Friday, March 29, 2024
Search
English
Optical Storage
Graphics Cards
General Computing
PC Parts
Digital Cameras
Consumer Electronics
Games
Mobiles
All News Categories
Older News
Optical Storage
Graphics Cards
General Computing
PC Parts
Digital Cameras
Consumer Electronics
Games
Cooling Systems
Mobiles
Software Reviews
Reviews Around the Web
Technology Previews
Essays
Interviews
Tech Views
Glossary
FAQ
Guides/How-To's
Firmware
Drivers
BIOS
Software
Media Tests
Drive Comparisons
DVD Media Formats
All Forums
Become Member
Today's Posts
Popular Topics
In-House
Optical Storage
Optical Storage Software
General
Consumer Electronics
Other
News Around The Web
Advertise
Links
Jobs
Site Map
News/Reviews Feed
Submit News
Polls
Competitions
Users' Privacy
Contact Us
About
Home
|
News
|
Reviews
|
Articles
|
Guides
|
Download
|
Expert Area
|
Forum
|
Site Info
Friday, July 4, 2014
Google Restores Search Links To British Newspaper Articles
You are sending an email that contains the article
and a private message for your recipient(s).
Your Name:
Your e-mail:
* Required!
Recipient (e-mail):
*
Subject:
*
Introductory Message:
HTML/Text
(Photo: Yes/No)
(At the moment, only Text is allowed...)
Message Text:
Google on Thursday decided to change its decision to remove links to stories in Britain's Guardian newspaper and BBC as part of the implementation of Europe's "right to be forgotten" court ruling.
The Guardian's story that was initially asked to be removed fom Google search in Europe described how a soccer referee lied about reversing a penalty decision.
BBC's article described how former Merrill Lynch Chief Executive Officer E. Stanley O'Neal was ousted after the investment bank racked up billions of dollars in losses.
In May, a European court ruling gave its citizens the "right to be forgotten:" to request the scrubbing of links to articles that pop up under a name search.
Google has already received more than 70,000 removal requests. It had previously notified the BBC and the Guardian, which in turn publicized the moves.
Privacy advocates talked about press censorship and it seems that the "right to be forgotten" ruling is not easy to be applied in practice. Google had also criticized the ruling from the outset.
Tweet
Home
|
News
|
All News
|
Reviews
|
Articles
|
Guides
|
Download
|
Expert Area
|
Forum
|
Site Info
Site best viewed at 1024x768+ -
CDRINFO.COM
1998-2024 - All rights reserved
-
Privacy policy
-
Contact Us
.