French privacy regulator demands Google make ‘right to be forgotten’ global
France’s data protection regulator, the Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés (CNIL), has ordered Google to remove results from every version of its search engine, not just the European versions. The call comes a year after the European Court of Justice’s ‘right to be forgotten’ ruling. It gave European residents the ability to request that search engines delete results related to them that they consider out of date, irrelevant or inflammatory. Google has an online form to allow individuals to request de-listings, but when accepted they only apply to the European search engines, not globally. The CNIL’s statement says it will move to impose…
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