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Canada Dashboard Digest | Officials examining ‘right-to-be-forgotten’ potential in Canadian law Related reading: A view from Brussels: EDPS sends signal on data transfers 

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As Google and the CNIL continue their battle over Europe’s “right-to-be-forgotten” law in France, Canadian officials are mulling whether the law has a place in their own legal system, The Globe and Mail reports. A case involving Google and Datalink Technologies Gateways, Inc., has drawn parallels to the case in France, as the search engine is challenging an order in front of the Canadian Supreme Court to remove listings of Datalink, which is being accused of trademark violations across its worldwide search. To address their course on the RTBF, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada has received 23 formal submissions on the subject. “The law is broadly struggling to address these issues, and so we thought it was a legitimate question to ask,” said Patricia Kosseim, director general of the Legal Services, Policy, Research and Technology Analysis branch of the OPC.
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