Sunday, October 12, 2014

Japanese court ordered Google to delete data – to the Minute News

The Tokyo District Court today sentenced the Internet giant Google to clear search results linking the name of a complainant to a crime he did not commit.

The court ruled that Google delete about 237 entries that appear after the Japanese media the name of the complainant be inserted into your search engine, news.

The man who filed a complaint against Google in June, argued that the results of research suggest that he was involved in a crime and that it constituted a threat to their way of life and compromises your privacy, says the Asahi Shimbun.

The court’s decision Tokyo follows the decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union on May 13 about the “right to be forgotten” in which courts may order that the search engines remove links whose content cited harms people.

According to his online site, Google makes clear that using the “right to be forgotten” is a complicated process because it involves assessing each application to try to balance the right to privacy and the public’s right to information movement.

Google offers an online form where users can request that their data be deleted. On the first day the company released the form on May 30, received 12,000 requests for removal of information.

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