The “right to be forgotten” isn’t guaranteed worldwide, according to a new court ruling.
Google on Tuesday won the latest lawsuit over its search results when a court in Japan ruled that the company did not need to remove links to articles written about a man arrested on child pornography charges, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The “right to be forgotten” is a term coined by a European Union court in 2014. Europeans can request that information that is “inaccurate, inadequate, irrelevant, or excessive” be removed from the search engine.
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Originally syndicated from Google wins its latest case against the ‘right to be forgotten’
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