Right to Be Forgotten: Google May Have to Cut Web Links to Wrong Info by Short Sellers | Tech News

Right to Be Forgotten: Google May Have to Cut Web Links to Wrong Info by Short Sellers

The pair are claiming their “right to be forgotten” under EU rules and want Google to delete links to the reports dating back to 2015.

By:BLOOMBERG
| Updated on: Dec 10 2022, 23:39 IST
Google BEST apps of 2022 announced! Check out Tablets, Chromebooks, Wear
image caption
1/5 Google says that 2022 marked the post-pandemic era for many across the world – and in India too, people once again opened themselves to the possibilities and experiences of the outside world while continuing to depend on digital solutions for support across many of their needs. (Unsplash)
Google
2/5 The winner of the Best Chromebooks app is BandLab – Music Making Studio, which is a free music recording and leading social music creation platform with more than 50 million users worldwide. (Unsplash)
image caption
3/5 BandLab is an app that lets users share music, no matter their skill level or background. The app also has a multi-track Studio, a music maker that lets you record, edit, and remix your music. (Google Play Store)
image caption
4/5 The best Tablets apps is the ‘Pocket: Save. Read. Grow.’ This app will help to capture the content that comes at you all day long, and curate your own space filled with only the topics you care about. You can save the latest stories, articles, news, sports, and videos from any device, and any publisher or app. (Google Play Store)
image caption
5/5 Google announced the best for Wear apps is the "Todoist: to-do list & planner." The app is a delightfully simple yet powerful task planner. It will even provide a work-life balance kind of service. (Google Play Store)
Google
icon View all Images
The EU Court of Justice ruled on Thursday that search engine operators “must deference information” on the internet when the person making the request “proves that such information is manifestly inaccurate.” (REUTERS)

The apparent targets of an information campaign by short-sellers got a boost in their bid to force Google to sever search links to reports criticizing their business models and depicting them living a lavish lifestyle.

The pair are claiming their “right to be forgotten” under EU rules and want Google to delete links to the reports dating back to 2015. Google refused, saying it couldn't judge whether the content in the disputed articles was wrong, as the complainants said.

The EU Court of Justice ruled on Thursday that search engine operators “must deference information” on the internet when the person making the request “proves that such information is manifestly inaccurate.”

The case is the latest test of the right to be forgotten following a 2014 EU court ruling that forces search engines to remove European links to websites that contain out of date or false information that could unfairly harm a person's reputation.

The EU judges said that it's up to the targets of online articles or pictures to prove why the material is wrong, but that they don't need to go through the courts to prove this.

Google and other search engine providers “cannot be required to play an active role in trying to find facts which are not substantiated by the request for deferencing,” the court said.

The case is: C-460/20, Google (Déréférencement d'un contenu prétendument inexact).

Catch all the Latest Tech News, Mobile News, Laptop News, Gaming news, Wearables News , How To News, also keep up with us on Whatsapp channel,Twitter, Facebook, Google News, and Instagram. For our latest videos, subscribe to our YouTube channel.

First Published Date: 10 Dec, 23:38 IST
Tags:
NEXT ARTICLE BEGINS