SPEC ENTERTAINMENT B.V. – Court Ruling (Netherlands, 2020)

Court Ruling
DPA RbMidden-Nederland9 January 2020Netherlands
final
Court Ruling

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

A Dutch court ruled that a TV show could use a woman's voice without her consent because it was part of artistic expression. The court found that her voice was personal data but said the use was lawful under GDPR's artistic expression rules. This case highlights how artistic projects might be allowed to use personal data without needing to delete it upon request.

What happened

SPEC ENTERTAINMENT used a woman's voice in a theater show without her consent, but the court found it lawful due to artistic expression.

Who was affected

The woman whose voice was used in a theater show after being recorded for a TV program about a robbery she experienced.

What the authority found

The court decided that the woman's voice was personal data, but its use was lawful under GDPR because it was part of artistic expression.

Why this matters

This ruling shows that artistic projects can sometimes use personal data without needing consent, as long as it's for artistic expression. Website operators and content creators should consider how artistic expression might affect their data use practices.

GDPR Articles Cited

Art. 17 GDPR
Art. 4(1) GDPR
Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR
Art. 85 GDPR
Art. 4(14) GDPR

National Law Articles

Article 43(2) GDPR Implementation Act
Article 8 ECHR
Decision AuthorityRb. Midden-Nederland
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

The plaintiff was victim of a robbery in her flower shop. Afterwards, she cooperated with a TV program to talk about the robbery. The reconstruction of the scene was shot with the plaintiff’s fragment of voice. The TV program had been included at a later stage in a theatre show which was aimed to be broadcasted on TV. The plaintiff filled a complaint against the company using her voice in the theatre show. The plaintiff argued inter alia that her voice had been processed without any legal basis, and that the controller violated Article 6 GDPR. The Court had to assess whether a person’s fragment of voice constitutes personal data or anonymous data, whether the processing was lawful and whether the fragment of voice could be deleted. The Court found that anonymous data is data that cannot be traced back to an identified or identifiable person. In the present case, the fragment of voice could lead to the plaintiff’s identification without disproportionate efforts. The Court considered that the information gathered here was so unique that it could only relate to one person. It further found that voice data constitutes biometric data within the meaning of Article 4(14) GDPR. Regarding the lawfulness of the processing, the Court considered that the use of the voice in the context of an artistic form of expression falls within the scope of Article 6(1)(f) GDPR. Also, it stressed that the processing of the personal data for an artistic form of expression does not allow the exercise of the right of erasure under Article 17 GDPR pursuant to Article 85 GDPR and a specific provision in Article 43(2) of the Dutch Data Protection Act that makes Article 17 GDPR inapplicable in cases of artistic expression. Thus, the Court found that the processing of the personal data was lawful and rejected the complaint.

Outcome

Court Ruling

A ruling by a national court on a data-protection matter.

Related Cases (0)

No other cases found for SPEC ENTERTAINMENT B.V. in NL

This is the only recorded case for this entity in this jurisdiction.

Details

Ruling Date

9 January 2020

Authority

DPA RbMidden-Nederland

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
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Cite as: Cookie Fines. SPEC ENTERTAINMENT B.V. - Netherlands (2020). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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