(AAB Appeal No. 12 of 2021)
No cogent evidence indicating the company had disclosed any of the appellant’s personal data to her colleagues —remedial action taken — further investigation could not reasonably bring about a more satisfactory result— discretion not to further investigate the complaint duly exercised
Coram:
Ms Elaine LIU Yuk-ling, JP (Deputy Chairman )
Mr MAK Kwong-fai (Member)
Sr WU Kam-fai (Member)
Date of Decision: 24 March 2022
The Complaint
The Appellant learned that two of her colleagues had talked about her age and years of working experience during a conversation, which was recorded by a voice recorder placed by the Appellant at her workplace. In the recorded conversation, one of the colleagues claimed that he learned about the information from the deputy manager of the human resources department of the company. The Appellant alleged that the company, as an employer, had breached DPP3 and/or DPP4 of the Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance (“PDPO”) by disclosing her age and years of work experience to other employee(s) without her consent and she therefore lodged a complaint to the Privacy Commissioner.
The Privacy Commissioner’s Decision
Upon the Privacy Commissioner’s preliminary enquiry, no evidence was found to substantiate the Appellant’s allegation that the company had disclosed her personal data to her colleagues. Given that the company had taken measures to enhance personal data privacy protection, the Privacy Commissioner exercised discretion under s. 39(2)(d) of the PDPO not to further investigate the matter. Dissatisfied with the Privacy Commissioner’s decision, the Appellant lodged an appeal to the AAB.
The Appeal
The AAB confirmed the Commissioner’s decision and dismissed the appeal on the following grounds:-
The AAB’s Decision
The appeal was dismissed.
(Uploaded in March 2024)