The right to be
informed vs. the right to be forgotten. The latest controversial debate is between
those who want to see their name deleted from search engines and those who would
like to be informed on biographies of known persons or characters which could
be found on web sites like Wikipedia.
Lately Wikimedia
Foundation reported a certain number of notifications with which Google informed
surfers to have deleted some links to Wikipedia following the exercise of the
right to be deleted by certain consumers.
Without
revealing the name of the applicants, Google explained how to respect the
judgment of the European Court of Justice, which guarantees the right to be
forgotten (as a result of which Google has received over 90 thousand
applications for removal of applicants requesting the right to be forgotten),
at least fifty pages of internet encyclopedias have already undergone this procedure.
Forty-six pages belong to Wikipedia: among them appears several times the name
of the chess player Guido den Broeder and one concerns Gerry Hutch, an Irish
imprisoned in the 80s.
One of these
requests came from Renato Vallanzasca a notorious Italian mobster who was a
powerful figure in the Milanese underworld during the 1970s. Following numerous
robberies, kidnappings, murders, and many years as a fugitive, he is currently
serving 4 consecutive life sentences with an additional 290 years in prison
Wikimedia
Foundation launched an alarm for the defense of freedom of information. "
Accurate search results are disappearing from Europe - said Lila Tretikov, executive
director of the Wikimedia Foundation -
without any public explanation, no real evidence, no judicial review and no
appeal procedure. The result is that unwanted information simply disappears.
Even Google had
shown his opposition to the decision of the European Court by the mouth of
David Drummond, chief legal officer of the Californian company: "We do not
agree with the judgment, it is a bit like saying that a book can be in a
library, but can not be included in its catalog. Obviously, however, we respect
the authority of the Court and we do our best to adhere to its decisions.
"
No comments:
Post a Comment