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Monday, 3 November 2014

Musician tries to use EU right to be forgotten to hide a bad review


Musician tries to use EU right to be forgotten to hide a bad review


The EU believes that its “right to be forgotten” is about removing outdated or irrelevant information, rather than letting people photoshop their backstories. Unfortunately, the latest in a long line of people to miss that memo is musician Dejan Lazic, who tried to using the ruling to erase a bad review. The Croatian pianist requested that the Washington Post nix a 2010 piece that described his playing as “cartoon-like,” which he described as “defamatory, mean-spirited, opinionated, one-sided, offensive [and] simply irrelevant for the arts” – which also just happened to be on the front page of Google when you searched for his name. Naturally, upon receiving the request, the newspaper reported upon it, providing plenty of fresh attention towards the not-particularly-scathing review. For his part, Lazic believes that he has a right to control his own image, and that reviewer Anna Midgette is holding a grudge against certain acts who are singled out for harsh judgment. Bet the EU sometimes wishes that it could just try and forget this whole thing ever started.






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