This is the property of the Daily Journal Corporation and fully protected by copyright. It is made available only to Daily Journal subscribers for personal or collaborative purposes and may not be distributed, reproduced, modified, stored or transferred without written permission. Please click "Reprint" to order presentation-ready copies to distribute to clients or use in commercial marketing materials or for permission to post on a website. and copyright (showing year of publication) at the bottom.
Subscribe to the Daily Journal for access to Daily Appellate Reports, Verdicts, Judicial Profiles and more...

Perspective

Jun. 17, 2014

Eternal sunshine of the spotless search

The recent European ruling that EU citizens can ask Internet search engines to delete certain search results about them has been hotly debated since its release last month. By Robert Blamires and Felicity Fisher


By Robert Blamires and Felicity Fisher


The recent European ruling that EU citizens can ask Google and other Internet search engines to delete certain search results about them has been well publicized and hotly debated since its release last month.


The Spanish claimant (Mario Costeja Gozalez) successfully argued for Google's deletion of search results linking to 16-year-old articles describing his house being repossessed to recover debts, on the gr...

To continue reading, please subscribe.
For only $95 a month (the price of 2 article purchases)
Receive unlimited article access and full access to our archives,
Daily Appellate Report, award winning columns, and our
Verdicts and Settlements.
Or
$795 for an entire year!

Or access this article for $45
(Purchase provides 7-day access to this article. Printing, posting or downloading is not allowed.)

Already a subscriber?

Enewsletter Sign-up