Tuesday 17 January 2017

Village Hotels, Subject Access Request

So following my complaint about spamming, Village Hotels responded to my Subject Access Request under the Data Protection Act.  In short, the DPA deems personal data to be owned by the person whome it regards.  A Subject Access Request allows the owner of some personal data to request information about it from a company that is holding it.

In this case I asked Village Hotels to:
  1. Confirm whether they are registered as a data controller under the Data Protection Act 1998.
  2. Provide a copy of all data they hold which relates to me.
  3. Confirm to me in writing where they obtained the data from and on what terms.
  4. Provide me with a complete list of companies, individuals, etc, that they have shared my data with and on what terms.
  5. Explain when and how they believe I gave them informed consent to send marketing emails.
They've sent some fairly extensive information, which is good, and confirmed that they are registered.

It seems that they have only my name and email address, which they thought had previously been deleted from their systems.

Notably they haven't said why they think they had consent, or where they got my data.

They enclosed an email chain, which is interesting: it includes a comment from someone at DA Group, which says
Also agree that you need to be careful emailing contacts that have had no interaction with your emails for 18 months - may be better to focus on a re-engagement campaign to these contacts rather than actively marketing to them
DA Group appear to be a marketing company, and the above comment seems a bit questionable.  The Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003 don't allow unsolicited emails to be sent to anyone who hasn't given the sender informed consent.  So if they can't demonstrate that such consent has been received, they shouldn't be sending any unsolicited emails, including a "re-engagement campaign".

(Also, yes the email they sent had a confidentiality statement on the bottom, no that isn't a contract I have agreed to, so I am ignoring it.)

Friday 13 January 2017

Village Hotels, yet again


Despite never being a customer of De Vere Venes, they sent me hundreds of spam emails, ignored my requests to stop and I eventually complained to the Information Commissioner's Office.  De Vere were instructed to stop spamming me and they admitted they had no idea where they got my details from.  Since the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003 require the sender of unsolicited emails to have obtained informed consent directly from the recipient, they're on pretty dodgy ground if they don't have any records to demonstrate that they acquired that consent.  Certainly, they won't be able to demonstrate consent with "we don't know where we got your details."

De Vere Venues then sold their brand and my details to VUR Village Hotels & Leisure.  VUR Village Hotels & Leisure used those details to start sending me spam again.  This is certainly unlawful - consent is non-transferable, so VUR Village Hotels & Leisure are in breach of the regulations by sending unsolicited emails to anyone in the database that De Vere gave them.  Furthermore, since the ICO had already told De Vere to suppress my details, actually using them was completely idiotic.  I'm also not terribly happy that De Vere sold off my data.

Much like De Vere, Village Hotels also ignored the legal notices I sent to them, so the next step was to take court action.  This is pretty easy to do - you just figure out how much the unsolicited email cost you, make sure you can justify it and submit a claim on moneyclaim.gov.  It costs £25 to file with the court.  They coughed up £225 (including the £25 filing fee) and stated that my details were bought from De Vere and that all other information had been removed during the transfer.  They didn't comment on the unlawful use of email addresses which they had bought from De Vere, beyond stating that their spam emails carry an "unsubscribe" link (which the regulations do not consider an acceptable alternative to acquiring informed consent before sending the emails).

5 days after they confirmed that they had suppressed my email address, I received another spam email.  Their defence was that it takes 3-5 days to suppress an email.  This isn't really acceptable - there's no reason that updating a database should take more than a few minutes, and the court papers were issued 10 days previous so sensibly they would have suppressed my address immediately.  In any case, as no further spams arrived I didn't press the point.

At the end of last year, it appears that VUR Village Hotels & Leisure moved to a different spam sending platform.  It looks like they hadn't actually removed my details from their database, merely flagged them as not to be used, and I guess they didn't bother to transfer that flag over to the new platform.  I started receiving more spam.  So off went another Notice Before Action.  An hour later I got an automated message from their spam sending platform (dotmailer.com) saying I'd been unsubscribed.  And 9 days later an email notifying me that they were paying another £200 compensation - I didn't even need to file with the court.

Of course, the concern is that not only do they clearly have no regard for the regulations, which prevent them from just buying a database of email addresses and spamming them, they also don't seem to have the data handling abilities required to ensure that people who unsubscribe actually remain unsubscribed.  I'd certainly recommend that any other recipients of spam from VUR Village Hotels & Leisure (or in fact, any registered UK company who is spamming your personal email address) serves them with a legal notice demanding compensation for their negligence.