NDR – Court Ruling (Germany, 2019)

Court Ruling
DPA BGH6 November 2019Germany
final
ePrivacy
Court Ruling

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

In a separate ruling, the German court addressed the rights of individuals versus the media's freedom to publish. The court found that individuals cannot demand the removal of all information about them from the internet. This case matters because it clarifies the limits of personal privacy in the context of public information.

What happened

The court ruled that individuals cannot request the deletion of all information about them from the internet.

Who was affected

Individuals whose personal information is published online by media outlets.

What the authority found

The court determined that the balancing of rights favors freedom of expression over individual privacy in this context.

Why this matters

This ruling reinforces the idea that media outlets have the right to report on public interest topics, even if it involves personal information. It serves as a guideline for how privacy and freedom of expression can coexist.

GDPR Articles Cited

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Art. 17(GDPR)
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Art. 17(GDPR)

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Decision AuthorityBundesverfassungsgericht
Reviewed AuthorityBGH (Germany)
Source verified 11 April 2026
authority corrected
scope corrected
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

The complainant sought injunctive relief against a search engine operator because the search engine’s list of results for searches of her name contained a link to the transcript of a TV broadcast that was uploaded to an online archive in 2010. In the document the complainant is identified by name and accused of unfair treatment of an employee. The Celle Higher Regional Court rejected her claim and then she referred to the Federal Constitutional Court. The Court decided for the first time that where EU fundamental rights take precedence over German fundamental rights, the Court itself can directly review, on the basis of EU fundamental rights, the application of EU law by German authorities. What is decisive here is that under current EU law there would otherwise be a gap in protection regarding the application of EU fundamental rights by the ordinary courts. The fundamental rights of both the Basic Law and the Charter are not limited to protecting citizens vis-à-vis the state, but also afford protection in disputes under private law. The conflicting fundamental rights must be balanced on an equal basis.https://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/SharedDocs/Pressemitteilungen/EN/2019/bvg19-084.html According to the Court, the balancing exercise here must take into account the fundamental right to private and family life as well as the fundamental right to the protection of personal data on the one hand and the freedom to conduct a business on the other hand. The fundamental rights of third parties directly affected must also be considered, including the freedom of expression of the broadcasting corporation and the internet users’ interest in receiving information. The search engine operator’s economic interests as such are in principle not sufficiently weighty to justify a limitation of the affected person’s right to protection. It is not for the individual to determine unilaterally what information may be disseminated about them in the course of public communicatio

Outcome

Court Ruling

A ruling by a national court on a data-protection matter.

Related Cases (0)

No other cases found for NDR in DE

This is the only recorded case for this entity in this jurisdiction.

Details

Ruling Date

6 November 2019

Authority

DPA BGH

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
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Cite as: Cookie Fines. NDR - Germany (2019). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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