Large majorities across demographic groups say it is more important to be able to keep things about themselves from being searchable online than to be able to discover potentially useful information about others. #RightToBeForgotten#R2BF#DataPrivacy https://t.co/jhGcQCMequ
“This is the first time we’ve had a society in which almost by default, everything is recorded and shared and aggregated in ways that create a lifelong profile. Children should have the right to make mistakes.”
https://t.co/YRMNwbWyXp
#Privacy#R2BF#SocialMedia#Reputation
The Salt Lake Tribune (@sltrib) is the latest newspaper to consider "Right To Be Forgotten" requests from people who want their names or pictures removed. #RightToBeForgotten#FreshStart#R2BF
https://t.co/UJg83qPo29
To address the fact that past indiscretions may now be a permanent barrier to employment, some news organizations are, by request, taking down old stories about small crimes by private people. #RightToBeForgotten#R2BF#DataPrivacy#GDPR
https://t.co/a8YGDJV2ae
"Allowing someone else to forget and grow from their mistake is a practice that newspapers ought to apply to themselves, especially as they continue to publish stories daily that affect people’s digital fates." #RightToBeForgotten#R2BF#DataPrivacy
https://t.co/ZhBeLuoKbq
Why America needs the #RightToBeForgotten: "the internet allows our collective consciousnesses to suddenly grow superhuman ability to recall character blemishes that in previous generations would have withered and died with the passing of time."
#R2BF
https://t.co/mki6gWqgXU
.@MLive explains why it considers #RightToBeForgotten requests: "Sometimes, people make mistakes and they pay the price and they’ve atoned for it, done the jail time or community service, and we feel it’s no longer relevant.” By @tennisbopper #R2BF
https://t.co/1rpWrUWe3L
Another win for #RightToBeForgotten advocates: News site @clevelanddotcom promises "to build tools to proactively remove dated content from our website that could be causing people to suffer because of mistakes they made long ago." #R2BF
https://t.co/Im4EYlve3M
How would you feel if, whenever someone googled your name, they saw details about the big mistake from your past, no matter how long ago it happened? @clevelanddotcom's expanded #RightToBeForgotten policy addresses these issues and more. #R2BF
https://t.co/ce3elCRUaP
What happens when a news story never disappears? Here's a good discussion of the #RightToBeForgotten and why people need to be able to move beyond their past indiscretions. By Terry Carter via @ABAJournal.
#R2BF#OnlinePrivacy#DataPrivacy
https://t.co/Bsu3CIjihD