Yes, I do, up to the age of 18.
I'm not suggesting that the right to be forgotten shouldn't be applicable to adults. I get calls where adults have been slammed on the Internet and have material on the Internet that they reasonably should have removed. For children, this is something that I think we should tackle. We're talking about the use of children's information in a commercial activity. Whether it's the child who puts the information online, a friend of theirs who puts it online, or somebody else who puts it online, this can have serious consequences for the development of the child. This can affect their mental health and their physical health. We're seeing great trends of self-harming of children, because in the online environment they can't get away from the mistakes that are out there.
I'm perhaps not as close to the technology era as perhaps Molly is. I certainly made mistakes growing up, and I can tell you that had that been videotaped or uploaded, I'm not sure I'd be standing here before you, or been called the bar.
We all need to allow our youth and our children to make those mistakes and move on from them. To my mind, the right of erasure applicable to minors, when their information is involved in commercial activities, strikes the balance.