Google now has 35 days from the 18 August to remove the links from its search results for the claimant’s name. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA |
The search engine had previously removed links relating to a
10 year-old criminal offence by an individual after requests made under the
right to be forgotten ruling. Removal of those links from Google’s search
results for the claimant’s name spurred new news posts detailing the removals,
which were then indexed by Google’s search engine.
Google refused to remove links to these later news posts,
which included details of the original criminal offence, despite them forming
part of search results for the claimant’s name, arguing that they are an
essential part of a recent news story and in the public interest.
Google now has 35 days from the 18 August to remove the
links from its search results for the claimant’s name. Google has the right to
appeal to the General Regulatory Chamber against the notice.
Deputy commissioner David Smith said: “The European court
ruling last year was clear that links prompted by searching on an individual’s
name are subject to data protection rules. That means they shouldn’t include
personal information that is no longer relevant.”
The right to be forgotten ruling allows Europeans to apply
to remove outdated information about them from search engine listings. Google
has approximately a 90% market share of search in Europe, making it the primary
focus of the rulings and watchdog attention.
Relating to
journalistic content
In the ICO’s ruling Smith says that it is “not a case where
the information is about an individual in public life or where making the
information available would protect the public from improper or unprofessional
conduct” and that “the information is not reasonably current”.
However, the ruling says that the “commissioner accepts that
the search results in this case relate to journalistic content” and “does not
dispute that journalistic content relating to devisions to delist search
results may be newsworthy and in the public interest”.
“That interest can be adequately and properly met without a
search made on the basis of the complainant’s name”, the ruling concluded.
Google alerted news organisations to early right to be
forgotten link removals through its webmaster tools, which prompted some news
organisations to detail which links had been removed in news updates.
In June the BBC detailed all the links removed to published
BBC articles. The Telegraph also published details of link removals affecting
its website.
Smith said: “Let’s be clear. We understand that links being
removed as a result of this court ruling is something that newspapers want to
write about. And we understand that people need to be able to find these
stories through search engines like Google. But that does not need them to be
revealed when searching on the original complainant’s name.”
Google did not respond to request for comment.
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