Hong Kong Privacy Watchdog Orders Removal of Viral Dashcam Video of Singer David Lui Fong
نظرة سريعة
- Hong Kong's privacy watchdog has ordered the removal of a viral dashcam video showing a heated argument between a ride-hailing driver and singer David Lui Fong.
- The footage, which escalated from a GPS dispute to profanity-laced insults, was deemed personal data, and drivers must obtain consent before uploading passenger footage.
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A viral dashcam video captured a heated argument between a ride-hailing driver and singer David Lui Fong. The footage escalated from a GPS dispute to profanity-laced insults.
A viral dashcam video clip showing a heated argument inside a ride-hailing vehicle between a driver and a passenger, identified in the footage as singer David Lui Fong, has prompted Hong Kong’s privacy watchdog to order its removal, the South China Morning Post has learned.
In response to the SCMP’s queries, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data said on Friday that it had ordered a social media platform to remove the footage, adding that the office had not yet received any complaints about the video.
It added that any video clearly identifying a specific person through a video camera system was deemed “personal data” under the Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance.
Drivers must comply with the law, the office said, meaning they cannot upload passenger footage without explicit consent.
The footage, first circulated on social media platform Threads, began as a dispute over an apparent GPS map mistake and quickly escalated into a shouting match with profanity and personal insults. It started circulating on social media on Thursday night.
The confrontation was sparked when the driver claimed he had arrived at the address shown on his map, while the passenger insisted it was incorrect.
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will the social media platform comply with the removal order?
- Were any complaints filed before the watchdog's intervention?






