It looks as though the lady will receive my message.
Thanks to those of you who have shown me positive support
Thanks to those of you who have shown me positive support

747 dude wrote:It looks as though the lady will receive my message.
Thanks to those of you who have shown me positive support
747 dude wrote:It looks as though the lady will receive my message.
slinky09 wrote:Very pleased for you, don't expect to much, be delighted if you get a reply.
honey lamb wrote:...but then I'm an old romantic at heart.
747 dude wrote:It looks as though the lady will receive my message.
747 dude wrote:It looks as though the lady will receive my message.
Thanks to those of you who have shown me positive support
tontybear wrote:It IS a breach of the Data Protection Act for VS to email a passenger in this way unless VS have stated this is one of the reasons why it holds and processes personal data in its registration. And I can't see that VS would have applied for such authorisation - it is a travel company not a dating agency.
Wishing it was not so is just wishing and not going to help.
This does not mean that some of us don't wish the OP well (which has been incorrectly thought) but that we are simply aware of the detail and implication of the law.
VS is already in trouble with the Information Commissioner re the unauthorised release of certain individuals travel plans (and what opinions are held about the individuals concerned does not mean that the law does not apply to them) and it will not want to add to that.
at240 wrote:One more go and then I am giving up.
The world sometimes seems to be full of people who derive some obscure pleasure from using the DPA to say no. I encounter this professionally all the time. You can often spot it: such people often make reference to the statute itself and then talk in terrified tones about a possible £500k fine.
If you look at some of the data protection consents that VS publishes...
http://www.virgin-atlantic.com/en/gb/privacyandsecurity/infouse.jsp
... you will see that they are hazy and mushy enough to give the airline some wiggle-room on this. No one is saying that VS is a dating agency, but it can be argued that this request is not unreasonable and that it just about falls within the scope of the uses of data that VS outlines. Of course it is not clear cut, but so what? That's life.
Again: VS could perfectly reasonably decline the request, because it could equally reasonably argue that this is nothing to do with its contractual obligations to passengers. It does NOT need the DPA to do this.
And I'm sorry, but the case you mention about the travel plans being leaked is completely irrelevant to this thread.
Aspects of this thread have really baffled me -- and none more so than the finger-wagging sanctimony supposedly backed up by 'data protection' concerns. The guy seemingly just wanted to pass a message on. Is that so terrible? You cannot expect people not to enquire if someone else is interested! How would relationships start otherwise? In some spontaneous and wordless embrace?
If she's not interested, she's not interested. Fine. If VS doesn't want to do it, fine. If he stalks or harasses her or refuses to take no for an answer, NOT fine. If he already has a restraining order, NOT fine (although presumably she would have made a bit of a fuss on the plane!). And in the 'not fine' scenarios, there is already plenty of adequate legal recourse.
Seriously, in life you manage risk. You cannot eliminate it. If you try to use the DPA or worst-case stalker scenarios to do so, you are going to live a pretty anaesthetised existence.
747 dude wrote:I'm amazed how sure you are that there is a breach of the Data Protection Act with what VS have done for me. They CAN email the passenger asking her whether or not she wants my message sent onto her. If she says yes then the message will be sent. Simple.
Smid wrote:747 dude wrote:I'm amazed how sure you are that there is a breach of the Data Protection Act with what VS have done for me. They CAN email the passenger asking her whether or not she wants my message sent onto her. If she says yes then the message will be sent. Simple.
I've held back from sending this post a number of times, but can't anymore...
I've not thought that your attempt to contact the named passenger was creepy or stalkerish.
However, after the continual repeated posts with you being so displeased about some nice peoples advice about the law governing Virgin Atlantic, and how likely they are to do what you want, has made me think now, that you are quite creepy and stalkerish...
at240 wrote:Aspects of this thread have really baffled me -- and none more so than the finger-wagging sanctimony supposedly backed up by 'data protection' concerns. The guy seemingly just wanted to pass a message on. Is that so terrible? You cannot expect people not to enquire if someone else is interested! How would relationships start otherwise? In some spontaneous and wordless embrace?
slinky09 wrote:Can we please get back to the light hearted fun of a few pages ago?
Hev60 wrote:Smid wrote:747 dude wrote:I'm amazed how sure you are that there is a breach of the Data Protection Act with what VS have done for me. They CAN email the passenger asking her whether or not she wants my message sent onto her. If she says yes then the message will be sent. Simple.
I've held back from sending this post a number of times, but can't anymore...
I've not thought that your attempt to contact the named passenger was creepy or stalkerish.
However, after the continual repeated posts with you being so displeased about some nice peoples advice about the law governing Virgin Atlantic, and how likely they are to do what you want, has made me think now, that you are quite creepy and stalkerish...
The word 'troll' has been in my mind since day one
A first time Poster, joined on 4th July ( should have waited until April 1st)
Has receives 92 replies and received over 6100 views. Wow that's a good way to get attention v(
Have to agree a total creep and this post has been very uncomfortable :$ :$
scnickr wrote:One word - appalling.
at240 - great post.
To the OP - Unfortunately modern day society is full of people that are quick to quote the DPA, other law and policies bla bla. IMO, they need to get out more. I'd also not bother to post here anymore and keep any updates over to The Dibb where it's a lot more friendlier and supportive.
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