A fact from Andrea Pető appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 1 May 2022 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that Hungarian historian Andrea Pető believes that "right to be forgotten" policies should not be applied to the Holocaust?
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... that Hungarian historian Andrea Pető believes that "right to be forgotten" policies should not be applied to the Holocaust? Source: “Yes. That’s why there was an important initiative passed by the European Parliament for the “right to be forgotten.” This right to be forgotten — to be deleted from certain databases — is, interestingly enough, used by some German and Dutch archives to block access to researching Holocaust materials. One of the achievements of the Hungarian leadership of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) was pushing through the policy that the “right to be forgotten” should not be applied to the Holocaust. This policy changes the whole institutional and legal framework of historical research, and makes the life of the archivist extremely complicated. Even outside the Holocaust, if there is a newspaper article from 1965 about a drunk driver in Budapest, it’s possible that you, as a researcher, will not be granted access to the related police file from the archive. No matter that the news was published in a newspaper. You own your own past, in a very strange way.” The Los Angeles Review of Books