Technologies and challenges Sample Clauses

Technologies and challenges. The fundamental technical challenge in enforcing the right to be forgotten lies in (i) allowing a person to identify and locate personal data items stored about them; (ii) tracking all copies of an item and all copies of information derived from the data item; (iii) determining whether a person has the right to request removal of a data item; and, (iv) effecting the erasure or removal of all exact or derived copies of the item in the case where an authorized person exercises the right. In a completely open system like the (vast) public portion of today’s world-wide web, anyone can make copies of a public data item and store them at arbitrary locations. Moreover, the system does not account for the number, owner or location of such copies. In such an open system it is not generally possible for a person to locate all personal data items (exact or derived) stored about them; it is difficult to determine whether a person has the right to request removal of a particular data item; nor does any single person or entity have the authority or jurisdiction to effect the deletion of all copies. Therefore, enforcing the right to be forgotten is impossible in an open, global system, in general. The ability to enforce a "right to be forgotten" crucially depends on the capabilities of the underlying information system. In a nutshell, this capability is technically feasible only in "closed" systems, which reliably account for the processing, storage and dissemination of all information, and prevent the dissemination of data to locations where an erasure cannot be enforced. In such a system, all participating entities must reside in a jurisdiction that enforces the right to be forgotten, every data request must be authenticated and logged, and the principals must be linkable to real-world persons or organizations. In principle, systems such as corporate networks and access-controlled public networks that fall entirely within the jurisdiction of EU member states, could meet these requirements. However, such networks would require, without exception, that all principals (users and providers) be strongly authenticated using a form of electronic identity that can be linked to natural persons. In an open system such as the public portion of the Internet, on the other hand, public data can be accessed by principals with online identities that cannot be reliably linked to a natural person. These principals are capable of further distributing the information to other untrusted pa...
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Related to Technologies and challenges

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