「学校でなくしたスマホを探したい」…CCTV映像求めると、学校「1分で1万ウォン」=韓国
”I want to find my phone that I lost at school”... When I asked for CCTV footage, the school said, ”10,000 won per minute” = Korea
When a student at an elementary school in Busan lost a smartphone used in class and a parent requested to check the school's CCTV, the school responded with a complaint about the protection of personal information.
It was reported that the fee was 10,000 won (about 1,100 yen) per minute, totaling several million won, due to the amount of work involved. This means that individuals will have to pay a high fee to view the content when they need it.
According to a report by SBS on the 23rd, a student's smartphone went missing on the grounds of an elementary school in Busan on the 16th of this month.
The smartphone of current student A was used as a teaching tool in a class held on the grounds that day, but A noticed that his smartphone was missing after he returned home from school.
A's parents requested the school to view the CCTV footage of the school grounds, and were told that the footage was from just after class time, lasting about three to four hours.
However, the school said it needed to de-identify the students' personal information to protect it, and hired a private company to de-identify them.
They informed us that if we requested processing, we would have to pay about 10,000 won per minute, meaning that it would cost 2.4 million won (about US$2,600) to review four hours of footage.
According to the Personal Information Protection Commission's guidelines for the installation and operation of fixed video information processing equipment in public institutions, when CCTV is viewed, personal video information is blurred to prevent identification of anyone other than the information subject.
Such protective measures must be taken. The costs incurred in this process can be charged to the person requesting the viewing. However, it is necessary to obtain the consent of all people appearing in the footage, and to take measures to protect the rights of the person in question from the investigation or prosecution of a crime.
The school said that the person in charge of managing the CCTV checked some of the footage but was unable to find the missing smartphone.
A's parents ended up reporting the loss of the mobile phone to the police.
2024/10/24 12:08 KST
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