Is the golden age of the Internet over? Will we need to go back to the printing press to share information?
Canadian Judge Says Google Must Remove Links Worldwide
Google
 has argued that following a global order by a Canadian court to remove 
specific search results could put in into conflict with laws of other 
countries.
OTTAWA — Google will appeal a 
decision by a court in British Columbia that requires the company to 
remove specific search results worldwide. While the case stems from an 
intellectual property dispute between two small industrial equipment 
companies, some legal experts say that if the decision is upheld it 
could have far-reaching consequences for the Internet.
The temporary order,
 granted last Friday by the Supreme Court of British Columbia, emerged 
from protracted litigation between two companies which were once both 
closely connected. Equustek Solutions makes a device that allows 
industrial machines made by different manufacturers and that use 
different software to communicate with each other. Those products were 
marketed by another company, Datalink, which sold them under its name.
While the two companies almost merged at one 
point, relations soured in the middle of the last decade and they split.
 One result of that was the court finding that Datalink’s stole 
Equustek’s designs and engineering to create its own device, which it 
largely sells through the Internet.
Trying to block the sales of Datalink’s 
product, however, has not been easy despite a court order banning online
 sales in December 2012. Datalink’s owners appear to have left Canada 
and the location of its Web-based operation is unclear.
In an earlier court ruling, the court ruled 
in favor of Equustek Solutions and its principals. After that ruling, 
Google Canada began to voluntarily remove the Web address related to 
Datalink from searches made through Google.ca. But in last week’s 
decision, Justice Lauri Ann Fenlon found that Datalink swiftly set up 
new websites with slightly different addresses every time it was blocked
 from search results in Canada by Google.
“Websites can be generated automatically, 
resulting in an endless game of ‘whac-a-mole’ with the plaintiffs 
identifying new URLs and Google deleting them,” she wrote.
Her solution, unprecedented for Canada, was 
the interim injunction requiring Google to kill all Datalink search 
results worldwide.
If upheld and then emulated by courts in other countries, said Michael Geist,
 a law professor at the University of Ottawa, the Internet could go from
 being perceived as a lawless place to “one where all courts apply” 
setting up conflicts between nations on several issues, particularly 
freedom of expression.
“The judge recognizes that there is this 
global impact but doesn’t really want to deal with it,” said Professor 
Geist, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet law. “Where this decision goes off the rails is when the court decides its order making power is limitless.”
Google Canada declined to comment beyond a 
short statement: “We’re disappointed in this ruling and will appeal this
 decision to  the British Columbia Court of Appeals, B.C.’s highest 
court.”
Professor Geist said he was puzzled that the 
order involves Google and no other web search provider, like Bing, 
making the information still easily available.
And while he agreed that the court could, and
 probably should have, ordered these search results struck in Canada, he
 said that it overreached with its global order. It would have been more
 appropriate, Professor Geist said, if Equustek sought similar orders in
 each of the countries where Datalink does business. They are not likely
 very numerous. Court filings indicate that at its peak in 2005, 
Equustek only sold 672,000 of its devices.
For Professor Geist, the decision is 
troubling in two different respects. If the order stands, it would most 
likely put Google in the position of deciding itself which court orders 
it obeys and where it honors them.
At the same time, he asked how Canadians 
would feel if “the European Court of Justice looked to  extend the right
 to be forgotten not just to Europe but to the rest of the world?”  That
 ruling, released last month, requires all search providers’ European operations to remove links that people believe violate their online privacy.
In its court submissions, Google argued that 
following a global order by a Canadian court could put in into conflict 
with laws of other countries. It cited a case where a French anti-racism
 group said that Yahoo had broken French law by allowing users to sell 
Nazi artifacts through its websites. A French court ordered Yahoo to 
block all access from France to Nazi artifact postings stored on its 
servers in the United States and fined the company about $15 million. 
Yahoo voluntarily removed the material and 
then turned around and sued the anti-racism group in California, arguing
 that its First Amendment Rights to free expression had been violated. A
 federal judge sided with Yahoo in 2002. But that was set aside by an appeals court in 2006,
 which did not address the question of whether American Internet 
companies must honor rulings by foreign courts related to postings that 
are unlawful overseas but not in the United States.
Professor Geist said that Google would most 
likely ask the appeals court to put the injunction on hold until it 
reaches its decision, a process that could be lengthy. It is also 
possible that Google will be supported in its appeal by other Internet 
search companies.
Based on earlier Canadian cross border 
Internet cases, Professor Geist said he expected that the global order 
would be struck down.
“This judge has decided that she’s going to 
decide for the rest of the world,” he said, adding that it appears that 
the judge, seeing the size and power of Google, may have decided that 
“judges need powers that are equally large if they’re going to deal with
 it.”
 
 
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