Philippine Daily Inquirer

Comelec going after ‘creepy’ text sender

- By Jovic Yee @jovicyeeIN­Q

The Comelec is looking for a man claiming to be its employee who sent a text message seeking to befriend a woman—using the contact details she gave when she registered as a voter.

A man who claimed to be an employee of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) could face criminal charges for sending a private text message to a woman he wanted to be friends with using the personal contact details she had given when she registered as a voter.

Comelec spokespers­on James Jimenez learned about the incident from an angry complaint on Twitter by a certain Ynna, whose girlfriend received the text message from the male Comelec staff member on Thursday night.

Without giving his name, the man introduced himself as the Comelec employee with whom Ynna’s girlfriend had a conversati­on about fingerprin­ts. He asked her if it was “OK” that he took her number “without asking permission.”

“If it’s not OK, just disregard my text. I just want to be friends with you, if that is OK with you. If not, I would no longer text you. I hope it’s OK and you won’t get mad,” his text read in Filipino.

Ynna, who wanted to get help on how to deal with the person, went on Twitter to vent her anger at the man, telling him that he should not “look at personal/official government documents ... It’s not flattering, it’s creepy.”

In response to Ynna, also on Twitter, Jimenez said what the Comelec staffer did was wrong.

“I apologize that this happened,” Jimenez said, asking for the name and telephone number of the message sender “so we can take appropriat­e measures.”

“Comelec gathers informatio­n for registrati­on and election purposes only; any other use of this informatio­n is unauthoriz­ed, unless by order of a court of law,” Jimenez said.

Data privacy

Under Republic Act No. 10173, or the Data Privacy Act of 2012, it is illegal to use personal informatio­n for unauthoriz­ed purposes and to process such informatio­n without the permission of the person concerned. Violators face imprisonme­nt of up to seven years and a fine of not more than P2 million.

Jimenez told the Inquirer on Saturday that he was in touch with the couple and was in- formed that they had filed a case against the man with the National Privacy Commission.

Jimenez pointed out, however, that it was still unclear if the message sender was indeed a Comelec employee since he did not have additional informatio­n about the man and the city to which he was supposedly assigned.

“If anything, he may be an employee who is part of the biometrics team. Our particular concern is that he claimed to be a Comelec employee,” he said.

Not a requiremen­t

Jimenez noted that it was also uncertain how the man got hold of the woman’s cell phone number because the Comelec voter applicatio­n form does not ask for a mobile number.

“Since a mobile number is not permanent, logic dictates that it will not be part of the form,” he said.

However, it was possible that while the woman’s applicatio­n was being processed, she was asked “on some personal level” that she provide her mobile number “under the pretext that it is needed,” Jimenez said.

 ??  ?? BAWAL ANG DATA BREACH PARA LANG MAGKA-DATE
BAWAL ANG DATA BREACH PARA LANG MAGKA-DATE
 ??  ?? LAST-DAY QUEUE Long lines of people wanting to register as voters have been reported at Comelec offices across the country, like this one in Arroceros, Manila, on Saturday.
LAST-DAY QUEUE Long lines of people wanting to register as voters have been reported at Comelec offices across the country, like this one in Arroceros, Manila, on Saturday.

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