Google is giving you more tools to fight doxxing trolls online

The permanence of the internet is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, you can find and reference events that took place years ago; on the other, any uploaded personal information is unlikely to vanish forever, whether or not it could compromise your data or include damaging results that can harm your personal or professional standing. So limiting the visibility of such content is crucial — that’s where Google Search’s personal info removal request policy comes in. It’s been in place for years, and now, the company’s expanding what content you can ask to be taken down as part of a policy update.

Sign up forfree

Forgot your password?

Create an account

*Required: 8 chars, 1 capital letter, 1 number

By continuing, you agree to thePrivacy PolicyandTerms of Use.You also agree to receive our newsletters, you can opt-out any time.

4

Google has a complete guide onremoving personally identifiable info (PII) or doxxing contentfrom Search. But the idea is that your request will be honored if it meets the listed requirements and the submitted URLs are covered by the company’s policy. However, you may be denied even if you meet the requirements, such as if the source page is a news article with broadly useful information or is a government or official site with public records.

That said, removing a Google Search result doesn’t erase the info from the web — you may need to contact the hosting site directly for that. But it helps for the most popular search engine to delist such data — remember that people will still be able to find the original info if they go digging. There’s no such thing as being too careful. So, take advantage of some of Google’s other features tomanage your “My Activity” dataordelete the last 15 minutes of search history.

A snapshot of Google Search page in light theme

The note-taking app I should have used all along

Broader branding hints at wider paid-tier ambitions

article limit background

The backlash is strong with this one

Spotify AI is the reason I keep pressing play

Browsers

Stop trusting big tech with your data

Breaking language barriers, one feed at a time

Samsung Notes logo in front of image containing S Pen and devices using Samsung Notes