Article 88
Processing in the context of employment
There is no recital in the Directive related to article 88.
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Regulation
Art. 88 1. Member States may, by law or by collective agreements, provide for more specific rules to ensure the protection of the rights and freedoms in respect of the processing of employees' personal data in the employment context, in particular for the purposes of the recruitment, the performance of the contract of employment, including discharge of obligations laid down by law or by collective agreements, management, planning and organisation of work, equality and diversity in the workplace, health and safety at work, protection of employer's or customer's property and for the purposes of the exercise and enjoyment, on an individual or collective basis, of rights and benefits related to employment, and for the purpose of the termination of the employment relationship. 2. Those rules shall include suitable and specific measures to safeguard the data subject's human dignity, legitimate interests and fundamental rights, with particular regard to the transparency of processing, the transfer of personal data within a group of undertakings, or a group of enterprises engaged in a joint economic activity and monitoring systems at the work place. 3. Each Member State shall notify to the Commission those provisions of its law which it adopts pursuant to paragraph 1, by 25 May 2018 and, without delay, any subsequent amendment affecting them. |
Directive
No specific provision |
Lithuania
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Czechia
Act No. 262/2006 Coll., the Labor Code, as amended Art. 30 (…) (2) In connection with pre-employment proceedings, an employer may request from a job applicant or other individuals only those data that are directly related to the conclusion of an employment contract. Art. 316 (1) Employees may not, without the employer’s consent, use the employer’s manufacturing and work equipment—including computer equipment and telecommunications devices—for their personal use. The employer is entitled to monitor compliance with the prohibition set forth in the first sentence in a reasonable manner. (2) The employer may not, without a compelling reason based on the special nature of the employer’s business, infringe upon an employee’s privacy in the workplace or in the employer’s common areas by subjecting the employee to open or covert surveillance, eavesdropping on or recording the employee’s telephone calls, monitoring the employee’s email, or inspecting mail addressed to the employee. (3) If the employer has a serious reason based on the specific nature of the employer’s business that justifies the implementation of monitoring mechanisms under paragraph 2, the employer is required to directly inform the employee of the scope of the monitoring and the methods by which it is conducted. (4) The employer may not require an employee to provide information that is not directly related to the performance of work and to the basic employment relationship specified in Article 3. In particular, the employer may not require information regarding (a) pregnancy, (b) family and financial circumstances, (c) sexual orientation, (d) origin, (e) membership in a trade union, (f) membership in political parties or movements, (g) affiliation with a church or religious community, (h) criminal record; except for subparagraphs (c), (d), (e), (f), and (g), this shall not apply if there is an objective reason based on the nature of the work to be performed and if such a requirement is reasonable, or in cases where this is provided for by this Act or a special legal regulation. The employer may not obtain such information through third parties. |
