As I may have mentioned before, we've installed facial recognition software at work. Instead of logging in/out of the building, you show your face to the screen, push a button and it records your presence. Its comparing to a camera picture taken previously. I've checked today, and the whole system does not fall foul of GDPR as the images aren't held by the company (incidentally, we're shit-hot on the implications and actions of GDPR).
So, what I'm suggesting is that these camera/face recognition systems are GDPR-compliant (presumably as images not stored by the club themselves), and that despite some IT foul-ups many years ago, it's entirely possible that City now have processes and procedures that meet current laws. Unless of course, you think the club is so stupid that they never learn from anything that happens....
So, what I'm suggesting is that these camera/face recognition systems are GDPR-compliant (presumably as images not stored by the club themselves), and that despite some IT foul-ups many years ago, it's entirely possible that City now have processes and procedures that meet current laws. Unless of course, you think the club is so stupid that they never learn from anything that happens....
