Categories: Insights, Publications · News, Publications

Tag: #dati personali, Licenziamento


23 Jan 2023

European Court rules that employee tracking through company car geolocator is lawful (Norme e Tributi Plus Diritto, 23 January 2023 – Alberto De Luca, Claudia Cerbone)

As only geolocation data referring to kilometres travelled were considered, the interference in the applicant’s privacy was limited and proportional to the intended purpose.

Dismissal by an employer based on the data from the geolocator of an employee’s company car is lawful and the collection and processing of the relevant data does not result in the infringement of the employee’s rights as enshrined in the Human Rights Convention. This was established, in an important precedent on this much debated issue, in the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights No 26968/1616 issued at the conclusion of Gramaxo v. Portugal. This is the first time the European Court has ruled on a case of surveillance at work through a geolocation system and laid down the criteria for the correct balance between the worker’s right to respect for his or her private life and the employer’s rights in terms of monitoring the proper use of capital assets.

The case on which the Court was asked to rule related to the dismissal of a medical representative of a Portuguese pharmaceutical company who, because of travel associated with his work, had been assigned a company car for mixed work and private use.

At a later date the company had installed a global positioning satellite system (GPS) on all company vehicles.

Following a comparison of the data collected through the installed systems, it was found that the employee in question had falsified the monitoring records making it look like the vehicle had been used more for work than it actually had and lowering its private use to reduce the cost to himself.

The full version can be accessed at Norme e Tributi Plus Law of Il Sole 24 Ore.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

8 Jun 2026

The employee’s systematic lateness may justify dismissal for just cause (Camera di Commercio Francese in Italia – Vittorio De Luca, Silvia Zulato)

With Order No. 13722 of 11 May 2026, the Labour Section of the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation (Corte di Cassazione) held that an employee’s repeated lateness, resulting…

4 Jun 2026

Webinar “Pay Transparency Has Arrived: the revolution in compensation between new obligations for companies and new rights for workers” – HR Virtual Breakfast

During our webinar “Pay Transparency Has Arrived: the Revolution in Compensation Between New Obligations for Companies and New Rights for Workers”, the speakers Claudia Cerbone, Managing Associate, and…

29 May 2026

Notification of dismissal: ordinary e-mail is sufficient if the employee has knowledge of it

With the recent order no. 13731 of May 11, 2026, the Court of Cassation ruled on the validity and effectiveness of a dismissal notification sent via e-mail. The…

29 May 2026

Did you know that… the so-called “1 May Decree” introduces new measures concerning fair pay, employment incentives, and work performed through digital platforms? 

The Official Gazette has published Decree-Law No. 62 of 30 April 2026, entitled “Urgent Provisions on Fair Pay, Employment Incentives and the Fight Against Digital Labour Exploitation”, which…

29 May 2026

Video-surveillance and data protection: the Italian Data Protection Authority reaffirms transparency obligations

With Decision No. 167/2026 of 12 March 2026, the Italian Data Protection Authority (“Garante per la protezione dei dati personali”) once again addressed the issue of video surveillance,…

20 May 2026

Webinar “May 1st Decree: Key Updates and what’s New” –  HR Coffee with De Luca & Partners

On the occasion of our webinar “An HR Coffee with De Luca Partners,” the speakers Silvia Zulato, Senior Associate, and Alessandro Riccardo Polli from the Labour Consulting Division…