On 13 May 2014, the European Court of Justice ruled that search engines such as Google had a duty to respect EU citizens’ right to be forgotten. That is, the search engines—deemed “controllers” of information under the Directive—were obligated in some circumstances to remove or de-list links from search results that pertain to information that infringes on an individual’s rights under the Directive. In the fall of 2015, the Spanish Supreme Court found itself obligated to determine the application of the digital right to be forgotten in a different context: This time in a digital newspaper archive. However, since the right to be forgotten is purely judicially-created and not yet memorialized in a regulation (other than through judicial inter...
Since the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled in Google Spain in 2014, the global legal dis...
The Internet has an almost unlimited capacity to remember, which has been described as the problem o...
The right to be forgotten – as an individual right to require personal data erasure on mass media –...
Diploma thesis The Right to be Forgotten on the Internet applies to the functions of Internet search...
Treball de Fi de Grau en Dret. Curs 2016-2017Tutora: Marisa Iglesias VilaOn the 5th of March 2010, M...
For many years, various authors have postulated the possible existence of a right to be forgotten. A...
On May 13, 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that Google must comply wit...
The landscape of internationally recognized rights is increasingly expanding the web and the Informa...
The right to be forgotten as established in the CJEU's decision in Google Spain is the first online ...
In May 2014, the European Court of Justice decided Google Spain v. AEPD and González and granted cit...
This paper considers the so-called 'right to be forgotten', in the context of the 2014 decision of t...
none1noFirst published online: November 25, 2015The passage of time may reverse the balance of inter...
Published: 25 November 2015The passage of time may reverse the balance of interests involved in the ...
The article analyses the judgment in case Google Spain, C-131/12, in which the Court of justice of t...
This comment examines a case referred to the Court of Justice of the European Union (“EU”) on “a Spa...
Since the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled in Google Spain in 2014, the global legal dis...
The Internet has an almost unlimited capacity to remember, which has been described as the problem o...
The right to be forgotten – as an individual right to require personal data erasure on mass media –...
Diploma thesis The Right to be Forgotten on the Internet applies to the functions of Internet search...
Treball de Fi de Grau en Dret. Curs 2016-2017Tutora: Marisa Iglesias VilaOn the 5th of March 2010, M...
For many years, various authors have postulated the possible existence of a right to be forgotten. A...
On May 13, 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that Google must comply wit...
The landscape of internationally recognized rights is increasingly expanding the web and the Informa...
The right to be forgotten as established in the CJEU's decision in Google Spain is the first online ...
In May 2014, the European Court of Justice decided Google Spain v. AEPD and González and granted cit...
This paper considers the so-called 'right to be forgotten', in the context of the 2014 decision of t...
none1noFirst published online: November 25, 2015The passage of time may reverse the balance of inter...
Published: 25 November 2015The passage of time may reverse the balance of interests involved in the ...
The article analyses the judgment in case Google Spain, C-131/12, in which the Court of justice of t...
This comment examines a case referred to the Court of Justice of the European Union (“EU”) on “a Spa...
Since the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled in Google Spain in 2014, the global legal dis...
The Internet has an almost unlimited capacity to remember, which has been described as the problem o...
The right to be forgotten – as an individual right to require personal data erasure on mass media –...