Every internet user has googled themselves at least once - if you say you haven't, you're lying. And typing your own name into the search engine generates conflicting emotions: anxiety and excruciating excitement. What will I find? Will I be first on the list of results? Will that photo of me with two cigarettes stuffed up my nose still be the top image?
But what happens if we stumble across something we consider to be irrelevant or outdated, or even something that might infringe on our privacy?
Keen to find out just how easy it would be to be "forgotten" by a global search engine, following the court ruling that Google must amend some search results at the request of ordinary people, I decided to try to get a photo of myself (a terrible one from last summer in which I'm trying desperately to hide my newly-fitted braces) permanently erased from all Google searches.
Read more:
• Joshua Keating: The problem with the 'right to be forgotten'
• Google blow as EU court backs 'right to be forgotten'
My first point of call is, of course, the search engine itself. Typing "how to get Google to remove something" into Google throws up a number of results, the first of which is the company's support page. I trawl my through various Contact Us options, but struggle to find a number for a helpline. Are theirs the only contact details not available via their all-seeing online powers?