http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/internet/entries/1d765aa8-600b-4f32-b110-d02fbf7fd379
This really makes a mockery of a daft ruling to begin with.
This really makes a mockery of a daft ruling to begin with.
Two high court judges were asked to decide "what is football?" after neighbours fell out over a kick-about in an exclusive, residents-only garden.
Christopher Fleming-Brown, 46, from Kensington, west London, was taken to court by Paula Lawton, 63, after playing ball with his son, aged five.
She accused him of turning the lawn garden into a recreation ground and breaching local by-laws.
Magistrates dismissed Ms Lawton's claim but she is challenging their ruling.
Retrial 'inappropriate'
The case concerned the alleged breach of by-laws governing the Arundel and Elgin gardens in the area close to Notting Hill.
Last November West London Magistrates said the banker's kick-abouts with his son did not amount to football in the eyes of the law.
She successfully challenged the magistrates' ruling before two senior judges at the High Court on Wednesday but was denied a retrial.
Lord Justice Waller, sitting with Mr Justice Treacy, said: "We think the justices took too narrow a view of what constituted football or a similar game by paying too much attention to the dictionary definition, which referred to two teams seeking to put the ball into the opposition's goal.
But sirely people do have the right to be forgotten?
Surely once a crime becomes spent then legally it is no longer "live", people don't have to mention it when asked, yet somebody could search, find the said story from 10 years ago and still judge someone, probably a reformed person, on their past activities - is that really fair?
Maybe the ruling needs some work, maybe the sheer number of "applicants" has been silly. But I think a rule, allowing people's past to be forgotten is fair.
tis amusing some of the stories that have been removed - for example:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/6173888.stm
I wonder which of them requested the deletion from google

But there past isn't being forgotten is it, what if you go into a library and pick up and old newspaper and read a story from ten years ago?
I'm still considering setting up a search engine in Iceland with all the links to forgotten links.
Unless it's slanderous then I see no reason it should be removed.
There's a fair few I can understand but removing someone's criminal past just because it's not recent is scary.
I find the idea that it's impossible to rehabilitate even scarier. Why would someone give up crime of even the most minor offense followed them for life?
Quite. Surely it depends on the crime in question?
I don't mean in reference to theft really unless they had control over my bank accounts. I'm more referring to the murder, rape, assault.
I know it's not a black and white situation but potentially someone who's had a rape conviction could have records removed putting people at risk. For example the club I used to work at never hired anyone with a drugs or sexual conviction due to the risk it posed to not only customers but the business itself.
I would want to be able to google my sisters boyfriend and find out if he's had a domestic violence claim or anything newsworthy.