In response to the letter "Privacy plan takes an absurd turn"
In response to the letter "Privacy plan takes an absurd turn" published in The Standard on 27 February 2008, the Privacy Commissioner Roderick Woo explained the rationale behind his proposal to the government to consider creating a new offence that anyone obtaining, disclosing, leaking or selling personal data without the consent of the owner is committing an offence:
I am interested in Mr Peter Gordon’s article of 27
February 2008,
“Privacy plan takes an absurd turn”. Mr
Gordon commented on my proposal to the Government to consider creating
a new
offence in order to deter irresponsible behaviour in handling personal
data
online.
First and foremost, I want to stress that my proposal is
not
intended to and should not interfere with the normal and innocuous
browsing
activities of web-users, nor will it interfere with the freedom of the
press.
As I explained earlier in my two press statements (see
http://www.pcpd.org.hk/english/infocentre/press.html), the rationale
behind the
proposal, apart from the deterrence of irresponsible handling of
personal data
online, is to curb (i) the unauthorized access and collection of
customers’
personal data by a staff of a bank or a telecommunications company for
the
purpose of selling them to debt collection agents or third parties for
profits;
and (ii) the use of personal data for personal gains of the collector,
such as
the sale of the data to direct marketing companies or for perpetuating
crime by
theft of identity. In any event, public
views will be widely sought before my proposal goes any further.
Obviously Mr Gordon was also concerned about freedom of
the press
and he worried that “no sporting events could ever be published or
broadcast
because people in the stands could ‘be directly or indirectly
identified’” and
that, “newspapers or television news reports could not use the images
of anyone
at all without the subjects’ explicit permission.”
I wish to allay his fears.
May I explain that for data protection principles under
the Personal
Data (Privacy) Ordinance to engage, there must be, first of all, a
collection
of personal data.
To qualify for a “collection” :-
(a) the
collecting
party must be thereby compiling information about an individual;>
(b) the
individual must
be one whom the collector of information has identified or intends or
seeks to
identify; and
(c) the
identity of the
individual must be an important item of information to the collecting
party.
Journalistic activities and particularly photo-journalism
are not
unduly inhibited by the Ordinance. The
Court of Appeal in the Eastweek Publisher Ltd (28 March 2000) case gave
the
following examples. A business editor
may consider it newsworthy to publish a crowd jostling in a queue for
an
initial public offering of shares in a company or for the purchase of
flats in
a new property development. A features
editor may likewise want a photograph of teenagers smoking cigarettes
to
illustrate a feature article on health concerns and a sports editor may
want to
print a picture of racegoers at Happy Valley to illustrate attendance
in record
numbers. It is not unlikely that some
of the persons identifiable in the photographs may not welcome the
publication
of their pictures.
The Court said that in none of the above cases is the
publisher or
editor in question seeking to collect personal data in relation to any
of the
persons shown in the photographs. The
fact that the photograph, when published, is capable of conveying the
identity
of its subject to a reader who happens to be acquainted with that
person, does
not make the act of taking the photograph an act of data collection if
the
photographer and his principals were acting without knowing or being at
all
interested in ascertaining the identity of the person being
photographed.
A distinction is made where an individual’s photograph is
taken with
a view to its inclusion as part of a dossier being compiled about that
individual as an identified subject, the act of photography would
clearly be an
act of personal data collection. For
example, the portfolio of photographs of particular actors,
entertainers or
fashion models maintained by a theatrical impresario or fashion
modeling agency
would clearly constitute personal data collected in relation to the
individuals
in question. The point to note however
is that there is nothing wrong in collecting such data so long as the
provisions of the Ordinance are observed.
Mr Gordon may also find comfort in a news activity
exemption under
section 61 of the Ordinance. The
exemption applies to the use of personal data when they are disclosed
to a data
user who is engaged in news activity and such disclosure is made by a
person
who has reasonable grounds to believe (and reasonably believes) that
the
publishing or broadcasting of the data is in the public interest.
Mr Gordon also touched on the issue of copyright in the
recent
incident of data leakage, I would just make the point that the
Ordinance is not
directly concerned with copyright. What
it is concerned with is the data subject’s personal data privacy right.
Yours sincerely,
Roderick B Woo
Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data
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