Our Justice Needs Some Tech Support
Last week the judge Mauro Caum Gonçalves (State Court: Rio Grande do Sul) proclaimed a sentence ordering a company that represents Google, Inc. in Brazil to pay the equivalent of 10,800 minimum wages (around US$ 2,000,000.00) to Deborah Pierini Cidade de Sá as indemnity for linking her name to that of a prostitute known as Bruna Surfistinha, who gained notoriety after publishing a book relating her sexual encounters.
According to the news, there were some pages that contained sentences like "naked fotos", "Bruna Surfistinha's sexual adventures" and "hot college girls" and Mrs. de Sá maiden name (Deborah Pierini Cidade) put toghether. These pages were not stored on Google's servers, nor was the company responsible for them.
It's OK that a person may try to have her/his name preserved from whatever s/he may find shameful (in this case, Mrs. de Sá felt that being somehow linked to Bruna Surfistinha would be harmful for her reputation), but it's clearly not Google's fault. They did not make the information up, they simply gathered information from 3rd parties and compiled it.
And it's certainly not the fault of the company that represents Google in Brazil (Montaury Pimenta Machado e Lioce SC. LTDA), and takes care of proper registration of Google's intellectual property in this country.
In Google's defense, they removed the entries from their database within 24hs after their representing partner was notified. A timely response for such a large company. There is NO reason for such a large fee. The sentence against Google is simply outrageous.
I think that the lack of technical information ultimately led the judge to make this unfortunate decision. If someone put up a website today linking both names again, sooner or later Google would index it. How could Google possibly know that this is in their index?
This case reminds me of the Daniela Cicarelli fiasco. When will they learn?!
Google can still appeal against the sentence, and will hopefully win in a higher court.
According to the news, there were some pages that contained sentences like "naked fotos", "Bruna Surfistinha's sexual adventures" and "hot college girls" and Mrs. de Sá maiden name (Deborah Pierini Cidade) put toghether. These pages were not stored on Google's servers, nor was the company responsible for them.
It's OK that a person may try to have her/his name preserved from whatever s/he may find shameful (in this case, Mrs. de Sá felt that being somehow linked to Bruna Surfistinha would be harmful for her reputation), but it's clearly not Google's fault. They did not make the information up, they simply gathered information from 3rd parties and compiled it.
And it's certainly not the fault of the company that represents Google in Brazil (Montaury Pimenta Machado e Lioce SC. LTDA), and takes care of proper registration of Google's intellectual property in this country.
In Google's defense, they removed the entries from their database within 24hs after their representing partner was notified. A timely response for such a large company. There is NO reason for such a large fee. The sentence against Google is simply outrageous.
I think that the lack of technical information ultimately led the judge to make this unfortunate decision. If someone put up a website today linking both names again, sooner or later Google would index it. How could Google possibly know that this is in their index?
This case reminds me of the Daniela Cicarelli fiasco. When will they learn?!
Google can still appeal against the sentence, and will hopefully win in a higher court.
Labels: Bruna Surfistinha, Deborah Pierini Cidade de Sá, Fiasco, Google, Justice
4 Comments:
Fuck Google. Every one of the negligent, reckless, privacy violating net abusers in 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View deserve to hung, drawn and quartered - with the resultant offal of their entrails fed to the growing maggots of swamp flies.
Well done, Mrs. de Sá! You got justice from these scum.
May you be the first of many.
To the anonymous person that commented above: are you that stupid?
You may hate Google, but the ammount of money she's asking is simply absurd. And the process is altogether frivolous.
If she wants to get rich by doing stupid things, she could just as well become a whore, because what she is actually doing is protituting our legal system.
Well, I was looking about this case in the internet and I found that she's a respectable lawyer. Imagine what people would say about that. I mean, co-workers or future clients. To have her name associated with a prostitute probably has hurt her professionally. And, another thing I found, she didn’t ask for that amount of money. The judge made that decision based on the fact that her name would be worldly known and Google Inc is a multimillionaire company. I guess if we were talking about a british newspapers or magazine, whith no respect for privacy, instead of Google, and we were talking about an actress, well... you known.....
Oh, come on! Google was linking to a page on another site (Catar) that listed the most searched terms on that site. IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH GOOGLE!
I hope this stupid lawyer gets all the recognition she's looking for, as someone who is prostituting our legal system.
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