Amazon Fined in France Over Alleged Employee Surveillance
23 January 2024 - 9:59PM
Dow Jones News
By Mauro Orru
France's privacy watchdog fined Amazon.com's local warehouse
management business, saying the company had put in place an
"excessively intrusive" system to keep track of staff
performance.
The country's data-protection regulator, the CNIL, said Tuesday
that it had fined Amazon France Logistique 32 million euros ($34.8
million), alleging the business was collecting employee data from
scanners used to process packages to gauge their productivity and
downtime.
The CNIL said the scanners kept track of periods of inactivity
exceeding 10 minutes and when a package is scanned "too rapidly,"
or in less than 1.25 seconds from the previous item, calling such a
system excessive as it could pressure staff to justify each break
or interruption.
The watchdog added that Amazon hadn't properly informed
employees and external visitors of video surveillance, in breach of
the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation, the EU's
strict data-privacy and security law.
Amazon said it strongly disagrees with the CNIL and that it
reserves the right to appeal, calling the conclusions "factually
incorrect." The online retail giant said use of warehouse
management systems is a common industry practice to guarantee
safety, efficiency and ensure that packages are processed in a
timely fashion.
The CNIL said it made the decision after conducting inspections
following press reports about certain practices at Amazon's
warehouses. The watchdog also said it had received several
complaints from employees.
Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 23, 2024 05:44 ET (10:44 GMT)
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