David
Drummond, chief legal officer of internet search firm, says adjusting to EU
rule on removing content is 'work in progress'
The Guardian, James Ball, Thursday 10 July 2014
|
Under a European court judgment Google may have to remove web links if it receives a complaint. Photograph: Michael Gottschalk/Photothek/ Getty Images |
Google has
acknowledged that it "incorrectly" removed links to several Guardian
articles last month and then reinstated them after complaints from people
citing the "right to be forgotten".
Following a
European court ruling, Google is required to remove links to "inadequate,
irrelevent or … excessive" information from its search results in EU
countries if the person to which the web page relates places a complaint,
subject to a public interest test. But in a comment piece in the Guardian,
Google's chief legal officer, David Drummond, acknowledged that the company,
which opposes the ruling, was still working out the right way to implement the
judgment, and had made some errors.
The
Guardian was one of the first outlets to be notified that some of its content
had been removed from some EU search results, receiving six notification that
articles had been affected. Four of those articles were subsequently reinstated
into search results by Google.
If
complainants wish to challenge reinstatements they must do so through their
country's information commissioner's office.
Drummond
said Google disagreed with the ruling, but said the company respected "the
court's authority" and was "doing its very best to comply quickly and
responsibly".
He promised
the public debate would affect how the company made its decisions on removing
or reinstating content for the 250,000 requests it had received from more than
70,000 people.
"Of
course, only two months in, our process is still very much a work in
progress," he wrote. "It's why we incorrectly removed links to an
article last week (since been reinstated). But the good news is that the
ongoing, active, debate that's happening will inform the development of our
principles, policies and practices, in particular about how to balance one
person's right to privacy with another's right to know."
Drummond
also announced that Google had set up an advisory council of experts to examine
the "right to be forgotten" issue. Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder and
internet campaigner, will sit on the panel, as will Le Monde's editorial
director, Sylvie Kauffmann, and the UN special rapporteur Frank La Rue.
The
advisory council would take evidence from appropriate bodies and interest
groups, as well as hold public meetings, Drummond said. It would produce a
public report on some of the more difficult points concerning the "right
to be forgotten", including issues about spent criminal convictions and
victims of abuse, as well as the wider societal implications of the court's
ruling.
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