The internet never forgets. But should it? That legal battle is raging in Canada and worldwide 

The web’s hive mind has a long memory — and a mean streak — which can be a serious problem for anyone trying to move past an ugly divorce, a criminal record, a bankruptcy or a foolish mistake. For years, officials turned a blind eye to the problem, declaring the web a wild and unruly frontier. But now, two decades after the advent of Google (the domain google.com was registered on Sept. 15, 1997), courts and regulators are increasingly asking the question: Should the internet’s cache of damaging personal data be made to disappear at some point? Or should it remain in place forever, burned onto the online presence of the once guilty like some kind of digital scarlet letter? Those who argue for a best-before date call it “the right to be forgotten” and say it should be a fundamental tenet of the digital age. But free speech advocates contend that enshrining the right in law will diminish the revolutionary power of the web by creating “black holes” where information can disappear. “There are two competing interests at the heart of almost everything that goes on online,” says Montreal lawyer Allen Mendelsohn, an internet law specialist. “In the simplest terms: It’s your right to your reputation versus the other person’s right to freedom of expression.” Europe and Argentina are among the jurisdictions that have already recognized an individual’s right to be forgotten.The issue has played out for years in Europe, where regulators are now wrestling with the thorny question of how to enforce removal orders on the transnational, shape-shifting web. In May 2014, the European Union’s highest court ruled that Google must remove links to damaging personal information deemed inadequate, irrelevant or excessive. The ruling — based on the complaint of a Spanish man who wanted Google to remove links to a 1998 news story about his bankruptcy —said search engines were data “controllers,” not just neutral conduits, and therefore had a responsibility to cleanse unfair and damaging information. In its wake, Google received a deluge of requests for cache removals from EU residents: more than 735,000 people filled out the company’s digital application form.It has since delisted 1.1 million search results inside the EU, according to the company’s public transparency report. France’s data protection agency, however, said that wasn’t good enough, and it has ordered Google to censor those same links worldwide so that someone conducting a search in Canada, for instance, couldn’t find information unavailable in the EU. (Google Search uses different domains for different countries: Canada is http://www.google.ca, Germany is http://www.google.de, Spain is http://www.google.es, Australia is http://www.google.com.au, the U.S. is http://www.google.com.) The company says the case has profound implications for the free flow of digital information.Google has challenged the order to France’s Conseil d’Etat, which in July referred the issue to the EU’s top court. “If French law applies globally, how long will it be until other countries – perhaps less open and democratic – start demanding that their laws regulating information likewise have global reach?” Google general counsel Kent Walker wrote in a recent blog post. Information that is legal in one country, he said, is verboten in another: “Thailand outlaws insults to its king; Brazil outlaws negative campaigning in political elections; Turkey outlaws speeches that denigrates Ataturk or the Turkish nation.” He warned that the case, if upheld, could trigger “a global race to the bottom.” Google is already in an uncomfortable situation. By recognizing the right to be forgotten, European courts have handed the multinational the judge-like responsibility of weighing individual privacy rights against the public’s right to know. Google officials have reviewed more than two million EU web addresses (URLs), and have decided to remove 56.9 per cent of them. The company provides examples of the decisions it faces, but it does not set out hard and fast rules for removals, nor does it explain how its officials balance public versus private interests. The Global Commission on Internet Governance, an independent think-tank led by former Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt, decried that state of affairs in a 2016 report: “Private companies — as opposed to courts and legislatures — are only accountable to their shareholders; they should not be the arbitrator on how to weigh fundamental rights and public interests.” Courts around the world are now wrestling with issues raised by privacy on the internet, and Canada is no exception. In January, the Federal Court of Canada issued a judgment that excoriated Sebastian Radulescu, the owner of the website Globe24h.com, as someone who “has essentially made a business of exploiting the privacy of individuals for profit.”

Google Seems To Have Stopped Removing Defamation – [Ag] Search Blog

online reputation management agencies by Chris Silver Smith At the end of December, I reported at Search Engine Land on what what seems to have been a major change in Google’s internal policy. (See: Paradigm shift: Has Google suspended defamation removals?) Google has effectively begun to decline requests to remove defamation from its web search results, although it has been honoring those takedown requests for many years now, when accompanied by properly-executed court orders. While I phrased the title of that article “Has Google…” and ended with a question mark, the reality is that the company has completely stopped removing URLs for defamation. The Search Engine Land editors and I opted for that interrogative title phrasing because Google declined to make any official statement about the matter. This lack of transparency around this has created a lot of consternation among attorneys who deal with online defamation, along with their clients — I polled a number of attorneys across the country and consistently found they had all encountered a change in their dealings with Google in the past few months. It seems that some stuff that was already being processed prior to Google’s apparent policy change may still be acted upon, but most new requests are getting denied with no reason provided. As I outlined in the article, the past year has seen some significant news around alleged instances of frauds perpetrated upon courts by attorneys and/or online reputation management agencies. I cited claims made by Pissed Consumer about court orders obtained to remove their pages based upon “stooge defendants” and fake/sham lawsuits. A number of readers subsequently brought to my attention a series of other articles on the matter by Paul Alan Levy and Eugene Volokh where they had identified a number of other lawsuits that centered around similarly suspect defendants, and the goal seemed to be to engineer a quicker and easier path to obtaining court orders to remove pages from search results:“Georgia Dentist Mitul Patel Takes Phony Litigation Scheme to New Extremes Trying to Suppress Criticism“ – August 19, 2016“A suspicious strategy in alleged online libel cases?“ – August 19, 2016“Dozens of suspicious court cases, with missing defendants, aim at getting web pages taken down or deindexed“ – October 10, 2016“Lawsuit against lawyers who allegedly filed improper lawsuits aimed at getting Internet criticism deindexed by Google“ – October 31, 2016“More on lawsuits against seemingly fake defendants, aimed at hiding online criticism“ – November 22, 2016“People trying to get Google to deindex professional news site articles“ – December 14, 2016From the listing of cases outlined in these articles, one might well assume that perhaps all defamation removal requests submitted to Google could have been similarly trumped-up on artificially-engineered defendants and court orders. But, that’s not so. There are plenty of highly-ethical attorneys who take their responsibilities seriously and have submitted real, valid, properly-executed court orders to Google requesting removal of URLs that falsely defame people and companies. Victims and their attorneys are unlikely to publicize when they prevail in legal cases and takedown requests, because attracting publicity to such activity could well induce the Streisand Effect, undermining the reparative activities they’ve undertaken in improving their reputations. So, if it wasn’t clear from my article, Google has suspended most takedowns from the goodguys now, as well as from the bad. Eric Goldman has also pointed out that Google’s legal department may be looking beyond just their own cases involving takedowns, such as in a case decided upon by the California Court of Appeal back in June of 2016, where Yelp was ordered to remove reviews that were found to be defamatory. (See “Yelp Forced To Remove Defamatory Reviews – Hassell v. Bird“.) The Hassell v. Bird case involved an instance where a trial court had found in favor of the plaintiff that a review was defamatory and the defendant defaulted — did not show up to defend against the accusations. Yelp complained that they were being ordered to take action despite not being a party in the original case, arguing that they should have been able to contest some of the claims in that earlier litigation. The appeal court’s opinion seemed to enable a path whereby some defamation claimants might be able to exert legal pressure to make (California-based) content-distributor companies remove stuff with court orders obtained through ex parte / default judgments of the very sort that were investigated and reported on in the Volokh and Levy articles where such judgments were obtained with the apparent goal of removing defamatory content from Google web search. Goldman, who appears to be an apologist/defender of Section 230 protections, makes some points about how the Court of Appeal’s decision in the Hassell v. Bird case seems a bit circuitous in arriving at making Yelp more accountable for a third-party’s reviews posted there in light of the CDA protections for user-generated content sites, all while ignoring that the defendant might be legally compelled and able to remove the offending reviews themselves without requiring Yelp’s intervention. (I simplify — Goldman outlines a number of different legal contentions involved in this case.) From a legal standpoint, Goldman seems to make some good points, although I disagree that default judgments are necessarily an “unreliable” path to justice — since there are instances precisely like Hassell v. Bird where a defamation case defendant will decline to appear in court — if someone can avoid court costs and potential loss of a case by merely not showing up, everyone would do this — critics of ex parte cases neatly avoid proposing alternatives. But, the aspect we’re interested in is whether Google and other Section 230 protected sites and service providers might find cause for concern by the appeal court decision. Some are speculating that the decision in that case influenced Google’s move to halt court-ordered defamation removals. However, it’s clear that Google has already historically considered itself immune under Section 230 regarding defamation removal court orders, and I can’t see them putting the breaks on their voluntary removals policy merely to abruptly start making a legal point — no, this was much more likely to have been done as a response to the handful of cases where defendants may have been faked-up in order to short-circuit the legal process and obtain court orders to fuel takedowns in a cheaper manner or in instances where there would have otherwise been no legal basis for a defamation finding. Google’s move seems to communicate that they may have become frustrated with an inability to discern valid, well-executed defamation removal requests from those bad ones that have been trumped-up through unethical means. This is unfortunate, because, as I had described, Google’s abrupt policy change is a terrible development for present and future defamation victims. People who have been damaged by outright lies, fabrications, exaggerations and malicious publication of private personal information suffer loss of business, inability to obtain employment, and difficulties in making new relationships. This is often not a situation where justice is being meted-out in terms of people necessarily deserving to have a bad reputation. I think the staunch defenders of Section 230 protections would do well to recognize the suffering of individuals and businesses when there’s absolutely no avenue for relief. While the economic advantages of keeping costs lower for companies is certainly a valid and admirable concern, that also needs some degree of balance rather than the apparent attitude that victims in these cases are some form of acceptable collateral damage in return for us all being able to search for celeb images and use our iPhones. As I opined in the Search Engine Land article, these companies already have substantial staff devoted to processing legal removal applications for bigger business interests like copyright violations, and there are potential ways user-generated content sites could save on processing legal removal requests. This is not an either-or scenario where we must choose between victims of false accusations and companies providing useful services. What one would hope would be for Google to simply limit the granting of removal requests by only suspending consideration for the attorneys and legal cases involved in unethical manipulation, similar to how the company penalizes websites that are found to be using black-hat SEO methods and spamming the search engine. Google has differentiated websites that are bad players versus good through many sophisticated methods. One would wish that they would apply similar sophistication towards evaluation of defamation removals, too, and not slam shut the door to relief for all victims. One also rather hopes and expects that complaints might be filed against attorneys and other individuals that have cooperated in schemes to deceive the courts — what appears to have been done in some instances is serious enough to merit criminal penalties. The entire community has an interest in removing the bad players from the equation. Meanwhile, as things currently stand, the only viable option for defamation and reputation attack victims will be to contract with the services of reputable online reputation management (a.k.a. “ORM”) firms and work towards displacing the negative materials with positive or neutral things. UPDATE: Eugene Volokh has now written an article reporting on my article and also commenting on it. In my article, I stated clearly that Google suspended their approvals, but not in every single instance — he quotes the Techdirt article about my article, saying “Google seems to have stopped responding to defamation lawsuit orders,” and he says that characterization is “something of an overstatement”. Like him, my contacts at Google also state they haven’t completely halted, and attorneys involved say a little activity is still happening. But, from the samples of cases I’ve seen, there are legit cases getting denied, just as I had described.

Bing is Now Refusing to Comply With Court-Orders to Remove Defamatory Content from Search Results

Several attorneys who specialize in Internet defamation law say that search engine Bing has recently changed its policy and is no longer complying with court-ordered removals of defamatory content. Such court-ordered removals are often requested as part of defamation lawsuits by reputation management attorneys, and obtained on behalf of a person or business. Removal orders are a useful tool to combat against sites such as Ripoff Report and other complaint sites based offshore, which usually refuse to remove defamatory content from their websites under any circumstances. Although the content may remain on the website, if a person or business is able to obtain a valid court order against the author of the post, search engines like Google, Bing, and Yahoo will usually agree to permanently remove the page from its search indices. Reputation attorneys have had great success using this method in the past. After all, it is more important for negative results to be removed from search engines than from a site very few people would search on. If the negative content can’t be found, there is not much to worry about. However, lately it seems that Bing, which also powers Yahoo’s search results, is no longer complying with defamatory content removal requests.Bing’s Official Policy on Defamatory RemovalsSeveral prominent Internet reputation attorneys I’ve spoken with said that Bing previously accepted removal orders, and allege that Bing has recently unofficially changed its policy quietly and no longer does. Nothing has officially changed, anyway. According to this Bing help page, Bing’s policy on defamatory content removals is: “We may remove displayed search results containing allegedly defamatory content. For example, we might remove a displayed search result if we receive a valid and narrow court order indicating that a particular link has been found to be defamatory.”Evidence to the ContraryInternet defamation attorney Aaron Minc, recently received a denial letter from Bing on his request to remove defamatory URLs based on a court order. The full copy of the letter has been posted on Minc’s Blog. After speaking with Minc further, he explained why he was surprised by Bing’s apparent change in policy regarding court order removals. “In the past, I have submitted court orders to Bing on multiple occasions to request removal of URLs from its search index that contains defamation,” Minc said. “The court orders are narrowly defined, they specify the exact URLs that we want to be removed, and they include what specific language in the URLs we want to be removed is defamatory. “I have never previously had a court order rejected by Bing. I found it particularly surprising that the Bing chose to reject the court order that I submitted given the circumstances underlying the case.” The order stemmed from a case involving two ex-employees of a company, who demanded that their ex-employer pay them $150,000 or that they were going to absolutely ruin their business to the point that they would have to change their name and industry. Their plan almost worked. When the company refused to pay, the employees took to posting dozens of slanderous and horribly detrimental lies about the company and its owners on websites like Ripoff Report and Pissed Consumer, labeling the company as a scam and falsely accusing the business of committing several state and federal laws and stealing from its employees. The business quickly began to lose profits and customers. After over a year of extremely contentious and hard fought litigation, the ex-employees and company finally agreed to settle the matter. In the court-ordered settlement signed by both parties, the two ex-employees admitted that the content they posted was false and agreed to have the content removed from web pages and search indices, along with posting redactions to their statements. “Bing’s response was extremely disappointing,” Minc said. “I just don’t understand why Bing decided to suddenly change its policy, when it seemed to have no problem assisting victims of defamation in the past who obtained valid court orders. “A lot of businesses and individuals really relied on Bing’s prior actions and policy, and are going to suffer significant harm from its change in policy. Google had no problem removing every URL we requested to be taken down.” Minc recently published a follow-up post stating that he has received calls from several other attorneys and individuals who are upset about the new policy change.More Removal Requests Rejected by BingInternet lawyer Aaron Kelly has had a similar experience. Mr. Kelly has submitted dozens of court orders to Bing in the past to remove defamatory URLs from its search index without issue. Now, Bing has rejected every single court order that he has recently submitted. “What’s most surprising about Bing’s apparent change in policy is that the company is rejecting court orders that it previously has accepted in the past,” Kelly said. Earlier this year, the website Ripoff Report re-indexed all of the content on its website, which slightly changed the URLs of all of the content posted on the site. Because of the re-index, content on Ripoff Report URLs that Bing had previously agreed to remove from its search index after being provided a valid court order, are now re-appearing in its search engine results. According to Kelly, Bing is refusing to continue to remove the exact same content on the new URLs. Kelly is equally surprised and disappointed by Bing’s policy developments as Minc. “I just don’t get it,” Kelly said. “This is causing significant harm to my clients.”