Tag Archives: Right2Remove

How to Avoid High-Risk Hires

The New York Times has published a disturbing article that shows how some online reputation damage happens: intentionally.

In A Vast Web of Vengeance, tech reporter Kashmir Hill details how one person spent years creating false, negative posts about more than a hundred people. They have suffered extreme reputation damage due to 1200 defamatory posts that are too unpleasant to print here. In her article, Hill describes “the power of a lone person to destroy countless reputations, aided by platforms like Google that rarely intervene.”

Yes: On the internet, anyone can be impersonated, harassed or the focus of “fake news.” It persists because of the Communications Decency Act Section 230, (CDA 230), a law that protects the platforms that publish such information — publishers like Google, Facebook, Twitter and millions of blogs, forums and websites — against liability for third-party content on their websites.

We have written extensively about the need to update that law.  That includes our interviews with leaders active in the movement to change it, notably:

Dan Shefet, a member of our Advisory Board, who established the Association for Accountability and Internet Democracy (AAID), which has lobbied the European Commission to introduce rules to make it easier for others to remove harmful information online.

 Right2Remove, which advocates for “Right to Remove” privacy policy legislation “that allows for the removal of content from Internet platforms that is designed to cause reputational harm to consumers in the United States.”

For more insight on this topic, our blog post  No Right to be Forgotten Here is also relevant.  And be sure to check out, The Case for Bringing the Right to be Forgotten to America.

Here is to more investigative journalism focusing on this important topic, including changing the law that enables such harmful content to remain on the internet forever, or at all.

 
 
Right to be Forgotten on Google

Since the United States has yet to implement a “Right to Be Forgotten” law like the one in Europe, all Americans remain at an increased risk of reputational harm, with few resources available to permanently remove damaging information from Internet search engines.

The Right2Remove movement is trying to change that. Founded by conceptual artist Paolo Cirio in 2016 and directed by blogger and activist Scott Philotoff, Right2Remove advocates for “Right to Remove” privacy policy legislation “that allows for the removal of content from Internet platforms that is designed to cause reputational harm to consumers in the United States.” Their vision is for Congress to introduce a “Right to Remove” bill that can be enforced by the Federal Trade Commission or an independent review panel.

Calling for sweeping change in Internet privacy and online reputation protection

Right2Remove calls for sweeping change in all aspects of Internet privacy and online reputation protection. Most notable is its advocacy for a data privacy law much like Europe’s “Right to be Forgotten,” which would grant individuals clear opt-in and opt-out options for data collection, access to all personal data collected, and the ability to correct inaccurate information and erase outdated or unlawful material, among other freedoms. Right2Remove also wants search engines and platforms to be held responsible for the dissemination of illicit, harmful, and misleading content, and the establishment of an independent, unbiased review panel for adjudicating consumer protection violations on the Internet.

Participate by taking these three actions

What can the Right2Remove do for you right now? It starts with 3 forms:

1.      The “Tell” form. Fill this form out to share personal experiences and stories concerning the need for a Right to Remove privacy policy. By submitting this form, you become part of the growing Right2Remove community, where you’ll have the opportunity to reach out to other community members for support and discussion. This will also get the ball rolling on organizing demonstrations and protests, fundraising, and meetings with the FTC and local officials.

2.      The “Remove” form. Filling out this form will generate an automated takedown letter to send to search engines asking for the removal of sensitive personal information from their search results.

3.      The “Support” form. Fill out this form if you have legal advice, legislation suggestions, technical tutorials, and emotional support to share.

By now, you know that the Internet can be as dangerous for your reputation as it is useful. It is imperative that Internet practices that permit the abuse and misuse of people’s sensitive information be reformed. Everyone has a right to be in control of their online reputation and have a say in what content is posted about them online.

You can read more about Right2Remove’s work here. You can help them directly by supporting their work and signing their petition for a Right to Remove privacy policy.

Related Reading: Can the “Right to be Forgotten” on Google Come to America? 

Online Reputations Are Hampered by Outdated Law

Growing Pains for “Right to Be Forgotten”

 
 
Google

The European Union has introduced some of the world’s strictest online privacy rules. The “Right to be Forgotten” on Google — not yet available in the U.S. — is a notable example.

Now, according to The New York Times, the French data protection authority has fined Google 50 million euros for not properly disclosing to users how data is collected across its services. That includes its search engine, Google Maps and YouTube and other platforms. (If you’ve seen personalized advertisements following you around when you are using the internet, that is where they originate. Tech companies make massive profits from collecting and selling your data to marketers.)

Organizations like Facebook and Google make strenuous efforts to keep such laws from entering the U.S. Nonetheless, Europeans who have spearheaded such efforts are laying the groundwork here to begin bringing more protective laws to U.S. consumers.

We support bringing the “Right to be Forgotten” to America…along with better privacy laws. These are articles we have published about the issues:

Protecting the Privacy of High Net Worth Families

Right2Remove: Bringing the “Right to be Forgotten” to America

Electronic Frontier Foundation Primer Helps Protect Your Online Privacy

How Google’s Content Removal Request Process Works

For more insight, read this Times’ article: What the G.D.P.R., Europe’s Tough New Data Law, Means for You.