Hundreds of footballers demand compensation over data misuse

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

Hundreds of footballers have demanded compensation for the trading of their performance data over the last six years.

The 850 players are led by former Cardiff City manager Russell Slade with the group having sent “letters before action” to 17 firms who they allege misused their data. The data ranges from a players height to their average goals per game with the group saying that the fact players do not receive payment for the use of their data contravenes GDPR rules. Article 4 of GDPR details “personal data” as “any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person.”

BBC News reports that the 17 firms served with letters include betting companies, data collection groups and entertainment channels but the group has highlighted potentially over 150 firms that it believes has misused data.

Slade said “It's incredible where it's used. On one player, and I'm not talking about a Premier League player or even a Championship player, there was some 7,000 pieces of information on one individual player at a lower league football club. There are companies that are taking that data and processing that data without the individual consent of that player. A big part of our journey has been looking at that ecosystem and plotting out where that data starts, who's processing it, where it finishes and that's a real global thing. It's making football - and all sports - aware of the implications and what needs to change.”

If the group are successful it could drastically change data collection as players will have more control over what information is made available to the wider public with players also financially benefiting from the use of their data. Lawyer Chris Farnell said “This will be a significant change if the precedent is set throughout football and how data is used throughout sport in general. It will change significantly how that data is being used and how it's going to be rewarded.”

You may also like

View All

FIFA finds no evidence of misconduct by VAR official over controversial hand gesture

FIFA has cleared a World Cup official of making a white supremacist gesture, with the official stating that the gesture was “a subconscious twitch”

Read More

Fox Sports evades punishment after violating FIFA World Cup advertising rules

Fox Sports, U.S. television broadcaster, known for its sports programming, will evade punishment from FIFA after it violated the governing body’s advertising rules during the first match of the World Cup

Read More

Role Opportunity | Premier League Judicial Panel

The Premier League is seeking to add further members to its independent Judicial Panel to adjudicate independently on disciplinary cases and appeals

Read More