AENA under criticism: €10 million fine for facial recognition at Palma airport – a reality check
What the AENA Case Means for Travelers in Mallorca
The Palma airport case shows why privacy, transparency, and real choice matter for travelers in Mallorca.

Answer
What does the AENA case mean for travelers in Mallorca?
More questions on this topic
Related follow-up questions from the same article, collected in one place.
Why was AENA fined for facial recognition at Palma airport?
AENA was fined for using biometric facial recognition without the required data protection assessment.
Is facial recognition at Palma airport still being used?
Biometric processing has been temporarily halted, pending the outcome of the case.
What should I know before agreeing to biometric boarding at Palma airport?
Ask how your data are used and whether you can board without facial recognition.
Is facial recognition really voluntary at airports like Palma?
It should be voluntary, but the alternative must be truly equivalent.
How long can biometric data be stored at Palma airport?
Passengers should ask for a clear retention period before agreeing.
What rights do passengers have if they do not want facial recognition at Palma airport?
You can refuse biometric processing and ask for a non-biometric option.
Why are biometric systems treated differently under EU privacy law?
Biometric data are highly sensitive and need stronger legal safeguards.
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