Former Formula One boss Max Mosley said that he will pursue more legal actions against Google.
Mosley sued Google and demanded that the Internet giant should take down his photos showing him participating in a sadomasochistic orgy, AFP reports.
On Friday, a Hamburg court ordered Google to block six images which were taken from a video of the orgy in 2008. According to the ruling, the video and subsequently the images violated Max Mosley's privacy. The case was filed in 2013 under the argument that the search giant must stop giving links of his videos and images related to the sex scandal.
Mosley has already admitted that he indeed participated in the orgy with five women and but denied that the said orgy followed a Nazi theme. Mosley paid each woman 2,500 sterling of $4000.
On Sunday, Mosley told the German newspaper Der Spiegel that his next steps include taking the lawsuit to a US court and demanding Google to take down its "autocomplete function" for his name. When you type in Mosley's name on Google, search results will include phrases such as "Mosley prostitute video."
The 73-year old Formula One boss called Google "technically... brilliant, sensational" and he also said that the company was ""arrogant" and "doing whatever it wants". For Mosley, Google's management is "...simply immature".
Google, on the other hand, stated that they would file an appeal, as the court ruling has created a "disturbing message".
In 2008, Mosley won a case against the News of the World tabloid which exposed his involvement in the orgy. He also brought the case to the European Court of Human Rights and proposed that newspapers should warn people involved in a case before exposing their private lives to the public. However, the court rejected the proposal.