Don’t Force Google to ‘Forget’
By JONATHAN ZITTRAIN
MAY 14, 2014
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — THE European Court of Justice ruled on Tuesday
that Europeans have a limited “right to be forgotten” by search
engines like Google. According to the ruling, an individual can
compel Google to remove certain reputation-harming search results
that are generated by Googling the individual’s name. The court is
trying to address an important problem — namely, the Internet’s
ability to preserve indefinitely all its information about you, no
matter how unfortunate or misleading — but it has devised a poor
solution.
The court’s decision is both too broad and curiously narrow. It is
too broad in that it allows individuals to impede access to facts
about themselves found in public documents. This is a form of
censorship, one that would most likely be unconstitutional if
attempted in the United States. Moreover, the test for removal that
search engines are expected to use is so vague — search results are
to be excluded if they are “inadequate, irrelevant or no longer
relevant” — that search engines are likely to err on the safe side
and accede to most requests.
[...]
Continua qui:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/15/opinion/dont-force-google-to-forget.html