My account was ‘assigned’ by the OC to a DCA a few years ago. It was then ‘reassigned’ (allegedly) by the OC to a new DCA which operated from the same address as the old one. For now the DCA in question will remain nameless. I haven’t paid them anything as I had previously queried the authenticity of the notice of assignment as I believed it was not genuine and the person who had allegedly signed the notices did not infact work for the OC at the time at the time the second one was allegedly signed by them. I suspected that it was created by the DCA and asked for the name of the staff member who had created the notice on their systems and they responded by saying that they ask external third parties to print customer correspondence.
About a year ago I sent a DSAR to them.
They sent a very large bundle of my personal data in an ordinary paper envelope by royal mail. no responsible, sane, level headed person would have done that. Needless to say the envelope split open whilst in transit as the envelope was too flimsy and could not support the weight of the documents. Royal mail had to repack the envelope in a clear ‘plastic’ sleeve and posted it to me. When I inspected the documents it was obvious that they were not in order leading me to believe that someone in the royal mail had had unauthorised access to my data. I complained to the DCA and sent them photos of the split envelope and advised them that as a breach of the GDPR had occurred they are to report it within three days to the ICO and the OC they are also to advise the ICO that they use third parties to print customer correspondence.
They finally sent me a final response in which they state that they are not at fault, no breach of the GDPR has occurred and that it is royal mail's fault because the plastic sleeve had the following words printed on it ‘our sincere apologies we are very sorry that this item has reached you in this condition’.
The letter also mentions that they are entitled to use external parties to print letters to customers!!
Do you guys believe I have a valid case to report to the ICO and also claim compensation based on the following:
About a year ago I sent a DSAR to them.
They sent a very large bundle of my personal data in an ordinary paper envelope by royal mail. no responsible, sane, level headed person would have done that. Needless to say the envelope split open whilst in transit as the envelope was too flimsy and could not support the weight of the documents. Royal mail had to repack the envelope in a clear ‘plastic’ sleeve and posted it to me. When I inspected the documents it was obvious that they were not in order leading me to believe that someone in the royal mail had had unauthorised access to my data. I complained to the DCA and sent them photos of the split envelope and advised them that as a breach of the GDPR had occurred they are to report it within three days to the ICO and the OC they are also to advise the ICO that they use third parties to print customer correspondence.
They finally sent me a final response in which they state that they are not at fault, no breach of the GDPR has occurred and that it is royal mail's fault because the plastic sleeve had the following words printed on it ‘our sincere apologies we are very sorry that this item has reached you in this condition’.
The letter also mentions that they are entitled to use external parties to print letters to customers!!
Do you guys believe I have a valid case to report to the ICO and also claim compensation based on the following:
- Deed of novation was not sent to me, neither was I asked whether the account could be assigned to the new DCA. I was sent a notice of assignment allegedly from the OC, which I know is not genuine.
- The new DCA has been processing my data without my consent and as the data controller they are responsible for ensuring that my data is always secure and ensure that unauthorised persons do not gain access to it, this has happened with the envelope coming apart.
- They confirmed that they use external third parties to print customer correspondence. They haven’t provided any details of who these third parties are and whether or not they are registered with the ICO.
Comment