- Editorials
- By Gabriela Vatu
- June 8th, 2014
Who Decides Who Has the Right to Be Forgotten?
Google has been put in charge of deciding what data is relevant and what is not
- Google News
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 31st, 2014
Google Receives 12,000 Requests for Link Removal in Europe
In just a few hours, Google was swamped with requests from Europeans
- Tips and Tricks
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 30th, 2014
How to Demand Your Right to Be Forgotten from Google
Here's a step-by-step helper on filling in a request with Google
- Google News
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 30th, 2014
Google Creates Form for Europeans Who Want "to Be Forgotten"
Europeans can now exercise their "right to be forgotten" in an organized manner
- Internet Life
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 26th, 2014
Google Gets Swamped with Link Removal Requests, Still Doesn't Know How to Handle Them [AP]
At least, Google will only have to deal with such requests from Europe
- Editorials
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 15th, 2014
Implications of “Right to Be Forgotten” European Court Decision Are Bigger than Google
Anyone with anything to hide in their past can now complain and change history
- Google News
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 15th, 2014
The Right to Be Forgotten: Google Receives Pleas for Link Removal from Pedophile [BBC]
Giving everyone the right to ask for their history to be erased can have a major impact
- Web Blog
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 15th, 2014
Eric Schmidt, Google: European Ruling Strikes Wrong Balance
Google isn't happy about the decision from the European Court of Justice
- Web Blog
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 14th, 2014
Wikipedia Founder: European Ruling on Google Is “Astonishing” [BBC]
The ruling that forces Google to delete links that become irrelevant doesn't make sense
- Google News
- By Gabriela Vatu
- May 13th, 2014
EU Court Orders Google to Drop Links to Irrelevant Personal Data
The "right to be forgotten" wins in Europe, so Google has to comply
- Google News
- By Lucian Parfeni
- February 26th, 2013
Google Fights Spain in EU Court over "Right to Be Forgotten"
Google argues that it shouldn't be forced to censor legal, factual information