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Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal challenging the Data Protection Commissioner's decision regarding complaints about covert surveillance and data access requests, on the grounds that no point of law had been identified in the appellant's motion, rendering the appeal baseless; and the court emphasises the need for reform due to the excessive appeals allowed under data protection law, which lead to delays, costs and court resource drain.
Data Protection Acts - Data Protection Commissioner - National Gallery of Ireland - covert surveillance - CCTV - email monitoring - data access request - biometric data - Circuit Court - High Court - Court of Appeal - appeal on point of law - legitimate interests - personal data processing - privacy rights - data controller - data subject - European Convention on Human Rights - European Charter of Fundamental Rights - Irish Constitution - Criminal Justice (Surveillance) Act 2009 - IT policy - Code of Conduct - abuse of process.
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