Sunday, March 27, 2016

Google France fined for right to oblivion only local – TecnoAndroid



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Google fined in France for not respecting the right to be forgotten

Google receiving a fine of one hundred thousand euro from the national commission French for Informatics and Freedom (CNIL) for not respecting the right to be forgotten in the world. From Mountain View do know that they are ready to use to defend his case.

That the right to be forgotten is one of the reasons most contention between the Mountain View giant and the European Union. The dispute goes on for some time, as early as February there had been the first disagreements between the French Government and the California-based company. The reason for the dispute is that the CNIL requires removal of the link, to those who request it, not only nationally, but globally.

Just in February we had already written that:

in the aftermath of the judgment on the “ right to be forgotten “, EU citizens may apply to engines search for remove about them. The results, therefore, once removed will no longer appear in searches carried out in the Old World on the popular search engine.

The EU regulators on privacy was very clear and, earlier, had asked the company to do so. Until now, therefore, the results of any search would be removed under what is called “ right to be forgotten .” And, in fact, only the European versions of Google have been omitted, such as google.co.uk or google.fr . The authority for the protection of the French data had threatened the company with a fine if he had not proceeded to remove the data from the global sites, such as google.com, the same way that of those in Europe.

Today is came the fine of one hundred thousand euro fine imposed by the CNIL. A Google spokesman has announced that the company is not willing to backtrack because the French Government, through its agency, can not decide what you can or can not search in other countries. Naturally Google will use.

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