CNIL (France) - SAN-2024-015: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{DPAdecisionBOX |Jurisdiction=France |DPA-BG-Color= |DPAlogo=LogoFR.png |DPA_Abbrevation=CNIL |DPA_With_Country=CNIL (France) |Case_Number_Name=SAN-2024-015 |ECLI= |Original_Source_Name_1=Legifrance |Original_Source_Link_1=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/cnil/id/CNILTEXT000050324681 |Original_Source_Language_1=French |Original_Source_Language__Code_1=FR |Original_Source_Name_2= |Original_Source_Link_2= |Original_Source_Language_2= |Original_Source_Language__Code_2= |...") |
m (links) |
||
Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
On 15 November 2021, the CNIL carried out an online check of five websites run by the controller and the processor. An on-site inspection was also carried out on 7 and 8 December 2021 at the premises of the two companies. The following details the findings of the investigation: | On 15 November 2021, the CNIL carried out an online check of five websites run by the controller and the processor. An on-site inspection was also carried out on 7 and 8 December 2021 at the premises of the two companies. The following details the findings of the investigation: | ||
1) Data retention period proportionate to the purpose of processing | 1) Data retention period proportionate to the purpose of processing under Article 5(1)(e) GDPR | ||
The controller retained the data of its customers for a period of six years after the end of the commercial relationship. The processor further recorded all telephone conversations with half of the conversations being deleted by the end of the day and the other half being stored for six years. | The controller retained the data of its customers for a period of six years after the end of the commercial relationship. The processor further recorded all telephone conversations with half of the conversations being deleted by the end of the day and the other half being stored for six years. | ||
The controller argued that this is necessary so that it would be able to respond to possible judicial investigations. | The controller argued that this is necessary so that it would be able to respond to possible judicial investigations. | ||
2) Prior consent to the processing of special category data | 2) Prior consent to the processing of special category data under Article 9 GDPR | ||
The controller offers users of its website horoscope.fr to fill in a form intended to issue a free prediction about their romantic compatibility with a person of their choice. Users must enter their sex, date, time and city of birth, as well as their e-mail address, but also the sex and date of birth of their partner. During the remote consultations, a plethora of personal information may be disclosed by the customers. | The controller offers users of its website horoscope.fr to fill in a form intended to issue a free prediction about their romantic compatibility with a person of their choice. Users must enter their sex, date, time and city of birth, as well as their e-mail address, but also the sex and date of birth of their partner. During the remote consultations, a plethora of personal information may be disclosed by the customers. | ||
The controller argued that this sensitive data is not processed but simply recorded. | The controller argued that this sensitive data is not processed but simply recorded. | ||
3) Processing for marketing purposes | 3) Processing for marketing purposes under Article L.34-5 of the French Post and Electronic Communications Code (''Article L.34-5 Code des postes et des communication électroniques'') | ||
The notice included on the contact form did not list the | |||
The notice included on the contact form did not list the controller, nor a list of all other third parties the data is shared with. While users could follow a link which provided some additional information, this link was located much further down on the form. Further, the information included in the link did not mention commercial advertising at all. | |||
During the proceedings the controller changed the format of the contact form to include a very small unintelligible character attached to a word on the form. A click on this character then lead to a footnote which was not visible on the original form listing the controller as the provider of marketing messages. | During the proceedings the controller changed the format of the contact form to include a very small unintelligible character attached to a word on the form. A click on this character then lead to a footnote which was not visible on the original form listing the controller as the provider of marketing messages. | ||
Line 102: | Line 105: | ||
The CNIL therefore concludes a violation of [[Article 9 GDPR|Article 9 GDPR]] as the mere willingness to enter information into a form or share personal information through the chat options does not equate to the fully informed consent to the processing of this sensitive data. | The CNIL therefore concludes a violation of [[Article 9 GDPR|Article 9 GDPR]] as the mere willingness to enter information into a form or share personal information through the chat options does not equate to the fully informed consent to the processing of this sensitive data. | ||
3) Processing for marketing purposes under Article L.34-5 of the Post and Electronic Communications Code (Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques) | 3) Processing for marketing purposes under Article L.34-5 of the Post and Electronic Communications Code (''Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques'') | ||
The CNIL states that the changes to the form do not negate that a breach of the GDPR took place in the past. Further, the improvements made to the form still do not meet the required standard of allowing the data subject to easily access a clear description of the marketing purposes and partners. | The CNIL states that the changes to the form do not negate that a breach of the GDPR took place in the past. Further, the improvements made to the form still do not meet the required standard of allowing the data subject to easily access a clear description of the marketing purposes and partners. | ||
4) Conclusion and setting the fine | 4) Conclusion and setting the fine | ||
The CNIL concluded that the controller had violated [[Article 5 GDPR#1e|Article 5(1)(e) GDPR]], [[ | |||
The CNIL concluded that the controller had violated [[Article 5 GDPR#1e|Article 5(1)(e) GDPR]], [[Article 9 GDPR]] and Article 34-5 of the French domestic provision (''Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques''). With reference to the controller’s annual turnover, a €100,000 fine was set for the breaches of the GDPR through [[Articles 5(1)(e)]] and [[Article 9 GDPR|9 GDPR]] and a €50,000 fine for the breach of Article L.34-5 of the French Post and Electronic Communications Code. | |||
== Comment == | == Comment == |
Revision as of 13:40, 14 October 2024
CNIL - SAN-2024-015 | |
---|---|
Authority: | CNIL (France) |
Jurisdiction: | France |
Relevant Law: | Article 5(1)(e) GDPR Article 9 GDPR Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques |
Type: | Investigation |
Outcome: | Violation Found |
Started: | 15.11.2021 |
Decided: | 26.09.2024 |
Published: | 10.10.2024 |
Fine: | 150,000 EUR |
Parties: | n/a |
National Case Number/Name: | SAN-2024-015 |
European Case Law Identifier: | n/a |
Appeal: | n/a |
Original Language(s): | French |
Original Source: | Legifrance (in FR) |
Initial Contributor: | ao |
A DPA fines a remote clairvoyance services provider €150,000 for failure to obtain prior consent to the processing of sensitive data as well as breaching the principle of storage limitation.
English Summary
Facts
The controller provides remote clairvoyance services via telephone, online chat or text message. On some of its websites, the controller offers personalized chats via telephone carried out by the processor. In order to promote their services, the two companies send marketing messages to existing and prospective customers via e-mail and text. Prospective customers' contact details are obtained through a contact form on either of the two companies’ websites. The controller and the processor up a shared database for their marketing purposes which on the 6 October 2022 included personal data of more than 1.5 million people.
On 15 November 2021, the CNIL carried out an online check of five websites run by the controller and the processor. An on-site inspection was also carried out on 7 and 8 December 2021 at the premises of the two companies. The following details the findings of the investigation:
1) Data retention period proportionate to the purpose of processing under Article 5(1)(e) GDPR
The controller retained the data of its customers for a period of six years after the end of the commercial relationship. The processor further recorded all telephone conversations with half of the conversations being deleted by the end of the day and the other half being stored for six years.
The controller argued that this is necessary so that it would be able to respond to possible judicial investigations.
2) Prior consent to the processing of special category data under Article 9 GDPR
The controller offers users of its website horoscope.fr to fill in a form intended to issue a free prediction about their romantic compatibility with a person of their choice. Users must enter their sex, date, time and city of birth, as well as their e-mail address, but also the sex and date of birth of their partner. During the remote consultations, a plethora of personal information may be disclosed by the customers.
The controller argued that this sensitive data is not processed but simply recorded.
3) Processing for marketing purposes under Article L.34-5 of the French Post and Electronic Communications Code (Article L.34-5 Code des postes et des communication électroniques)
The notice included on the contact form did not list the controller, nor a list of all other third parties the data is shared with. While users could follow a link which provided some additional information, this link was located much further down on the form. Further, the information included in the link did not mention commercial advertising at all. During the proceedings the controller changed the format of the contact form to include a very small unintelligible character attached to a word on the form. A click on this character then lead to a footnote which was not visible on the original form listing the controller as the provider of marketing messages.
The controller argued that it would be impossible to provide data subjects with a comprehensive list of recipients as this would breach contractual confidentiality clauses.
Holding
1) Data retention proportionate to the purpose of processing under Article 5(1)(e) GDPR
The CNIL clarifies that while the controller must comply with judicial requests for data, the controller would not face any criminal sanctions if had deleted data as it was no longer necessary to process it for the controller’s specified purposes. Thus the CNIL did not accept the controller’s argument for warranting the six year storage policy.
As the data is collected for a specific purpose which is the management of the commercial relationship, the CNIL states that as soon as the purpose changes, the controller must take action in differentiating the data. The practice of categorically compiling all customer data into an active database without any differentiation or archiving policy therefore constituted a violation of Article 5(1)(e) GDPR. In relation to the managing of commercial relationships, the CNIL recommended a maximum storage period of three years after the commercial relationship has ended.
2) Prior consent to the processing of special category data under Article 9 GDPR
The CNIL points out that the mere act of recording the conversations, storing some and deleting others at the end of the day falls under the definition of processing under Article 4(2) GDPR, therefore rejecting the controller’s argument. Contrary to the provisions of Article 4(11) GDPR, the CNIL notes that the company does not provide any specific information to the data subjects with regard to the collection and processing of data collected from the form on the website and does not explicitly collect their consent for the processing of such data. Similarly, in the context of “chat” or SMS consultations, no information on the processing of such data is provided or any consent obtained.
The CNIL therefore concludes a violation of Article 9 GDPR as the mere willingness to enter information into a form or share personal information through the chat options does not equate to the fully informed consent to the processing of this sensitive data.
3) Processing for marketing purposes under Article L.34-5 of the Post and Electronic Communications Code (Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques)
The CNIL states that the changes to the form do not negate that a breach of the GDPR took place in the past. Further, the improvements made to the form still do not meet the required standard of allowing the data subject to easily access a clear description of the marketing purposes and partners.
4) Conclusion and setting the fine
The CNIL concluded that the controller had violated Article 5(1)(e) GDPR, Article 9 GDPR and Article 34-5 of the French domestic provision (Article L34-5 Code des postes et des communications électroniques). With reference to the controller’s annual turnover, a €100,000 fine was set for the breaches of the GDPR through Articles 5(1)(e) and 9 GDPR and a €50,000 fine for the breach of Article L.34-5 of the French Post and Electronic Communications Code.
Comment
Share your comments here!
Further Resources
Share blogs or news articles here!
English Machine Translation of the Decision
The decision below is a machine translation of the French original. Please refer to the French original for more details.