SITUATION
8:
ASKING YOU TO TRANSMIT YOUR ID CARD COPY

When you send a copy of your ID card
by post, put the ID card copy in an envelope marked "confidential"
|
Under the Code, organisations
are required to treat ID card copies as confidential documents.
If they request that an ID card copy be transmitted to them,
e.g. by post or fax, they are also required to take all reasonably
practicable steps to ensure that the copy will be received
only by the intended recipient and be kept in a secure manner.
Action
you can take: When you send a copy of your ID card to an organisation by
post, put the copy in a sealed envelope marked "Confidential" for the attention
of the individual or the organisational unit that is responsible for the matter
concerned.
Action you can take:
If you are asked to send a copy of your ID card by fax or
other electronic means, you may consider asking about the
measures taken to ensure the security of the copy once it
has been transmitted. Possible safeguards include fax "padlocks",
"confidential mail boxes", password control and having a dedicated
fax in a secure area for receiving confidential documents.
An organisation may
be contravening the Code if it is unable to give you
a reasonable answer about its security measures.
SITUATION
9:
DISPLAYING YOUR NAME WITH YOUR ID CARD NUMBER

Organisations
should not publicly display your name together with your
ID card no. |
Organisations should
not publicly display your name together with your ID card
no. Unless otherwise required or permitted by law, organisations
should ensure that an ID card number and the name of the holder
are not displayed together publicly. They should also ensure
they are not made visible or otherwise accessible together
except to persons who need to carry out activities related
to permitted uses of the ID card number.
One common situation
in which a breach of the above requirement may occur is the
publication of notices including individuals' names and ID
card numbers in a newspaper, e.g. notices carrying the result
of a lucky draw or a competition. Another is the display of
notices containing individuals' names and ID card numbers
on a notice board in places such as a school, an office, or
the lobby of a residential building. A further one is the
inadvertent disclosure of the names and ID card numbers of
visitors' to subsequent visitors to a building in a visitors'
log-book.
Action you can take:
Where you encounter a situation such as those described
above, ask the organisation to stop or else to justify the
display or disclosure.
An organisation may
be contravening the Code if it cannot provide a good
justification.
SITUATION
10:
ISSUING YOU A CARD BEARING YOUR ID CARD NUMBER

Organisations
should not issue to you a card bearing your ID card no.
|
Under the Code, an
organisation should not issue to an individual a card (not
being the Hong Kong ID card or driving licence) bearing in
a legible form the ID card number of that individual.
This prohibition applies
even if the card bears an altered form of the ID card number
from which the ID card number may be deduced. It also applies
even if the card issued is not required to be worn or publicly
shown. This particular requirement of the Code takes effect
on 19 December 1998, which is 6 months later than the other
requirements.
All staff, student,
medical and other cards issued by organisations such as employers,
schools, universities and insurance companies are subject
to this requirement.
Action you can take:
If an organisation has issued, or proposes to issue, a card
to you bearing your ID card number, point out to the
issuing body that this is contrary to the Code.
ENQUIRIES
AND COMPLAINTS

If
you have any questions, you are welcome to approach the
PCPD for guidance. |
If you think an organisation's
practices in relation to ID card numbers or copies do not
comply with the requirements of the Code, you should, in the
first instance, query this with the organisation concerned
in the manner suggested above. If you do not get a reasonable
answer, you can approach the Office of the Privacy Commissioner
for Personal Data (PCPD) for further guidance on the issue
or to make a complaint, as appropriate. The PCPD hotline is
2827 2827.
Back
to top


