AGG-§7-GDPR-Art9 legal data_error ai_generated partial

AI tells a German employer that storing applicant photos and ethnic origin data in HR files is required for diversity tracking under AGG

ID: legal/germany-antidiscrimination-employment-records

Also available as: JSON · Markdown · 中文
78%Fix Rate
85%Confidence
1Evidence
2024-03-15First Seen

Version Compatibility

VersionStatusIntroducedDeprecatedNotes
AGG 2006 active
GDPR 2018 active
BDSG-neu 2019 active

Root Cause

Germany's General Equal Treatment Act (AGG) prohibits processing of racial/ethnic origin data without explicit consent or legal basis; storing photos in HR files creates a presumption of discrimination and violates GDPR Article 9.

generic

中文

德国《平等待遇法》(AGG)禁止在未经明确同意或缺乏法律依据的情况下处理种族/民族出身数据;在人事档案中存储照片会引发歧视推定,并违反GDPR第9条。

Official Documentation

https://www.antidiskriminierungsstelle.de/SharedDocs/Downloads/DE/publikationen/AGG/agg-gleichbehandlungsgesetz.pdf

Workarounds

  1. 90% success Remove photo from application process entirely; use a blind application system where names, photos, and ethnic data are hidden from hiring managers until after initial screening.
    Remove photo from application process entirely; use a blind application system where names, photos, and ethnic data are hidden from hiring managers until after initial screening.
  2. 88% success If diversity monitoring is needed, collect ethnic origin data via a separate anonymized survey form that is never linked to individual applicant records, and aggregate results only.
    If diversity monitoring is needed, collect ethnic origin data via a separate anonymized survey form that is never linked to individual applicant records, and aggregate results only.
  3. 82% success Store photos only after hiring, with explicit consent and a legitimate purpose (e.g., security badge), and ensure they are not used for diversity analysis.
    Store photos only after hiring, with explicit consent and a legitimate purpose (e.g., security badge), and ensure they are not used for diversity analysis.

中文步骤

  1. Remove photo from application process entirely; use a blind application system where names, photos, and ethnic data are hidden from hiring managers until after initial screening.
  2. If diversity monitoring is needed, collect ethnic origin data via a separate anonymized survey form that is never linked to individual applicant records, and aggregate results only.
  3. Store photos only after hiring, with explicit consent and a legitimate purpose (e.g., security badge), and ensure they are not used for diversity analysis.

Dead Ends

Common approaches that don't work:

  1. 85% fail

    Consent is not freely given in an employment context per GDPR Art 7(4); photos still create a presumption of discrimination under AGG §22.

  2. 72% fail

    Blurring does not remove the data category; ethnic origin remains special category data requiring Art 9 justification.

  3. 65% fail

    Works council agreements cannot override GDPR Article 9 prohibitions; only a collective bargaining agreement with explicit legal basis may apply.