New York Times article: European Court Lets Users Erase Records on Web

From The New York Times, Wednesday, May 14, 2014. See http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/14/technology/google-should-erase-web-links-to-some-personal-data-europes-highest-court-says.html?emc=edit_th_20140514&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=11413166&_r=0

 

By David Streitfeld
Europe’s highest court said on Tuesday that people had the right to influence what the world could learn about them through online searches, a ruling that rejected long-established notions about the free flow of information on the Internet.
A search engine like Google should allow online users to be “forgotten” after a certain time by erasing links to web pages unless there are “particular reasons” not to, the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg said.
The decision underlined the power of search companies to retrieve controversial information while simultaneously placing sharp limits on their ability to do so. It raised the possibility that a Google search could become as cheery – and as one-sided – as a Facebook profile or an About.me page.
Jonathan Zittrain, a law and computer science professor at Harvard, said those who were determined to shape their online personas could in essence have veto power over what they wanted people to know.
“Some will see this as corrupting,” he said. “Others will see it as purifying. I think it’s a bad solution to a very real problem, which is that everything is now on our permanent records.”
In some ways, the court is trying to erase the last 25 years, when people learned to routinely check out online every potential suitor, partner or friend. Under the court’s ruling, information would still exist on websites, court documents and online archives of newspapers, but people would not necessarily know it was there. The decision cannot be appealed.
In the United States, the court’s ruling would clash with the First Amendment. But the decision heightens a growing uneasiness everywhere over the Internet’s ability to persistently define people against their will.
“More and more Internet users want a little of the ephemerality and the forgetfulness of predigital days,” said Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, professor of Internet governance at the Oxford Internet Institute.
Young people, in particular, do not want their drunken pictures to follow them for the next 30 years. “If you’re always tied to the past, it’s difficult to grow, to change,” Mr. Mayer-Schönberger said. “Do we want to go into a world where we largely undo forgetting?”
The court said search engines were not simply dumb pipes, but played an active role as data “controllers,” and must be held accountable for the links they provide. Search engines could be compelled to remove links to certain pages, it said, “even when the publication in itself on those pages is lawful.”
The court also said that a search engine “as a general rule” should place the right to privacy over the right of the public to find information.
Left unclarified was exactly what history remains relevant. Should a businessman be able to expunge a link to his bankruptcy a decade ago? Could a would-be politician get a drunken-driving arrest removed by calling it a youthful folly?
The burden of fulfilling the court’s directives will fall largely on Google, which is by far the dominant search engine in Europe. It has more than 90 percent of the search business in France and Germany.
Google said in a statement that the ruling was “disappointing” and that the company was “very surprised” it differed so much from a preliminary verdict last year that was largely in its favor.
The decision leaves many questions unanswered. Among them is whether information would be dropped only on Google sites in individual countries, or whether it would be also erased from Google.com. Even as Europe has largely erased its internal physical borders, the ruling could impose digital borders.
Another open question is how much effort a search engine should reasonably spend investigating complaints.
“I expect the default action by search engines will be to take down information,” said Orla Lynskey, a lecturer in law at the London School of Economics.
A trade group for information technology companies said the court’s decision posed a threat to free expression.
“This ruling opens the door to large-scale private censorship in Europe,” said James Waterworth, the head of the Brussels office for the Computer and Communications Industry Association, which counts Facebook, Microsoft and Google among its members. “While the ruling likely means to offer protections, our concern is it could also be misused by politicians or others with something to hide.”
That view was echoed by Big Brother Watch, a London-based civil liberties group that was perhaps the first to invoke the specter of Orwell.
“The principle that you have a right to be forgotten is a laudable one, but it was never intended to be a way for people to rewrite history,” said Emma Carr, the organization’s acting director.
Mr. Mayer-Schönberger, the author of “Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age,” said such concerns were overblown. He said the court was simply affirming what had been standard European practice.
Relatively few people in Europe have had issues with wanting to delete information on the Internet, Mr. Mayer-Schönberger said. “I don’t think this will lead to the end of the Internet as we know it.”
Michael Fertik is chief executive of Reputation.com, which helps people improve their search results into something they find less objectionable.
“For the first time, human dignity will get the same treatment online as copyright,” Mr. Fertik said. “It will be protected under the law. That’s a huge deal.”
The only loser, he said, was Google. “It no longer gets to profit from your misery.”
And perhaps Reputation.com. “This ruling is not necessarily favorable for my business,” he said.
Those who worry that many people might use the ruling to erase information that is detrimental but is unquestionedly accurate may find support in the case that began it.
The case started in 2009 when Mario Costeja, a Spanish lawyer, complained that entering his name in Google led to legal notices dating to 1998 in an online version of a Spanish newspaper that detailed his debts and the forced sale of his property.
Mr. Costeja said the debt issues had been resolved many years earlier and were no longer relevant. So he asked the newspaper that had published the information, La Vanguardia, to remove the notices and Google to expunge the links. When they refused, Mr. Costeja complained to the Spanish Data Protection Agency that his rights to the protection of his personal data were being violated.
The Spanish authority ordered Google to remove the links in July 2010, but it did not impose any order on La Vanguardia. Google challenged the order, and the National High Court of Spain referred the case to the European court.
Mr. Costeja’s lawyer, Joaquín Muñoz, said Tuesday’s ruling was a victory not only for his client, but for all Europeans. “The fundamental point is that consumers will now know what the rules of the game are and how to defend their rights,” he said.
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James Kanter, Mark Scott and Raphael Minder contributed reporting.
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A version of this article appears in print on May 14, 2014, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: European Court Lets Users Erase Records on Web.

2013 Annual Police Memorial Service & Awards Program Today

The Peoria Police Department held its annual Police Memorial Service and Awards Program today, May 14th. Following the Memorial Service, the Awards Program was held in the City Council Chambers at City Hall.

The Officers and Civilians recognized for accomplishment in 2013 are as follows:

2013 Police Officer of the Year: David Buchanan

2014 American Legion Meritorious Award: Lee Braun

2013 Civilian Employee of the Year: Doug Ward

2013 Life Saving Valor Award: Christopher Lenover

2013 Distinguished Service Commission Personnel:

Chad Batterham                               Justin Sinks

Paul Deeb                                           Christopher White

Jason Leigh                                        Aaron Zaborac

Randall Schweigert

 

Red Cross and Health Department to Hold Car Seat Check in Eureka

EUREKA, ILLINOIS — Car seats can reduce injuries in children by at least fifty percent if the seat is installed properly. To help parents keep children safe, the American Red Cross and the Woodford County Health Department will be hosting a free car seat check event.

The event will be held on Thursday, May 22 from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Woodford County Health Department, located at 1831 S. Main Street, Eureka Plaza, Eureka.

Lisa Maynard, the American Red Cross Grant Assistant, said about the importance of this event, “Buckling up on every ride is the single most important thing a family can do to stay safe in the car. In central Illinois, ninety percent of car seats are improperly installed which puts children at risk.”

The event will also feature national certified child passenger safety technicians, recall information, and technicians to provide installation instructions and safety information for car seats. A free car seat will be provided to families based upon need and availability.

For more information about this car seat check, contact Lisa.Maynard@redcross.org.

HARTS (Helping All Relationships To be Safe) Program at Bartonville Grade School to Deliver their “On the Go Bags” for Homeless men.

May 12, 2014 – Peoria, IL – The Center for Prevention of Abuse offers healthy relationship programming to area schools.  One of the programs offered through the Prevention Services Department, HARTS, (Helping All Relationships To be Safe) is designed for young women in grades six through twelve. They learn the tools necessary to form healthy family, dating and peer relationships. Students put their newly acquired knowledge and skills into action as they work together to create a hands-on project to benefit their community.
This school year the 8th grade HARTS girls from Bartonville Grade School created a project called “On the Go Bags”, which they will deliver to the Salvation Army for men who are homeless. These bags contain:

• pair of men’s socks (the girls did a sock drive at school to get the socks for the bags)
• washcloth
• soap
• toothbrush
• toothpaste
• lotion
• water bottle
• coupon for a free Hardee’s chicken tenders
• note of encouragement written by the girls

WHEN: Thursday – May 15, 2014 at 3:30 pm
WHERE: Salvation Army, 414 N.E. Jefferson, Peoria, IL 61603

For more information on prevention programs, please contact
Marcia Bolden at 691-0551
or email: PreventionEd@centerforpreventionofabuse.org

SOUTH SIDE TRUST & SAVINGS BANK ANNOUNCES RE-ELECTED BOARD OF DIRECTORS

PEORIA, ILLINOIS…May 12, 2014…South Side Trust & Savings Bank, a subsidiary of Mid Illinois Bancorp, Inc., held their Annual Meeting on April 14, 2014 where David F. Cochran, Chairman; David H. Bettinghaus, Kevin E. Colgan, Steven J. Fawley, David L. Golwitzer, Karen M. Jensen, Mark W. Joseph, Mark E. Matuszak, William C. Schwab, Michael J. Stone, Jeffrey W. Ward, Timothy M. Ward, and John J. Waugh were re-elected to the board of directors.

South Side Trust & Savings Bank, a locally owned financial institution since 1922, has $674 million in assets and serves the tri-county area with 12 full service locations in Peoria, East Peoria, West Peoria, Bartonville, Chillicothe, Washington, and Pekin.  South Side Bank owns Mid Illinois Insurance Services, Inc. located at 1524 W. Glen Avenue in Peoria.

 

Public Information Officers to Participate in Exercise

May 12, 2014: Peoria, IL – The Central Illinois Public Information Officers will be participating in a full scale exercise at the State Street Post Office in Peoria, IL on Tuesday, May 13 from 3:40 – 6:00 p.m. During the exercise, the post office will be practicing its response to a Biohazard Detection System alert which alerts postal employees to the presence of Anthrax. The CIPIO will practice establishing and staffing a Joint Information Center (JIC) as a result of the alert. A JIC is utilized during large scale disasters that either affect a large number of people or a large geographic area, both of which are possible should Anthrax be detected in mail.

The CIPIO will also practice the emergency response role of Media Liaison in conjunction with post office personnel if media elects to cover the event as a real-world news story. For more information on the exercise, please contact Michael Clark, Post Office Supervisor, CSS – Finance, at (309) 671-8833.

Coal Ash Waste Hearings in Chicago to Address Statewide Illinois Water Contamination Issues

Recent Disasters Across the Country Spur Communities Impacted by Coal Ash Contamination to Call for Stronger Protections

WHAT: On Tuesday May 13, community members from across the state of Illinois whose lives have been negatively impacted  by coal ash waste contamination will join the Sierra Club, Environmental Law & Policy Center and Prairie Rivers Network for a telephone press conference to outline why the state must strengthen proposed rules to protect communities from coal ash disasters and ongoing threats to public health.

Adjacent to Illinois’ 22 coal-fired power plants are 91 coal ash ponds, and no matter the plant owner, outdated and cost-cutting disposal methods have led to the state’s discovery of contamination at each site it has tested. Coal ash is full of heavy metals, like mercury, lead and arsenic, which can cause cancer and brain damage in humans and are toxic to fish and wildlife.

The telepresser precedes two days of Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB) hearings set in Chicago to discuss how and when power plants will be required to close and clean up dangerous coal ash pits in the state of Illinois. Hearings in Springfield in February yielded strong turnout from community members who fear their own drinking water may be contaminated from neighboring coal ash pits.

The hearings come in the aftermath of the this winter’s coal ash disaster in North Carolina, where toxic coal ash flowed through a broken pipe into the Dan River, contaminating as far as 70 miles downstream. The disaster, which could cost up to $1 billion to clean up, could have been avoided if the alarm raised by community groups and citizens for years had been heeded.

Community members from Peoria, Joliet, Vermillion and Waukegan will join the telepresser to offer personal testimony on how coal ash contamination affects them locally in vastly different communities across the state.

WHEN: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 11:00 AM CT

DIAL-IN: Phone: 866-952-7524 – Passcode: COAL (spoken to operator)

WHO:

  • Jack Darin, Director, Sierra Club, Illinois Chapter
  • Andrew Armstrong, Staff Attorney, Environmental Law & Policy Center
  • Traci Barkley, Water Resources Scientist with Prairie Rivers Network
  • Tracy Fox, Resident from Peoria County, Ill.
  • Kristin Camp, Resident from Vermillion County, Ill.
  • Tracy Panetino, Resident from Will County, Ill.
  • Maryfran Troha, Resident from Lake County, Ill.

Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for Re-Opening of Main & University Intersection is TODAY, May 12th @ 2:00 p.m.

In celebration of the reopening of the Main and University intersection, a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony will be held:

                         Date:    Monday, May 12, 2014

                        Time:  2:00 PM

                        Where: Main & University Intersection

 The City of Peoria and Illinois American Water have been working on the improvements for the Main and University intersection.  As part of the City’s continued efforts following the public input from the meetings on September 2013 and January 2014, the reconstruction of the Main & University intersection is complete.  The reconstruction plans were derived from the efforts and suggestions of the public for: wider sidewalks, lane reconfigurations, added street parking, upgraded signals and lighting, new landscaping and improved pedestrian access.

Parking is available in the parking lots near One World Café, Avanti’s and Campus Town.  In case of rain, the ceremony will be held at Bradley’s Michael Student Center First Floor Atrium, 915 N. Elmwood, Peoria.

For more information regarding the ceremony, contact City Engineer Scott Reeise, P.E. or Vikki Hibberd, Administrative Manager at Public Works, (309) 494-8800.

Public Meeting about re-striping of MacArthur Highway for Traffic & Bicycle Lanes on May 15th

On Thursday, May 15, Councilwoman Denise Moore will host a public meeting regarding the restriping of MacArthur Highway for traffic and bicycle lanes at:

Frank Campbell Center

312 Merryman Avenue

6:00 – 7:15 PM.

Frank Campbell Center can be accessed from Riverwest. City Traffic Engineer Nick Stoffer will discuss the options about the proposed traffic and bicycle design as well as updates on the Bluff projects. Public concerns and questions are encouraged at this meeting. For more information, contact Nick Stoffer, Traffic Engineer, at (309) 494-8800.