Google is once again in trouble with Europe’s authorities about privacy.

The company was fined $112,000 on Thursday by France’s data protection watchdog for failing to comply with demands to extend a European privacy ruling across its global domains, including Google.com in the United States.

The financial penalty — a paltry sum compared to Google’s $75 billion in annual revenue — relates to the “right to be forgotten” ruling issued in 2014 by Europe’s top court. The ruling allows anyone with connections to Europe to ask search engines like Google to remove links about themselves from online results.

Google has fought hard to limit the legal decision to its European operations like Google.fr in France, saying that applying the ruling worldwide would infringe people’s freedom of expression.

But French privacy regulators, among others, have demanded that the company apply the “right to be forgotten” across its global domains to comply with Europe’s tough data protection rules that enshrine an individual’s privacy as a fundamental human right.