MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. —
Europe's moves to rein in Google — including a court ruling this month ordering
the search giant to give people a say in what pops up when someone searches
their name — may be seen in Brussels as striking a blow for the little guy.
But across the Atlantic, the
idea that users should be able to edit Google search results in the name of
privacy is being slammed as weird and difficult to enforce at best and a
crackdown on free speech at worst.
"Americans will find
their searches bowdlerized by prissy European sensibilities," said Stewart
Baker, former assistant secretary for policy at the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security. "We'll be the big losers. The big winners will be French
ministers who want the right to have their last mistress forgotten."
Mountain View, California
-based Google says it's still figuring out how to comply with the European
Court of Justice's May 13 ruling, which says the company must respond to
complaints about private information that turns up in searches. Google must
then decide whether the public's right to be able to find the information
outweighs an individual's right to control it — with preference given to the
individual.
The judgment applies to all
search engines operating within the European Union. But in practice that means
Google, given that 90 percent of all online searches there use Google's search
engine.
"The ruling has
significant implications for how we handle takedown requests," Google
spokesman Al Verney said. "This is logistically complicated, not least
because of the many languages involved and the need for careful review. As soon
as we have thought through exactly how this will work, which may take several
weeks, we will let our users know."
There will be serious technological challenges, said
U.S. privacy attorney David Keating in Atlanta.
"It seems aspirational,
not a reality, to comply with such a standard," he said. "The
reengineering necessary to implement the right to be forgotten is significant."
Google may partially automate
the process, as it does with copyright-infringement complaints, but ultimately
a human will have to decide when results should be sanitized.
Johannes Caspar, who as
Hamburg's Commissioner for Data Protection acts as Germany's lead regulator of
Google on privacy issues, confirmed the company is already working on an
"online tool" to help people file complaints.
Because the court's ruling
applies only within Europe, it will mean some fragmentation of search results.
That is, Europeans and Americans will see slightly different versions of the Internet. A worst-case
scenario would be if Google decides it must err on the side of caution and
removes links liberally in order to avoid lawsuits, critics of the ruling said.
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales,
who has been an outspoken critic of the ruling, summarized it for The
Associated Press as a "technologically incompetent violation of human
rights." He said it amounts to censorship, and he predicted it will
ultimately be scrapped.
"The danger is that
search engines now are faced with an uncertain legal future which may require
them to censor all kinds of things when someone thinks it is
'irrelevant'," Wales said.
In the wake of the decision,
some Europeans are already asking to clean up their online history, though
there may not yet have been a "flood" of hundreds of requests,
including some from pedophiles and politicians, as was reported in the British
press shortly after the ruling was handed down.
In Britain, David Murphy of
the Information Commissioner's Office said "while we've had some people
get in touch around this issue, we're simply telling them to speak to
Google."
Officials in the Netherlands
said they haven't had any new requests since the ruling.
Caspar, the German official,
said his office has received 20 new requests, including some from people who
won legal fights with websites to have material taken down — but the sites
didn't comply because they were based abroad.
Differences between the U.S.
and Europe over privacy have never been greater, sparked by recent revelations
that the U.S. National Security Agency secretly broke into communications on
Yahoo and Google abroad and targeted overseas telecoms, including German
Chancellor Angela Merkel's own cellphone.
Joel Reidenberg, visiting
professor of information technology policy at Princeton University, said the
ruling was not surprising, "given the current tenor of US-European privacy
relations as a result of the Snowden revelations."
A "fundamental
divide" between the European and American worldview is becoming evident,
he said.
"In Europe, there is a
sense that privacy and control over personal data are basic human rights,"
he said. In America, freedom of speech and free-market solutions tend to
prevail, he said.
Nico Sell, who runs San
Francisco-based Wickr, an encrypted messaging service, said it would make more
sense to let individuals, not tech giants, control their own online presence.
"The right to be
forgotten is a great idea philosophically, but it is wrong to put the onus on
Google or Facebook," she said. "They have no idea where all your data
is, and this is not their job. We need to give consumers tools with the ability
to add expiration dates to their personal data."
The above article is a repost from News
Observer.
0 comments:
Post a Comment