By Sam Schechner 

PARIS-- Google Inc. has removed tens of thousands of links--possibly more than 100,000--from its European search results from some individuals, according to a person familiar with the matter, illustrating the scale of Europe's nascent "right to be forgotten."

The Mountain View, Calif., company told European privacy regulators during a meeting in Brussels Thursday that it has removed slightly more than 50% of the links that it has so far processed under the new right, the person said.

Established by a May decision from the European Union's top court, the new right to be forgotten gives Europeans the ability to request that search engines remove information about them from search results for their own names.

Since Google began taking removal requests in late May, it has received them from 91,000 individuals, covering 328,000 URLs--though not all the requests have yet been processed, the person said, adding that the rate of removals was still preliminary.

Google's removal rate is the first clear signal of how broadly the search company is implementing the right-to-be-forgotten ruling, and could help set a broader precedent. Other firms like Microsoft Corp. have been watching Google closely to see how it interprets the decision. European politicians, who are debating a law that could implement a more stringent version of the right, are watching as well.

Google's disclosure could also soothe tensions with privacy regulators, who called Thursday's meeting and have been critical of how the search company has implemented the ruling. Some have been demanding that Google end its notifications to websites that have been the subject of right to be forgotten requests, which have in some cases made it possible to identify the person making the request.

The more-than-50% rate could, however, fuel concerns among free-speech advocates, who have said that the overall decision risks leading to broader censorship of the Web.

"If you let this go without protest, then it will creep," said Bob Satchwell, executive director of the U.K.'s Society of Editors. "This passion for privacy will creep into law across Europe and erode the freedom of speech."

During Thursday's meeting, Google gave some of the most detail yet about how its removals work. The search company said it has rejected just over 30% of the requests it has received, and has requested more information from requesting parties in 15% of cases, the person familiar with the matter said.

Through July 18 most requests came from France, with 17,500 requests. Germany had 16,500 requests, and 12,000 requests originated in the U.K., the person said. Some 8,000 requests came from Spain, 7,500 from Italy, and 5,500 from the Netherlands, the person added.

Write to Sam Schechner at sam.schechner@wsj.com

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