form givingll in a reasons for having certain information not turn up on searches. while saying they're willing to comply, chief executives have not been enthusiastic. eric schmidt told the company's annual shareholder meeting that they struck the wrong balance between the right to know and the right to be forgotten. criticizelarry page what he said was an extra layered of regulatory complexities. although google had the resources to deal with it, this would make it harder for internet startups to succeed and make it easier for to radical regimes to sensitive civilians. but the law only applies to search engines with business headquarters in europe. results can still turn up on websites operating overseas. stocks inbaking general took a beating in european trading this friday. the wall street journal reports the u.s. is seeking $10 billion in fines. it will be one of the biggest penalties ever. just to put it in perspective, the profits last year amounted to four .8 billion euros right about $6.5 billion. with sanctions on iran and cuba, currently negotiating with u