CNIL – CJEU Judgment (France, 2019)

CJEU Judgment
Court of Justice of the European Union24 September 2019France
final
CJEU Judgment

CJEU judgment — not a DPA enforcement action

This is a Court of Justice ruling, not an enforcement action by a data protection authority. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

The Court of Justice ruled on how search engines should handle requests to remove links to sensitive data. This matters because it affects how personal data is managed online. Website operators should be aware of their responsibilities regarding sensitive data and user rights.

What happened

The Court ruled on the obligations of search engines to remove links to sensitive personal data.

Who was affected

Individuals seeking to have links to sensitive personal data removed from search results.

What the authority found

The Court held that search engines must consider requests to remove links to sensitive data but are not required to automatically delete them.

Why this matters

This ruling clarifies the responsibilities of search engines in managing sensitive data, emphasizing the need for a balanced approach between privacy rights and public interest. Businesses should ensure they understand these obligations to avoid potential legal issues.

GDPR Articles Cited

Art. 10 GDPR
Art. 21 GDPR
Art. 85 GDPR
Art. 9(1) GDPR
Art. 9(2) GDPR
Art. 17(1) GDPR
Decision AuthorityCJEU
Reviewed AuthorityCE (France)
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

Four applicants wanted to exercise their right to de-referencing concerning various links to third-party websites which contained sensitive data pertaining to them. As the requests were rejected by Google, the applicants brought complaints before the Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), the French data protection authority. the CNIL refused, however, to serve formal notice on Google to carry out the de-referencing requested. Thereupon, the applicants turned to the Council of State (Counsel d’État), which ordered a stay of the proceedings and referred to the Court four questions relating to the applicability of the prohibition of the processing of sensitive data in the context of search engines and to the de-referencing of such data. The Court recalled that an activity of a search engine, which consists in finding information published or placed on the internet by third parties, indexing it automatically, storing it temporarily and making it available to internet users according to a particular order of preference, must be classified as "processing of personal data" and that the operator of the search engine therefore needs to be considered a 'controller' within the means of article 4(7) GDPR. In its preliminary ruling the court judged that: * Information relating to legal proceedings brought against an individual and information relating to an ensuing conviction are data relating to ‘offences’ and ‘criminal convictions’ within the meaning of Article 8(5) of Directive 95/46 (and Article 10 GDPR); * The operator of a search engine is in principle required to accede to requests for de-referencing links to web pages containing sensitive personal data, unless an exemption is applicable; * A search engine operator does not need to automatically delete links to specific sites following an erasure request made by the data subject. Instead, in order to determine whether to remove links to pages that contain sensitive personal data, the search eng

Outcome

CJEU Judgment

A judgment by the Court of Justice of the European Union, typically on a preliminary reference from a national court.

Violations (4)

No Reject Button
critical

Cookie banner does not provide a clear reject/refuse all button at the same level as the accept button.

Art. 7 GDPR

Cookies Placed Before Consent
critical

Non-essential cookies (tracking, advertising) are placed on the user's device before obtaining valid consent.

Art. 6(1) GDPR

Third-Party Cookies Without Consent
critical

Third-party tracking cookies or scripts are loaded without obtaining prior user consent.

Art. 13, 14 GDPR

Unclear Cookie Information
high

The cookie banner or cookie policy provides vague, incomplete, or unclear information about what cookies are used and why.

Art. 12, 13 GDPR

Related Cases (0)

No other cases found for CNIL in FR

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

Details

Judgment Date

24 September 2019

Authority

Court of Justice of the European Union

About this data

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

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