Science & Technology
The requests, submitted on Friday, came after Google set up an online form to allow Europeans to request the removal of results about them from Internet searches.
The number confirms earlier estimates given by the German daily Der Spiegel and reported in other media.
Earlier in May the European Court of Justice ruled that individuals have the right to have links to information about them deleted from searches in certain circumstances, such as if the data is outdated or inaccurate.
Google said that each request would be examined individually to gauge whether it met the ruling's criteria.
The US-based Internet giant declined to estimate how long it might take for the links to disappear, saying factors such as whether requests are clear-cut will affect how long it takes.
The ruling on the right to be forgotten comes amid growing concern in Europe about individuals' ability to protect their personal data and manage their reputations online.

In Ethiopia's Danakil Depression, the sulfur dust in the soil of a hydrothermal vent ignites to form blue flames.
Those gases emerge from cracks in the volcano at high pressure and temperature - up to 1,112°F (600°C). When they come in contact with the air, they ignite, sending flames up to 16 feet (5 meters) high.Some of the gases condense into liquid sulfur, "which continues to burn as it flows down the slopes," said Grunewald, "giving the feeling of lava flowing." Cynthia Werner, a research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) at the Alaska Volcano Observatory, told National Geographic that Grunewald's photos show an unusual phenomenon.
"I've never seen this much sulfur flowing at a volcano," she said.

Simulating brain controlled flying at the Institute for Flight System Dynamics.
Researchers at the Technische Universität München (TUM), under the guidance of Professor Florian Holzapfel, are developing methods for even untrained laypersons to strap into the cockpit, soar into the clouds and return safely again to the surface of the Earth. The method, involving a white skull cap and several wires, relies upon electroencephalography (EEG) readings from specific brain regions used by traditional pilots in captaining an aircraft. The EU funded project, "Brainflight," is a long-term study intended to make flying even more accessible to the average person.
"With brain control, flying, in itself, could become easier," explained Tim Fricke, one of the project leads at TUM, in a recent statement. "This would reduce the work load of pilots and thereby increase safety. In addition, pilots would have more freedom of movement to manage other manual tasks in the cockpit." This last point is true because, with mind controlled thought, the pilot would not be restricted by having to maintain contact with flight control devices or pedals.
Neither dead or alive, knife-wound or gunshot victims will be cooled down and placed in suspended animation later this month, as a groundbreaking emergency technique is tested out for the first time.
Surgeons are now on call at the UPMC Presbyterian Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to perform the operation, which will buy doctors time to fix injuries that would otherwise be lethal.
"We are suspending life, but we don't like to call it suspended animation because it sounds like science fiction," says Samuel Tisherman, a surgeon at the hospital, who is leading the trial. "So we call it emergency preservation and resuscitation."
The technique involves replacing all of a patient's blood with a cold saline solution, which rapidly cools the body and stops almost all cellular activity. "If a patient comes to us two hours after dying you can't bring them back to life. But if they're dying and you suspend them, you have a chance to bring them back after their structural problems have been fixed," says surgeon Peter Rhee at the University of Arizona in Tucson, who helped develop the technique.
The benefits of cooling, or induced hypothermia, have been known for decades. At normal body temperature - around 37 °C - cells need a regular oxygen supply to produce energy. When the heart stops beating, blood no longer carries oxygen to cells. Without oxygen the brain can only survive for about 5 minutes before the damage is irreversible.
A group of scientists in Switzerland is developing small robotic modules, called "roombots," which fit together like LEGO bricks to form structures that can self-assemble and morph into different shapes.
The idea of roving furniture may be somewhat disconcerting, but the researchers envision them being used to provide assistance to elderly or disabled people.
"The idea of different units that self-assemble and change morphology has been around for quite a while, but nobody came up with a good idea for how to use them," said Massimo Vespignani, an engineer at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, in Switzerland, andco-author of a study to be published in the July issue of the journal Robotics and Autonomous Systems.
According to the preliminay orbit, 2014 KP4 is an Apollo type asteroid. This class of asteroids are defined by having semi-major axes greater than that of the Earth (> 1 AU) but perihelion distances less than the Earth's aphelion distance (q < 1.017 AU). It is also flagged as a "Potentially Hazardous Asteroid". PHA are asteroids larger than approximately 100m that might have threatening close approaches to the Earth (they can come closer to Earth than 0.05 AU).
2014 KP4 had a close approach with Earth on May 11, 2014 at rougly 26.2 LD (Lunar Distances = ~384,000 kilometers) or 0.0673 AU (1 AU = ~150 million kilometers).
We performed some follow-up measurements of this object on 2014, May 20.6, remotely from the Q62 iTelescope network (Siding Spring) through a 0.50-m f/6.8 astrograph + CCD + focal reducer. Below you can see an animation showing the fast movement (the object was moving at 6.5 "/min) of 2014 KP4 on the the sky on May 20, 2014. Each frame is a single 15-second exposure. Click on the thumbnail here to see the animation (East is up, North is to the right):
Below you can see the discovery images of 2014 KP4 by SONEAR survey.
The debut of the new search engine was announced Thursday at the 18th International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg dubbed the "Russian Davos".
The engine is referred to as "safe search", because no unchecked links should appear in its results.
"We've indexed over 10 billion documents on the Russian internet, picking the most reliable, and full and official sources of information," the company said in a statement.
"We consider the absence of unreliable information crucial for users rather than the recall ratio. Such an approach is at the core of the Sputnik concept", said Aleksey Basov, Vice President of Rostelecom and Chairman of Sputnik.
The new web-search engine aims to develop and incorporate services that might be helpful to people in their everyday life and social activities. It will be handy in daily local tasks, saving time and money, finding a petrol station with the cheapest gasoline, a nearest vet clinic, the fastest services to renovate an apartment, or links to process an official document. Sputnik will also broadcast news from several TV stations on its page.
The study, published in the journal BMC Genomics, shows different genes are active in female pigs' reproductive system cells depending on whether female (X) or male (Y) sperm are present.
It is thought the sow's fallopian tubes, known as the oviduct, change in response, allowing her to influence the sex of her offspring.
The research suggests the sow may favour one sex over the other and give it a better chance of reaching the egg first.
Researchers are still not sure why this ability has evolved but believe if females can recognise the sex of sperm and change in response, they might be able to create an environment that favours boys or girls.
Lead author Prof Alireza Fazeli, from the department of human metabolism at the University of Sheffield said: "What this shows is that mothers are able to differentiate between the sperm that makes boys and girls.
"That on its own is amazing. It's also of great scientific and evolutionary importance.
"If we understand how they can do that, this can revolutionise the field.
"We don't know what the human application could be or how it works but we believe female pigs can choose one gender over another.

This image shows a star forming region in a nearby galaxy known as the Large Magellanic Cloud.
In the space around us, on Earth, in the Solar System and our Milky Way Galaxy, as similar objects get farther away, they look fainter and smaller. Their surface brightness, that is the brightness per unit area, remains constant.
In contrast, the Big Bang theory tells us that in an expanding Universe objects actually should appear fainter but bigger. Thus in this theory, the surface brightness decreases with the distance. In addition, the light is stretched as the Universe expanded, further dimming the light.
So in an expanding Universe the most distant galaxies should have hundreds of times dimmer surface brightness than similar nearby galaxies, making them actually undetectable with present-day telescopes.
But that is not what observations show, as demonstrated by this new study published in the International Journal of Modern Physics D.











Comment: With filters in place for extremism, child pornography and other unsavory topics, does what a company chooses not to index, or deem "unreliable," amount to protection or censorship?