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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Scrub requests inundate Google

Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO – Google is being swamped with demands from Europeans trying to erase humiliating links to their past from the world’s dominant Internet search engine.

Nearly 145,000 requests have been made in the European Union and four other countries by people looking to polish their online reputations, according to numbers the company released Friday. That’s an average of more than 1,000 requests a day since late May, when Google began accepting submissions in order to comply with a European court that ruled some embarrassing information about people’s lives can be scrubbed from search results.

Europe’s insistence that its citizens have the “right to be forgotten” in certain instances has thrust Google into an uncomfortable position that it sought to avoid. The company has been trying to define what kind of material merits deletion while also striving to stand by its belief that all of the world’s information should be universally accessible.

Requests can be made by more than 500 million people living in the European Union’s 28 countries, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.

The removal requests covered more than 497,000 Web links. Google says it has jettisoned 42 percent, or more than 200,000, of the troublesome links. Among all websites, Facebook’s social network has had the most links erased from Google’s European search results so far at 3,332. Google’s own YouTube video site has had nearly 2,400 links removed.

The content blocked from Google’s search results in Europe still could appear in listings posted in other parts of the world, including the U.S.

Any request rejected by Google still can be appealed to privacy regulators in Europe.