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15 N.C. J.L. & Tech. 463 (2013-2014)
Google Search Results: Buried If Not Forgotten

handle is hein.journals/ncjl15 and id is 487 raw text is: NORTH CAROLINA JOURNAL OF LAW & TECHNOLOGY
VOLUME 15, ISsUE 3: SPRING 2014
GOOGLE SEARCH RESULTS: BURIED IF NOT FORGOTTEN
Allyson Haynes Stuart*
The right to be forgotten or mandatory deletion of online
information squarely confronts the First Amendment right to free
speech. But the underlying problem provoking advocates of a right
to be forgotten is only increasing: harmful information posted
online has the real potential to destroy a person's reputation or
livelihood In addition, the way Internet users get their
information-search engines, primarily Google-emphasizes
harmful information if it is popular under Google's algorithm.
In response to requests for removal, Google maintains that it
cannot control the underlying websites, so removing information
from its results is pointless. But, in fact, the search results
themselves are of crucial importance. And those results are
already being altered If Internet users'primary access to the vast
amount of online information is filtered-and hand-edited-by a
search engine, why should that editing not take into consideration
the harmful nature of some information? This Article proposes that
Google consider demoting references to information in its
search results that fall within one of several sensitive categories
when the party requesting removal has unsuccessfully exhausted
her remedies with respect to the website publisher of the
information. This amounts not to censorship, but to factoring in the
nature of the information itself in determining its relevance in
response to search requests.
Associate Professor of Law, Charleston School of Law. The author would
like to thank the participants of the 2013 Privacy Law Scholars Conference, in
particular Paul Bernal and Jef Ausloos, for their helpful comments on an earlier
draft; and Kelsey Brudvig, Meghan White and Stephanie P. Brown, for their
excellent research assistance.

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