Recently, the Italian Data Protection Authority (Autorità Garante) has returned to the issue of the use of biometric data in the context of managing employment relationships. “As things stand, current law does not allow the processing of employees’ biometric data for purposes of timekeeping”. This was reiterated by the IDPA in a ruling of 6 June 2024, in which it fined the employer, a dealership, EUR 120,000 for, among other things, unlawfully processing its employees’ biometric data.
The IDPA intervened following a complaint from an employee, who alleged:
- the unlawful processing of personal data through a biometric system installed at the employer company’s two production units and
- the use of management software with which each employee was required to record repair work performed on assigned vehicles, the time and manner in which the work was performed, and downtime with specific reasons.
With reference to the first ground of complaint, namely the processing of biometric data, the IDPA has again clarified that employers may not use biometric data. The current position is that there is no legal provision for the use of biometric data for attendance tracking, and at this point it should be remembered that even employee consent cannot be considered a suitable prerequisite for lawfulness. This is because of the asymmetry between the respective parties to the employment relationship.
On the other hand, with reference to the second ground of the complaint, the IDPA found that the company, through management software, had been collecting personal data related to the activities of employees for more than six years to prepare monthly reports to be sent to the parent company, containing aggregate data on the time spent by the workshops on the work performed. This activity had always been carried out without a proper legal basis and adequate disclosure, which, in the context of the employment relationship, are expressions of the principles of fairness and transparency.
It is worth mentioning that the latter activity could, among others, involve indirect remote monitoring of workers’ activities, which, as such, would require compliance with the safeguards provided by Article 4 of the Italian Workers’ Charter i.e., signing a union agreement or, failing that, obtaining authorisation from the National or Regional Labour Inspectorate.
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