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Sweden just isn't what it used to be...

"In most countries, the government knows when you were born, your social security number, where you live, how much you earn and how much your house is worth. Sweden is a bit different though. There, the tax authority doesn’t just use this information for administrative purposes – but sells it to data brokers who publish it online. This is a violation of EU law. Earlier this year, a Swedish data subject asked the country’s tax authority to stop selling his data. The country’s Supreme Court has recently ruled that freedom of information and privacy rights must be balanced and data must be marked as confidential, if the recipient is likely to process it in conflict with the GDPR. The tax authority rejected the request, claiming it simply follows the Swedish constitutional principle of transparency rather than the ruling by the Supreme Court. noyb now takes the authority to court."

noyb.eu/en/noyb-takes-swedish-

noyb.eunoyb takes Swedish tax authority to court for selling people’s personal dataIn Sweden, the tax authority doesn’t just use people's personal information for administrative purposes – but sells it to data brokers who publish it online.
#Sweden#EU#Taxes
kvadd
Public

That is not true though. This information is public and free for anyone to look up. And this has been the case for a very long time.

Miguel Afonso Caetano
Public

@kvadd Yes, but data brokers can buy that information for ad targeting and marketing purposes. These usages should be specifically outlawed, according to the GDPR.