The Constitutional Court of Colombia held that the online publication of a court docket relating to a divorce, which included files with information about the petitioner’s family life, violated her right to privacy. The petitioner was the defendant in a divorce lawsuit before a civil court. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the government established that every judicial notification should be conducted online. The civil court, alleging compliance with this order, published the divorce docket’s judicial files on its website. Although the petitioner requested, through a tutela action (amparo), that the files should not be accessed through a Google search, the documents remained online and publicly available. The Constitutional Court, upon hearing the case on appeal, clarified that the Covid-19 regulations did not oblige tribunals to publish all judicial files—only to conduct notifications virtually. It also held that private information, such as the petitioner’s, was exempted from publication. Thus, it ruled that publishing the court docket violated the right to privacy. The Court ordered the files to be removed from the internet and requested the Judiciary to train its employees in charge of publishing content on their websites.