tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2617183138118819994.post3025656869615607461..comments2024-03-05T17:50:31.778+02:00Comments on Afro-IP: Google now implementing the ‘right to be forgotten’ decisionUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2617183138118819994.post-12230315236897570972014-07-01T19:36:38.232+02:002014-07-01T19:36:38.232+02:00Charles, thanks for sharing the experiment. :-)
...Charles, thanks for sharing the experiment. :-) <br /><br />I hope (or guess) that EU policymakers are aware of the<br />practical difficulty. IPcommentatorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02641576296229717318noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2617183138118819994.post-67514426371155314502014-06-30T16:58:27.788+02:002014-06-30T16:58:27.788+02:00It was too tempting to find out if Google.es has r...It was too tempting to find out if Google.es has remembered to forget Mario Costeja Gonzalez. The web results indeed bear the notice at the bottom of the page, "Es posible que algunos resultados se hayan eliminado de acuerdo con la ley de protección de datos europea. Más información." But what happens if one clicks the 'Imágenes' tab? Aha. There are the reproductions of the original notice placed in La Vanguardia in 1998. Has MCG achieved digital immortality, rather than being forgotten?Charlesnoreply@blogger.com