Two years or so ago, the United Nations appointed a special rapporteur on the right to privacy, and that person has a mandate to try to develop an instrument of international application, but this is not going to happen tomorrow. It's desirable, but this is not imminent for sure.
As for the right to be forgotten, I must say that if you ask whether there should be an international rule on something like the right to be forgotten, the right to be forgotten deals, as I said earlier, with the balance between important constitutionally protected rights, such as freedom of expression and the right to privacy. One aspect of privacy is that it depends on certain international principles, but its application depends a little bit on the culture of the place. All countries do not have the same way of looking at privacy, and certainly they do not have the same constitutional protections governing it. So, yes, we should move towards or we should seriously consider something like the right to be forgotten, but we should also look at our constitutional framework and values to determine how far to go.