
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2014, the European Union’s Court of Justice determined that individuals have a right to be forgotten, “the right—under certain conditions—to ask search engines to remove links with personal information about them.” It is not absolute, but meant to be balanced against other fundamental rights, like freedom of expression. In a half year following the Court’s decision, Google received over 180,000 removal requests. Of those reviewed and processed, 40.5% were granted. Largely seen as a victory in Europe, in the U.S., the reaction has been overwhelmingly negative. Was this ruling a blow to free speech and public information, or a win for privacy and human dignity?
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
4.6
20922,092 ratings
In 2014, the European Union’s Court of Justice determined that individuals have a right to be forgotten, “the right—under certain conditions—to ask search engines to remove links with personal information about them.” It is not absolute, but meant to be balanced against other fundamental rights, like freedom of expression. In a half year following the Court’s decision, Google received over 180,000 removal requests. Of those reviewed and processed, 40.5% were granted. Largely seen as a victory in Europe, in the U.S., the reaction has been overwhelmingly negative. Was this ruling a blow to free speech and public information, or a win for privacy and human dignity?
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
5,056 Listeners
9,162 Listeners
1,106 Listeners
32,098 Listeners
6,274 Listeners
784 Listeners
26,334 Listeners
6,675 Listeners
25,777 Listeners
10,661 Listeners
110,705 Listeners
6,962 Listeners
5,663 Listeners
15,457 Listeners
8,607 Listeners