Right To Be Forgotten

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legitimately.” The right to be forgotten is a future-oriented right “in light of the time that has elapsed” by withdrawing consent. At the same time, the right to be forgotten, if it has an affinity with the right to change one’s mind or the right to repentance, touches the heart of individual autonomy, and ultimately is linked to the right to informational self-determination. In this sense, the right to be forgotten may be traced back to the well-established right to informational self-determination.

The essence of privacy is the “right to be let alone.” The German Federal Constitutional Court ruled that “in the context of modern data processing, the protection of the individual against unlimited collection, storage, use and disclosure …show more content…

‘Control’ could also signify, not so much the possibility to decide over the use of one’s data, but at least the right to be aware of their fate, to get informed about who-knows-what about you and what to do.

The right to be forgotten is defined as "the right to silence on past events in life that are no longer occurring." It leads to allowing individuals to have information, videos or photographs about themselves deleted from certain internet records so that they cannot be found by search engines. This right is thus a manifestation of the right to informational privacy, allowing an individual to control information about him published by search engines.

The informational autonomy is derived from the right to privacy, but not in the classical meaning of ‘privacy’ read as ‘intimacy’ or ‘secrecy.’ It rather refers to another dimension of privacy, i.e. the individual autonomy, the capacity to make choices, to take informed decisions, in other words to keep control over certain aspects of one’s life. Related to personal information, this individual autonomy means informational autonomy or ‘informational self-determination’ as was first stated by the German constitutional court in its crucial decision in …show more content…

Indeed, an important part of the privacy literature has focused on property-based metaphors and descriptions to sustain the argument that a greater control over personal information could be achieved through market-oriented mechanisms based on individual ownership of personal data. According to this view privacy can be compared to a property right: “Privacy can be cast as a property right. People should own information about themselves and, as owners of property, should be entitled to control what is done with it.” Or as V. Bergelson puts it, “In order to protect privacy, individuals must secure control over their personal information by becoming real

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