Right to honour.
Erase what harms your reputation
When something is published that harms someone’s dignity, the law allows requesting its removal. The right to honour protects name, image and privacy from public attacks.
More than 12,800 clients in 65 countries.
Over 15 years removing negative content.
EXPERIENCE
Removal of content under the right to honour












96%
Success
+12.5K
People have removed content
+100K
Content items removed
24h
Removal time
96%
Success
+12k
Clients
100k
Contents deleted
24h
Removal time
What can be removed under the right to honour?
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News that harms without grounds.
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Intimate photos or videos posted without consent.
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Comments that attack someone’s reputation.
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Defamation, insults or damaging rumours.
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Impersonation or misuse of someone’s name or image.
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Posts published after someone’s death.
LEGAL PROTECTION
What does it mean to protect digital honour?
Protecting online honour means defending your integrity from harmful content such as defamatory comments, fake news or unfair practices aimed at damaging your name or your brand.
These situations can appear on social networks, blogs, forums or even review sites, and their impact can be significant if not addressed quickly.
SOLUTIONS
Right-to-honour services
At RepScan, we offer specialised services to address violations of digital honour.
Our approach combines legal guidance with advanced technology to ensure strong protection.
Defamation
Right to be forgotten
Memory of the deceased
Comments on social networks
Removal of news
Personal data
When something harms you, the right to honour allows it to be removed.
WHAT YOU WILL GET
Legal solutions to protect your honour
The right to honour, recognised as a fundamental right (CE 1978; STC 139/1995), protects the dignity, integrity and reputation of individuals and companies. In Europe, there is a strong legal framework regulating this protection, although its application on the internet outside the EU can be limited.
Personal or professional reputation can be affected by defamation, false information or unfair practices. At RepScan we specialise in the right to honour and in defending digital reputation through legal action and precise strategies.
REGAIN CONTROL
Actions against unfair competition
Leaders in digital reputation management and the right to honour
In the case of companies, unfair competition can involve spreading false information to damage your brand or divert clients.
- Disclosure of business secrets: Confidential information used to harm a competitor.
- Spreading false information: Statements intended to damage the image of a company or self-employed professional.
- Constant monitoring: We identify harmful posts or information leaks.
- Legal action: In serious cases, we support clients in legal processes to protect their rights.
Legal and technological support in every removal
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RESTORE YOUR GOOD IMAGE
High effectiveness in removing content under the right to honour
National coverage: Our commitment is to assist and guide you worldwide. Join the growing number of people strengthening their online reputation.
Guarantee: More than 100,000 items removed and over 12,800 clients worldwide support our work.
Monitoring: Ongoing monitoring and analysis service that repeatedly tracks specific content to ensure it does not reappear.
Hire the monitoring service.
Is there something online that affects your honour?
Removal service for publications that violate the right to honour.
We remove news, photos, videos and comments that damage reputation or affect personal dignity. We apply legal measures so they do not appear again in search engines or on other websites.
- Legal removal of content that affects honour, image or privacy.
- Disappearance from Google results and social networks.
- Ongoing supervision to prevent future reappearances.
Frequently Asked Questions about removing content under the right to honour
When defamatory statements, insults or false/outdated news are published that damage reputation. In these situations the post can be removed, along with the Google results showing it.
Yes. If it affects the right to honour, it can be removed from the source and a request can be made to remove or de-list it from Google so it no longer appears under a person’s name.
Direct URLs, dated screenshots, author/profile details and documents showing falseness, correction or closure of the case. The more precise the material, the higher the chance of removal.
Link review → request to the platform or publisher → request to Google (de-listing by name) → AEPD or court if needed → monitoring to detect copies (monitoring is a separate service).
Platforms and social networks: days or weeks. Administrative or court routes: longer. Progress is reported until the post or Google results are removed.
Yes. If there is defamation or insults, the post can be removed from the platform and a request can be made to Google to de-list the results showing it under a person’s name.
Removing at the source deletes the post from the site. Removing from Google (de-listing) prevents it from appearing in name searches. Both are often used together.
A formal request is sent, a removal request is made to Google for affecting the right to honour, and legal action may be considered to delete or correct the article.
Yes. When both apply, they are used together to remove news articles and de-list Google results, strengthening the outcome.
Do you need more information?
Contact us and we will evaluate your case with security and confidentiality in under 48 hours.

