Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Internet History Of Harper PMO Deleted From Google Web Searches At Govt Request

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2016 12:49 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government has had dozens of web pages from Stephen Harper's days as prime minister deleted from Google search results.
     
    The Privy Council Office requests for deletion from Google began last Nov. 4, the day the Trudeau government took office and continued into January.
     
    Documents tabled in the Commons in response to a written question from Conservative MP Candice Bergen detail the deletion requests.
     
    The PCO says the material itself was neither deleted nor destroyed and remains available through Library and Archives Canada.
     
    The search result requests cover Harper's daily posts and his 24-Seven video diary as well as news releases in both French and English.
     
    On Nov. 9, the PCO asked Google to clear its index for any page published on the domain pm.gc.ca before Nov. 4, but Google did not offer such a service.
     
    In January, requests were made for more deletions year-by-year through Harper's tenure and the government reply says pages no longer show up search results.
     
    In all, the PCO made asked Google 51 times to remove Harper material from its search results.
     
    The office said, however, that Harper's website material was saved in its entirety and can be accessed through the archives.
     
    "This application went live in April and a link to it has been added to the PCO website," said Raymond Rivet, director of corporate and media affairs for the PCO.
     
     
    A few other agencies made a handful of requests to Google asking that documents be removed from web searches.
     
    For example, the RCMP asked that one news release be removed because charges had been dropped and that another be deleted because a publication ban had been imposed in a case.
     
    National Defence asked Google to remove an older version of a document from its cache because it included personal information about a member of the Forces.
     
    The Treasury Board asked for a change after finding that Google searches tied a photo of Bill Matthews, comptroller general of Canada, to biographical information for Bill Matthews, a former MP from Newfoundland and Labrador.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace

    Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace
    As the row over the Kohinoor diamond intensifies with political parties demanding its return to India, accounts of historians establish that the majestic stone was forcibly taken away by the British and was never gifted by Duleep Singh

    Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace

    Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill

    Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill
    Lee and Price Carter say their late mother would not have qualified for medical help to end her life under the restrictive provisions of the bill introduced last week by the Trudeau government in response to the top court's ruling.  

    Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill

    Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report

    Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report
    A new report suggests the red hot real estate markets in Vancouver and Toronto are discouraging some potential sellers from listing their homes because they're afraid of becoming buyers themselves.

    Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report

    Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver

    Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver
    Support from two nearby schools helped to convince Vancouver city officials to allow a nearly 20-year-old medical marijuana shop to remain in operation.

    Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver

    Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug

    Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug
    A University of British Columbia engineering professor is the latest to create a breathalyzer she says can detect THC levels in the breath of someone who has smoked pot.

    Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug

    'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise

    'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise
    When a tiny town in northeast British Columbia couldn't get federal funding for bicycle lanes, Greg Moore says it fudged the paperwork.

    'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise