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Italy watchdog bans Amazon logistics unit from using staff personal data

February 24, 2026 12:37 PM EST

Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of Amazon logo in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

By Elvira Pollina

MILAN, ‌Feb 24 (Reuters) - Italy's ​privacy ​watchdog on Tuesday ordered a local unit of e-commerce giant Amazon to stop using the ‌personal information of more than 1,800 employees at ⁠a warehouse north-east of Rome.

The unit, Amazon Italia Logistica, must also ‌stop processing any data ‌collected through four video-surveillance cameras installed near bathrooms and break areas of the Passo Corese facility, the ​authority said in a statement.

"We are examining with the utmost attention the measure issued by the Italian ⁠Data Protection Authority," Amazon said.

"The protection of personal data, particularly that of our ​employees, represents an absolute priority for us," it added, vowing to "promptly review our processes and ​procedures" if "any non-compliance issues emerge ‌from (our) analysis."

INFORMATION ON SICK RELATIVES, STRIKE ACTIVITIES

The information Amazon collected and shared with several managers ⁠included details on medical conditions, trade union and strike activities, and sensitive details on family life such as sick ⁠relatives or marriage break-ups, the authority said.

The regulator said this was ​in breach of rules that bar employers from handling data that was not relevant to assessing professional skills.

The data-use ban, issued after ‌inspections at the Passo Corese site two weeks ago, covers information collected during employment ‌and retained for up to 10 years, the watchdog ⁠said, adding it was ‌investigating other possible ​violations.

(Reporting by Elvira Pollina, writing by Gianluca Semeraro, editing by Giulia Segreti, Alvise Armellini and Aurora ‌Ellis)



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