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Most people use these two phrases as if they mean the same thing. They do not. The right to be forgotten is an informal term that emerged from a 2014 court ruling and refers specifically to search engine de-indexing. The right to erasure is a formal legal right under GDPR Article 17 that covers a much wider universe of data processing. The distinction is not just semantic: it determines who you make your request to, what grounds you invoke, and how likely you are to succeed. This article explains both rights precisely, introduces the overlooked right to rectification under Article 16, and provides a clear decision framework for which right to use in your situation.
"Right to be forgotten" is informal; "right to erasure" is the statutory term. GDPR Article 17 codified the right to erasure. The right to be forgotten is the colloquial name for the search-engine de-indexing version of that right, born from a 2014 court ruling that predates GDPR.
For news articles, the correct target is the search engine, not the publisher. Publishers are typically protected by the freedom of expression exemption under Article 17(3)(a). Requesting de-indexing from Google or Bing is the practical route.
Right to rectification (Article 16) is often overlooked and frequently more powerful. If a news article contains factual errors, rectification bypasses the freedom of expression barrier and gives you a direct basis to request a correction from the publisher or search engine.
The Google Spain case decided de-indexing, not deletion. Mario Costeja Gonzalez won the right to have Google remove links. The newspaper kept the original article online. This is the core practical distinction between the two concepts in action.
The confusion between these two terms is understandable because they describe overlapping concepts, and journalists, lawyers, and technology commentators often use them without precision. But for anyone dealing with an actual data removal or de-indexing problem, the distinction matters practically.
The phrase "right to be forgotten" entered public consciousness in May 2014 when the Court of Justice of the European Union issued its landmark judgment in Case C-131/12, commonly called the Google Spain case. The court found that individuals could, under certain conditions, require search engines to de-index links to information about them. The ruling was immediately interpreted by media across the world as establishing a "right to be forgotten," and that phrase stuck. It is now embedded in general usage, in parliamentary debates, and in everyday conversation about online reputation and privacy.
The phrase "right to erasure" entered binding law three years later, when the General Data Protection Regulation came into force across the European Union. Article 17 of the GDPR is titled "Right to erasure (right to be forgotten)" and that title is itself a formulation that partially explains the ongoing conflation. The parenthetical acknowledges the popular phrase while establishing the formal legal term. However, Article 17 is substantially broader than what the 2014 court ruling addressed.
Understanding the history of each term makes it possible to use them correctly, invoke the right legal ground, and direct your request to the right party.
GDPR applies across the European Economic Area and, through adequacy decisions and extraterritorial scope provisions, to data processors worldwide who handle EEA residents' data. The UK retained GDPR as UK GDPR after Brexit with near-identical terms. Outside the EEA and UK, the right to be forgotten has no binding legal basis in most jurisdictions, though some countries have enacted similar frameworks. For US-based individuals, options differ significantly. This article focuses on GDPR as the primary framework but notes US-specific routes where relevant.
In 1998, a Spanish newspaper called La Vanguardia published two small notices about a property auction linked to social security debts owed by Mario Costeja Gonzalez. The notices were entirely lawful at the time. More than a decade later, Costeja Gonzalez found that searching his name on Google surfaced those old notices near the top of results. He argued the information was now outdated, irrelevant, and damaging to his reputation. He wanted the links removed.
The case eventually reached the Court of Justice of the European Union. In its 2014 ruling, the court reached two important conclusions that shaped the modern right to be forgotten.
First: Google is a data controller. By indexing and presenting search results, Google processes personal data and is therefore subject to European data protection law, regardless of the fact that the underlying content lives on a third-party website. This was a foundational finding because it established that search engines, not just original publishers, can be required to act on data subject requests.
Second: La Vanguardia, the newspaper that originally published the notices, did not have to remove anything. The court specifically held that the original publication was lawful and that the newspaper's freedom of expression and public interest in maintaining accurate historical records outweighed Costeja Gonzalez's privacy interest in having the newspaper content erased. What Costeja Gonzalez could require was that Google stop surfacing links to those notices in searches of his name.
The practical outcome is the model still in use today: de-indexing removes the search entry point to a piece of content without requiring the publisher to delete the article itself. The article continues to exist at its URL, accessible to anyone who knows the direct link or finds it through other means, but it no longer surfaces when someone searches the individual's name.
Many people believe that a successful right to be forgotten request means an article is deleted from the internet. It is not. De-indexing removes the article from search engine results for name-based queries. The article itself remains live on the publisher's website. Anyone with the direct URL, or anyone who finds it through an alternative search, can still access it. This distinction matters enormously when assessing what outcome is realistic from a de-indexing request.
Article 17 of the GDPR created a formal, statutory right to have personal data erased under specific conditions. It applies to any data controller who processes personal data about a data subject, which is an enormously broad category: companies, apps, platforms, marketing agencies, data brokers, analytics providers, search engines, publishers, and virtually any organization that holds records about identifiable individuals.
A data subject can invoke Article 17 on any of six grounds. Only one needs to apply for the request to be valid:
Article 17(3) lists circumstances in which the erasure obligation does not apply, even when a valid ground exists. These exemptions are the primary reason that requesting erasure directly from a news publisher almost always fails:
Freedom of expression and information. Where erasure would conflict with the right to freedom of expression and information, the controller can refuse. Journalism and the publication of news is protected here. A newspaper is entitled to argue that removing a true, contemporaneously accurate story conflicts with press freedom. Data protection authorities across Europe have consistently upheld this exemption for publishers maintaining factual archives.
Public interest in public health. Data processed for reasons of public health under Article 9(2)(h) and (i) is exempt. Less commonly invoked in the news article context but relevant for medical or epidemiological data.
Archiving, research, and statistical purposes. Data held for archiving in the public interest, scientific or historical research, or statistical purposes is exempt where erasure would seriously impair achievement of those objectives. Historical newspaper archives routinely invoke this exemption.
Establishment, exercise, or defence of legal claims. A controller may retain data if it is needed for litigation. This exemption is particularly relevant in cases where the article concerns ongoing legal proceedings.
Publishers invoke the freedom of expression exemption as a near-automatic defence to erasure requests. Search engines operate differently: their role is not to publish news but to index and surface it. The Google Spain court recognized this distinction. A search engine can satisfy freedom of expression concerns by de-indexing name-specific search results while the underlying article remains available at its original URL and accessible through general topic-based searches. This is why de-indexing requests to Google succeed at higher rates than deletion requests to publishers.
When people encounter a damaging news article about themselves, they typically want one of two things: the article to disappear from Google, or the article to be removed from the publisher's website entirely. These are different objectives requiring different approaches.
This is what most people mean when they say "right to be forgotten." You submit a request to Google (or Bing, or another search engine) asking them to remove specific URLs from search results that appear when someone searches your name. Google processes these requests through a dedicated web form and evaluates each URL individually, weighing your privacy interest against the public interest in the information.
Google considers factors including: whether the information is about a public figure (higher bar for removal), whether the information is still current and relevant, whether the article concerns a matter of genuine public interest, and whether the information is accurate. For private individuals and for articles describing events that are now outdated and no longer relevant, de-indexing requests succeed at meaningful rates.
The request is made to Google as a data controller. You are invoking GDPR Article 17, typically relying on the Article 21 objection ground. The process applies to the European version of Google search results but can also affect other regions depending on your location and the nature of the request. Our detailed guide on how to file a Google right to be forgotten request walks through the mechanics step by step.
This is the broader Article 17 right in action. If a company holds your personal data in its database, marketing lists, CRM, backup systems, or internal records, and you have a valid ground under Article 17, you can require them to delete it. This applies to e-commerce platforms that retain purchase history, data brokers that sell personal profiles, marketing agencies that hold email addresses, analytics providers, and any other data controller processing personal data about you.
You send a formal erasure request to the data controller's privacy or data protection team, citing Article 17 and the applicable ground. The controller must respond within one month under Article 12 and must either confirm erasure, explain a legitimate exemption, or escalate for a further two-month extension with notice. If they refuse without valid justification, you can escalate to your national data protection authority.
For our clients at RemoveNews.ai, the relevant data erasure requests outside of search engines typically involve data aggregator sites and people-search platforms that republish news article excerpts alongside personal information in database form. These sites are often more responsive to direct Article 17 requests than major news publishers, since they do not benefit from the journalism exemption to the same degree. See our GDPR right to be forgotten for news articles guide for a deeper treatment of this distinction.
Most people dealing with a damaging news article focus entirely on erasure or de-indexing. They overlook a third right that is often more powerful in the specific context of factually inaccurate news coverage: the right to rectification under GDPR Article 16.
Article 16 gives any data subject the right to have inaccurate personal data corrected without undue delay, and incomplete personal data completed. The right does not require deletion. It requires correction. Where a news article contains false statements of fact about a specific individual, those false statements constitute inaccurate personal data processed by the publisher (and by search engines indexing the article).
The critical distinction from Article 17 is the exemption landscape. The freedom of expression exemption in Article 17(3)(a) is a broad defense for publishers maintaining accurate historical records. It does not, however, protect the continued publication of factually false information. A publisher cannot invoke press freedom to justify maintaining demonstrably incorrect facts about an individual. Article 16 rectification requests are therefore considerably harder for publishers to refuse when the factual inaccuracy is clearly documented.
Practical use cases for Article 16:
For a full treatment of how to pursue factual corrections and updates to news articles, see our guide on news article corrections and retractions, and our article covering what to do when a news article contains false information about you.
Does your situation involve inaccurate information in a news article? The right to rectification is frequently the strongest available tool. Our specialists can assess whether your situation qualifies and help you submit an effective formal request.
Get a Free AssessmentThe following table shows the three rights side by side. This is the clearest way to see how they differ in practice and which one to reach for in a given situation.
| Term | Legal Basis | Who You Request It From | Scope | Best For | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right to Be Forgotten | Informal term; rooted in Google Spain (2014) and GDPR Article 17 via Article 21 objection | Search engines: Google, Bing, Yahoo | De-indexing specific URLs from name-based search results. Article itself remains live on publisher's site. | Reducing visibility of news articles, old court records, or personal data in search results for your name | Does not delete the original content. Not applicable to US-only individuals with no GDPR connection. Public interest articles are harder to de-index. |
| Right to Erasure | GDPR Article 17 (formal statutory right) | Any data controller: companies, platforms, apps, databases, data brokers, search engines | Complete deletion of personal data from all systems, including databases, backups, and marketing lists | Removing personal data from data broker sites, CRM systems, marketing lists, and platforms that have no journalistic justification for holding your data | Freedom of expression exemption protects publishers. Research and archiving exemptions protect historical data. Cannot be used to force news organisations to delete accurate articles. |
| Right to Rectification | GDPR Article 16 | The publisher of the inaccurate content, or the search engine displaying it | Correction or completion of inaccurate or incomplete personal data. Not deletion, but amendment. | News articles containing factual errors, outdated information presented as current, or incorrect quotes attributed to you | Applies only where the data is demonstrably inaccurate. Does not help if the article is accurate and simply unflattering. Disputes over accuracy may require documentation or legal support. |
The correct right to invoke depends on three variables: whether the information is accurate, who holds it, and what outcome you want. The framework below walks through the key decision points.
The most common frustration people experience when trying to invoke their rights is that the news publisher will refuse any erasure request by citing freedom of expression. This is a legitimate defense that has been consistently upheld by data protection authorities and courts across Europe. Understanding why the exemption applies to publishers but not search engines is essential context for setting realistic expectations.
A news organisation's core function is the exercise of journalistic freedom. Article 85 of GDPR requires member states to provide exemptions for journalism, academic, artistic, and literary expression. National implementations of GDPR across EU member states have generally given broad protections to publishers. The argument is that requiring publishers to delete true, historically accurate articles from their archives at the request of the subjects of those articles would fundamentally undermine press freedom and the public record.
A search engine's function is categorically different. Google does not author content. It aggregates and surfaces links to third-party content based on algorithms. When Google indexes a page about an individual, it is acting as a secondary distributor of that person's personal data. The court in the Google Spain case reasoned that de-indexing links from name-specific searches does not prevent the underlying article from being accessed; it merely makes it harder to find via the search engine. The article remains part of the public record. The search engine's role as an intermediary allows it to remove the link without infringing press freedom.
This is why practitioners consistently direct clients toward de-indexing requests as the primary route when dealing with news articles. A request to the publisher citing GDPR Article 17 will almost always be refused. A well-prepared request to Google has a meaningfully higher success rate for private individuals who can demonstrate that the information is outdated, irrelevant, or disproportionate to current purposes.
For the specific mechanics of what Google evaluates and how to frame a request effectively, see our detailed walkthrough: how to file a Google right to be forgotten request.
Invoking the wrong right wastes time and signals inexperience to the recipient. Our team has guided 1,000+ individuals through the right to be forgotten process, Article 17 erasure requests, and Article 16 rectification claims.
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