This article focuses on the right to privacy in the digital age. The author introduces cases handled by the Taiwan Association for Human Rights and looks at disputes involving the right to privacy and possible solutions to those disputes. The article also discusses the meaning of the right to privacy as a basic human right. The cases of the Health Insurance Research Database (NHI) and the ETC Traffic Database (MOTC) are selected for study. By introducing the background of these two databases and analyzing the presuppositions for their reuse of personal data, the article tries to look at disputes over de-identification and the right to privacy in Taiwan. At the end of the article, the author tries to propose some possible solutions for the disputes mentioned.