Privacy czar asks Federal Court to settle ‘right to be forgotten’ issue
OTTAWA — A man who says a Google search reveals outdated and highly personal information about him will be the test case that helps a judge decide whether the search engine must remove the links from its results.
Privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien is asking the Federal Court of Canada to clarify if Google’s ever-popular search tool is covered by the law governing how companies handle personal information.
The outcome is expected to break new ground in the Canadian debate about whether people have a “right to be forgotten.”
In the commissioner’s notice filed Wednesday with the court, the unnamed complainant alleges Google is breaching Canada’s privacy law by prominently displaying links about him when his name is searched.


