Y12W24VC The right to be forgotten

In 1998, a Spanish lawyer Googled his own name and found old newspaper notices about a real-estate auction, held sixteen years earlier, to cover debts he had since paid. The matter was long resolved. The search results weren't. He took the case to the European courts. This week's article examines the legal principle that emerged — the right to be forgotten — and what it reveals about how we live in a time that doesn't forget.

Core Vocabulary

jurisdiction

/ˌdʒʊrɪsˈdɪkʃən/|ju·ris·dic·tion

noun

the area where laws apply

Word Breakdown: juris- (law) + -diction (speaking/pronouncement)

Word family: jurisdictional (v./n.)

Synonyms: domain, territory, authority

Collocations: national jurisdiction, legal jurisdiction

In the articleThe legal question is which jurisdiction's law applies.

discoverability

/dɪsˌkʌvərəˈbɪləti/|dis·cov·er·a·bil·i·ty

noun

the ease of being found

Word Breakdown: -ability (capable of being)

Word family: discoverable (adj.)

Synonyms: visibility, accessibility, prominence

Collocations: high discoverability, online discoverability

In the articleThe actual information wasn't ordered removed from the world; only its discoverability through searches of a specific person's name was affected.

retention

/rɪˈtenʃən/|re·ten·tion

noun

the act of keeping

Word Breakdown: re- (back) + -tention (holding, Latin tenere)

Word family: retain (v./n.)

Synonyms: keeping, preservation, custody

Collocations: data retention, information retention

In the articleThe argument for retention is that the historical record is valuable precisely because it includes embarrassing and inconvenient truths.

permanence

/ˈpɜːmənəns/|per·ma·nence

noun

the state of lasting without change

Word Breakdown: per- (through) + -mance (state of being)

Word family: permanent (v./n.)

Synonyms: durability, continuity, persistence

Collocations: digital permanence, permanent record

In the articleMost people, when asked about privacy, express serious concerns about digital permanence.

delisting

/diːˈlɪstɪŋ/|de·list·ing

noun

removal from a listing

Word Breakdown: de- (away/reverse) + listing

Word family: delist (v./n.)

Synonyms: removal, de-registration, exclusion

Collocations: search delisting, delisting request

In the articleA person can request delisting of search results linking their name to information that is "inadequate, irrelevant, no longer relevant, or excessive."

preserve

/prɪˈzɜːv/|pre·serve

verb | [base – past – past participle]

keep from loss or deterioration

Word Breakdown: pre- (before) + serve (protect, Latin servare)

Word family: preservation (n.)

Synonyms: maintain, protect, conserve

Collocations: preserve information, preserve privacy

In the articleThe argument for retention is that the historical record is valuable precisely because it includes embarrassing and inconvenient truths.

overreach

/ˌoʊvərˈriːtʃ/|o·ver·reach

noun

extending authority too far

Word Breakdown: over- (excessively) + reach

Word family: overreaching (v.)

Synonyms: overextend, exceed, transgress

Collocations: governmental overreach, judicial overreach

In the articleCritics of the right worry about regulatory overreach — the risk that vague criteria will be used to suppress legitimate public interest material.

contested

/kənˈtestɪd/|con·test·ed

adjective

disputed

Word family: contest (v./n.)

Synonyms: disputed, challenged, debated

Collocations: heavily contested, widely contested

In the articleIt is contested not because it is obviously wrong but because it sits at the intersection of two genuine values.

Technical Terms

right to be forgotten

/raɪt tə biː fəˈɡɒtən/|right to be for·got·ten

noun

the EU legal principle allowing requests to remove personal information from search results

Synonyms: data erasure, right to deletion, right to delist

Example: A person can invoke the right to be forgotten to request removal of outdated search results.

In the articleHe took them to the Spanish data-protection authority, then to the European courts, and in 2014 — sixteen years after he had first noticed the problem

data-protection law

/ˈdeɪtə prəˈtekʃən lɔː/|da·ta-pro·tec·tion law

noun

regulation governing the collection and use of personal information

Synonyms: privacy regulation, data privacy statute, personal data protection

Example: Companies must comply with data-protection law when collecting customer email addresses for marketing.

In the articleHe took them to the Spanish data-protection authority, then to the European courts, and in 2014 — sixteen years after he had first noticed the problem

GDPR

/ˌdʒiː diː piː ˈɑːr/|GDPR

noun

General Data Protection Regulation, the EU framework including this right

Synonyms: EU data protection regulation, European privacy law, General Data Protection Regulation

Example: The GDPR gives EU citizens rights to access, correct, and delete their personal data held by organizations.

chilling effect

/ˈtʃɪlɪŋ ɪˈfekt/|chill·ing ef·fect

noun

the suppression of legitimate activity by fear of legal consequences

Synonyms: suppression of expression, self-censorship risk, intimidation effect

Example: Excessive penalties can create a chilling effect, discouraging legitimate activity.

In the articleStill, the practical effect has been significant.

delisting

/diːˈlɪstɪŋ/|de·list·ing

noun

removing a result from search indexing without deleting underlying content

Synonyms: search de-indexing, removal from results, search suppression

Example: After the delisting request, the controversial article no longer appeared in search results.

In the articleA person can request delisting of search results linking their name to information that is "inadequate, irrelevant, no longer relevant, or excessive."

Figurative Phrases

come back to haunt

affect negatively later — idiom; 'haunt' figurative

Etymology/Type: Idiom; "haunt" is borrowed from the supernatural (a ghost returning to cause disturbance) and applied figuratively to past events or consequences that return unexpectedly to affect the present negatively.

Synonyms: return to cause trouble, surface to hurt you later, catch up with you

Example: The unflattering post she'd made in Year 9 came back to haunt her when an employer looked her up online.

In the articleHe took them to the Spanish data-protection authority, then to the European courts, and in 2014 — sixteen years after he had first noticed the problem

the digital past

accumulated online history — idiom; 'past' as artefact

Etymology/Type: Metaphor; the past is treated as a permanent physical record or artefact (like a paper archive) that persists digitally and cannot easily be erased or forgotten.

Synonyms: your online history, your digital footprint, what the internet remembers

Example: Before applying for work experience, she cleaned up her digital past, removing posts she wouldn't want a professional to see.

In the articleOn one of these searches, he found that the first results led to old newspaper notices about a real-estate auction held sixteen years earlier to cover

write yourself out of

remove yourself from — idiom; 'write out' figurative

Etymology/Type: Idiom from narrative and editing; "write out" means to exclude or eliminate from a text, applied figuratively to removing yourself from digital records or history.

Synonyms: remove yourself from, edit yourself out of, extract yourself from

Example: She wanted to write herself out of the group's shared document entirely after the project ended, but the edit history remained.

In the articleIf you find yourself with material you'd like to remove, and you're not in the EU, the practical options are limited but real.

scrubbed from the record

deleted from history — idiom; 'scrubbed' figurative

Etymology/Type: Idiom; "scrubbed" (as in scrubbing something clean or removing dirt) is applied figuratively to deleting or removing information from historical records.

Synonyms: deleted from the record, erased from history, wiped from the file

Example: Even after the inaccurate article was corrected, the original version couldn't be entirely scrubbed from the record.

In the articleTransparency and accountability depend, in part, on the durability of the record.

off the record

not to be publicly attributed — idiom; no literal record

Etymology/Type: Idiom from journalism and official documentation; a statement made "off the record" is not to be entered into the official record or attributed publicly.

Synonyms: in confidence, not for public use, between us

Example: She shared her real concerns off the record with a trusted teacher, not wanting her words to become part of an official complaint.

In the articleTransparency and accountability depend, in part, on the durability of the record.

paper trail

documentary evidence — idiom; often figurative even when electronic

Etymology/Type: Metonymy; "paper" originally referred to physical documents as evidence, but now applied figuratively to any documentary evidence, whether digital or not.

Synonyms: a documentary record, a trail of evidence, a record of what occurred

Example: The email exchanges left a clear paper trail showing who had agreed to what in the group project.

In the articleThis means that the responsibility for managing your own digital trail falls substantially on prevention rather than correction.

Confusing Words

jurisdiction vs authority

Jurisdiction and authority are related legal concepts, but jurisdiction refers to geographic scope while authority refers to the power to decide.

  • Jurisdiction refers to the geographic or subject-matter boundaries within which a court has legal power — test: "Does this court have jurisdiction over this case?"
  • Authority refers to the right or power to make decisions and enforce them — test: "What authority granted them this power?"

Substitution test: If you can replace the word with "power to decide," use authority; if you need "the area where laws apply," use jurisdiction.

retention vs retained

Retention and retained are word forms from the same family, but retention is a noun (the thing), while retained is the past form of the verb (the action).

  • Retention (noun) — the act of keeping something — "Data retention policies govern how long companies store personal information."
  • Retained (verb form) — kept or held back — "The company retained the records because they were relevant to the case."

Structural test: If the word follows "be" or acts as an adjective, use retained; if it is the subject or object of a sentence, use retention.

contested vs contestable

Contested and contestable both relate to dispute, but contested describes something already disputed, while contestable means something could be disputed.

  • Contestedalready disputed or challenged by others — "The decision remains contested by environmental groups."
  • Contestablecapable of being disputed — "The court found the claim contestable but not yet proven."

Time/status test: Use contested for something that is currently disputed; use contestable for something that could be disputed.