With a decision of 10 November 2022, the Italian Data Protection Authority (l’Autorità Garante per la protezione dei dati personali, the ‘Authority’) imposed a fine of EUR 20,000 on an Italian company for monitoring employee attendance by reading fingerprints. The Authority reiterated that ‘the processing of biometric data in the workplace is allowed only if necessary to fulfil obligations and exercise the employer’s rights provided for by a legal provision and with appropriate safeguards’.
The case arose following a report made to the Authority by a trade union organisation that complained about the introduction by the company, the employer, of a stamping system that used a biometric terminal to monitor access and attendance of employees and collaborators within its facilities. The union also challenged the fact that the system had been introduced even though the company had been asked to adopt ‘less invasive means’ that did not involve the processing of biometric data of the data subjects.
The company defended itself by stating that the system adopted was intended to facilitate the registration of entry and exit times for data subjects and represented a ‘more streamlined and faster’ tool than the one previously used, which recorded attendance through a personal identification badge.
After carrying out its preliminary investigation, the Authority held, among other things, that the processing of biometric personal data carried out by the company was unlawful for (i) having carried out processing in the absence of an appropriate lawful basis: the Authority, in fact, reaffirmed that the processing of biometric data in the workplace is allowed only if it is provided for by a national or European law; (ii) not having provided the data subjects with adequate information, thus infringing the fundamental principles on the subject such as those of lawfulness, fairness and transparency; (iii) not having updated the Record of Processing Activities which, in the version presented to the Authority, did not record any processing of employee biometric data, thus also infringing the principle of accountability; (iv) having processed a category of special data for the sole purpose of simplifying employment relationship management activities.
For all these reasons, therefore, the Authority sanctioned the company, ordering it not only to pay the above-mentioned administrative fine for the above-mentioned infringements but also ordering the publication of the decision on its institutional website.
In conclusion, while in the work context monitoring employees’ attendance is necessary to verify compliance with working hours as well as for the employer to fulfil specific obligations and exercise specific rights, for the processing of biometric data of employees to be lawful, it must be based on a legislative provision and cannot be based on the collection of the data subjects’ consent ‘in the light of the asymmetry between the respective parties to the employment relationship and the resulting, if any, need to ascertain from time to time and in concrete terms the effective freedom of expression of will of the employee’.
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