Your Right To Be Forgotten Beats Google's Right to Remember
Your Right To Be Forgotten Beats Google's Right to Remember Hamza Shaban Last week, Microsoft's Bing joined Google in acquiescing to the E.U. high court's "right to be forgotten" ruling, which allows European citizens to petition for the removal of search results about themselves that are "inadequate…no longer relevant, or excessive." The Court of Justice sees it as a victory for privacy protection; Google sees only censorship. The company that aims to catalog the world's knowledge thinks it has a right to know it all. For Google, and the many Google apologists, the court ruling is a sloppy, onerous drag—a burden for tech innovators and an impotent half-measure for privacy advocates. continua qui: http://gizmodo.com/your-right-to-be-forgotten-trumps-googles-right-to-reme-1... -- Avv. Alessandro Mantelero, PhD Aggregate Professor, Politecnico di Torino Director of Privacy and Faculty Fellow, Nexa Center for Internet and Society Visiting Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute Research Consultant, Sino-Italian Research Center for Internet Torts at Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology Programme Coordinator, Double Degree program in Management and IP Law, Politecnico di Torino–Tongji University of Shanghai http://staff.polito.it/alessandro.mantelero Politecnico di Torino Corso Duca degli Abruzzi, 24 10129 Torino - Italy in libertate fortitudo
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Alessandro Mantelero