident of Spain named Mario Costeja González filed a complaint against La Vanguardia newspaper due to articles which they had published online from 1998 which contained sensitive information of his. When googling his name, Costeja obtained links to two articles from La Vanguardia which contained information about his forced sale of property in order to pay off social security debts. Costeja requested that La Vanguardia remove this information from their site and also requested that Google remove these links from their search results.
  
  

Revision as of 02:12, 13 March 2019

The right to be forgotten, also commonly known as the right to erasure, is the idea that an individual should have the ability to erase parts of their online identity in which the information is no longer needed for its original processing purpose. This idea arose from individuals who believed that they should be able to control whether or not their information persists online. In the European Union (EU) and Argentina this right has already been implemented with the creation of a law which allows citizens to request that their information is removed from google's search results. The right to be forgotten brings up a number of issues concerning the relationship between internet censorship and the right to privacy, as well as online anonymity problems.

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History

Before the expansion of the internet and search engines such as Google and Yahoo, the right to be forgotten didn't come into conception until recently. In the Pre-internet era, data was not as easily accessible due to its physical nature and public records were difficult to obtain which lead to "practical obscurity" of people's data. This means that the data is effectively protected due to the practical difficulty to access it. Following the digitization of records as well as the expansion of digital libraries for search engines, data became more easily accessible and the right to be forgotten began to come into conception. In 2014, a landmark case of Google vs. Costeja made the right to be forgotten a well known concept.

Google vs. Costeja

In 2010, a resident of Spain named Mario Costeja González filed a complaint against La Vanguardia newspaper due to articles which they had published online from 1998 which contained sensitive information of his. When googling his name, Costeja obtained links to two articles from La Vanguardia which contained information about his forced sale of property in order to pay off social security debts. Costeja requested that La Vanguardia remove this information from their site and also requested that Google remove these links from their search results.


Case Studies

Ethical Issues

References