Abstract

 


 



The Right to Be Forgotten Across the Pond


Meg Leta Ambrose


ATLAS: Technology, Media, & Society, University of Colorado

Jef Ausloos


KU Leuven - Interdisciplinary Centre for Law and ICT (ICRI)

September 21, 2012

2012 TRPC, Journal of Information Policy, Volume 3 (2013), pg. 1-23

Abstract:     
The ‘right to be forgotten’ has gained increasing traction and significant debate on both sides of the Atlantic since the popularization of Viktor Mayer-Schonberger’s 2009 book, Delete. The term has caused a great deal of media speculation since the European Commission’s proposal for a new Data Protection Regulation in January 2012. The United State has also proposed a ‘right to be forgotten’ for children through an amendment to the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act. This article offers a brief history of the interest in individual liberation from one’s informational past and analyzes the legislative language of the proposed right from each region. It then sorts conceptual conflation of the interest as it is brought into the Digital Age, outlining the many possible applications of the right as it is currently articulated. The article argues that the concept of ‘oblivion’ is quite distinct from the concept of ‘erasure,’ and should be treated as such. It then critically analyzes the implementation of the right to erasure, the more imminent of the two. The goal of this paper is to provide readers with a more comprehensive background on the right to be forgotten and argue for both conceptual and legal distinction to be made between erasure and oblivion.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 23

Keywords: privacy, right to be forgotten, international law, data

JEL Classification: K19, K29, K39

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Date posted: April 3, 2012 ; Last revised: February 21, 2013

Suggested Citation

Ambrose, Meg Leta and Ausloos, Jef, The Right to Be Forgotten Across the Pond (September 21, 2012). 2012 TRPC, Journal of Information Policy, Volume 3 (2013), pg. 1-23. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2032325 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2032325

Contact Information

Meg Leta Ambrose (Contact Author)
ATLAS: Technology, Media, & Society, University of Colorado ( email )
1125 18th St. 320 UCB
Boulder, CO 80304
United States
Jef Ausloos
KU Leuven - Interdisciplinary Centre for Law and ICT (ICRI) ( email )
Sint-Michielsstraat 6
Leuven (Belgium), 3000
Belgium

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