ANSPDCP (Romania) - Raiffeisen Bank SA

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Revision as of 09:24, 29 November 2022 by Jg (talk | contribs) (→‎Holding: Elaborated more on the holding and added some comments)
ANSPDCP - Raiffeisen Bank SA
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Authority: ANSPDCP (Romania)
Jurisdiction: Romania
Relevant Law: Article 25(1) GDPR
Article 32(1) GDPR
Article 32(2) GDPR
Article 32(4) GDPR
Type: Investigation
Outcome: Violation Found
Started:
Decided:
Published: 16.11.2022
Fine: 28,000 EUR
Parties: Raiffeisen Bank SA
National Case Number/Name: Raiffeisen Bank SA
European Case Law Identifier: n/a
Appeal: Unknown
Original Language(s): Romanian
Original Source: ANSPDCP (in RO)
Initial Contributor: Daniela Duta

The Romanian DPA fined Raiffeisen Bank SA €28,000 for a number of data breaches, following 17 different notifications.

English Summary

Facts

The DPA received 17 notifications of data breaches regarding Raiffeisen Bank SA (the controller). The notifications were (for the most part) done by the controller itself and affected its customers (the data subjects). Therefore, the DPA started an investigation into the controller. During the investigation, the DPA found that the controller used the systems managed by the Credit Bureau S.A., the National Tax Administration Agency (ANAF) and its own IT systems to simulate credit decisions ("pre-scoring") for an external credit broker.

Two notifications were about pre-scoring operations carried out for (potential) customers, concerning at least 169 data subjects. The DPA found that the controller used the Credit Bureau System without the necessary signature from the data subjects to access their data in the respective system.

The controller further notified the DPA about a data breach that resulted in the context of loans to individual data subjects with the help of an external company, acting as a processor. Apparently, some data subjects were approved for loans without them having requested them and without having signed any relevant documents regarding these loans.

In addition, four data breaches happened in the context of email communications. The cause for every one of these data breaches was that the controller entered a wrong e-mail address. In one case, as a result of two data subjects submitting similar complaints, the controller sent documents containing personal data belonging to one data subject to the other.

Another incident concerned a situation involving suspected internal credit fraud. To investigate the suspected fraud, the controller carried out specific operations to grant a loan to a data subject without the presence of the data subject. The controller applied for credit facilities, completed and signed the documentation related to the credit facility. To update the data subjects' data in its application, the controller changed the data subjects' phone number with a phone number of one of its employees and entered a fictitious email address. A similar data breach took place when the controller granted three credit facilities (Flexicredit, Flexicredit refinancing and Purchasing Card) in the name of a data subject without the latter having actually requested these.

Last, a data breach consisted of the unauthorised disclosure of personal data of some data subjects from their Smart Mobile account (the mobile banking service provided by the controller) to other customers of the controller.

Holding

The DPA held that the controller did not take measures to ensure that any natural person acting under its authority and having access to personal data did not process them unless requested to do so by the controller. The DPA stated that this led to unauthorised access to the personal data of the controller's customers (e.g. name, surname, home address, nationality, image of the person, personal number code, identity card number and serial number, email, phone number, data from the Credit Bureau System, data from the record system managed by ANAF, data from the Smart Mobile account) and unauthorised disclosure of this data by the controller.

The DPA underlined that, according to the principle of integrity and confidentiality laid down in Article 5(1)(f) GDPR, the controller had the obligation to process personal data in a way that ensured their adequate security. This included protection against unauthorised or unlawful processing and against accidental loss, destruction or accidental damage, by taking appropriate technical or organisational measures.

The DPA sanctioned the controller with two warnings and three fines, totalling to €28,000. This included one fine amounting to €3,000, one amounting to €20,000, and two warnings for violating Article 32(4) jo Article 32(1) and (2) GDPR (security of processing). In addition, a fine of €5,000 for violating Article 25(1) GDPR (data protection by design and default).

Comment

The Romanian DPA only publishes press releases, therefore no additional information was available on the decision. This press release was surprisingly long and more detailed than usual. However, it was unclear from the press release which data breaches lead to what sanctions. The DPA published another press release in the same week, where it sanctioned another large bank, ING, with a high fine. Both decisions include the same reference to Article 5(1)(f) GDPR. You can find the GDPRhub summary on that decision here.

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English Machine Translation of the Decision

The decision below is a machine translation of the Romanian original. Please refer to the Romanian original for more details.

16.11.2022

Sanctions for GDPR violations



In September 2022, the National Supervisory Authority completed an investigation at the operator Raiffeisen Bank SA and found multiple violations of the provisions of the General Data Protection Regulation.

The operator was penalized with two warnings and three fines totaling 138,572 lei (the equivalent of 28,000 EURO), as follows:

1. Fine in the amount of 98,980.00 RON, the equivalent of 20,000 EURO for the violation of art. 32 para. (4) in conjunction with art. 32 para. (1) and para. (2) from GDPR;

2. Warning for violating the provisions of art. 32 para. (1) and art. 32 para. (2) from GDPR;

3. Fine in the amount of 14,847.00 RON, the equivalent of 3000 EURO, for the violation of art. 32 para. (4) in conjunction with art. 32 para. (1) and para. (2) from GDPR;

4. Fine in the amount of 24,745.00 RON, the equivalent of 5000 EURO, for the violation of art. 25 para. (1) of the GDPR;

5. Warning for violation of the provisions of art. 32 para. (4) in conjunction with art. 32 para. (1) and para. (2) of the GDPR.

The investigation was started as a result of the transmission by the operator Raiffeisen Bank SA of a number of 17 notifications regarding the occurrence of personal data security violations, according to the provisions of the General Data Protection Regulation.

Thus, during the investigation, the following were mainly found:

Queries were made by Raiffeisen Bank S.A. in the records system managed by Biroul de Credit S.A., respectively in that managed by the National Agency for Fiscal Administration (ANAF), and the IT systems of the operator Raiffeisen Bank S.A. were also used. to simulate credit decisions ("prescoring") for an external credit broker.

In two situations, prescoring operations were carried out for customers or potential customers, but the query in the Credit Bureau System was carried out without the documentation related to the query being signed by the respective applicants. It was found that the incidents notified to the National Supervisory Authority concerned a number of at least 169 natural persons.

The operator of Raiffeisen Bank SA notified the Authority of an incident related to the granting of loans to some clients, natural persons, through an entity having the capacity of authorized person of the operator. The basis of the notification was information according to which customers had been approved for loans for personal needs without them having requested them and without having signed the related documents.

Therefore, it was noted that Raiffeisen Bank S.A. did not take measures to ensure that any natural person who acts under the authority of the operator and has access to personal data only processes them at the request of the operator and did not implement adequate technical and organizational measures to ensure a level of security corresponding to the risk of processing . This led to unauthorized access and/or unauthorized disclosure of personal data transmitted, stored or processed through the IT applications used by Raiffeisen Bank S.A. in lending activity.

The operator notified an incident regarding the violation of data security, which consisted in the fact that, during the process of updating the data of a client, a wrong e-mail address was entered into the system and a document with multiple data was sent to another natural person personal data belonging to the bank's client.

Another incident consisted in the fact that the Raiffeisen Bank SA operator sent confidential data via e-mail to a person other than the person concerned.

Another notification of an incident produced at the level of the operator concerned the fact that a document entitled "Form for defining personal data" was sent to an erroneous e-mail address of another natural person and which contained numerous personal data of a customer of the bank.

A similar incident occurred as a result of the fact that two clients of the operator submitted similar complaints, and when preparing the response e-mail to the first client's complaint, the operator attached documents with personal data belonging to the other client to the e-mail sent to him. The cause of the wrong transmission of the documents was represented by the similarity between the typology of notifications and the successive time of sending the response.

Another incident regarding data security violations, notified by the operator, looked at a situation involving suspicions of internal credit fraud and consisted of:

a) carrying out specific operations for granting a loan for a natural person client, without the presence of the applicant at the agency's headquarters.

b) applying for Credit Card credit facilities, completing and signing the documentation related to the credit card facility, requesting credit facilities for personal needs credit, completing and signing the documentation related to the personal needs credit facility, updating the data of the concerned persons in the Bank's application by changing the telephone number of the concerned persons with the telephone number of the bank employee and by entering a fictitious email address.

A similar incident, notified by the operator and investigated by the National Supervisory Authority, consisted in the processing of data by the operator in connection with the granting of three credit facilities (Flexicredit, Flexicredit refinancing respectively Shopping Card), on behalf of a natural person, client of the bank, but without actually requesting those loans.

Another violation of the security of personal data, notified by the banking operator, consisted in the unauthorized disclosure of the personal data of some customers from their Smart Mobile account (the mobile banking service provided by Raiffeisen Bank) to other customers of the operator.

In the context of the above, during the investigation it was found that the operator Raiffeisen Bank S.A. has not taken measures to ensure that any natural person acting under its authority and having access to personal data does not process it except at the operator's request. This led to unauthorized access to the personal data of Raiffeisen Bank S.A. customers (for example, name, surname, home address, citizenship, nationality, person's image, personal numerical code, ID card number and series, email, no . telephone, data from the Credit Bureau System, data from the record system managed by ANAF, data from the Smart Mobile account) and upon the unauthorized disclosure of these data by the operator.

We emphasize that, according to art. 5 para. (1) lit. f) from GDPR, Raiffeisen Bank S.A. had the obligation to process personal data in a way that ensures their adequate security, including protection against unauthorized or illegal processing and against accidental loss, destruction or damage, by taking appropriate technical or organizational measures ("integrity and confidentiality").



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