14 comments

  • engeljohnb 35 minutes ago
    I'm glad it all worked out for this individual. I hope more people live their lives like this as the dystopia progresses.

    Unfortunately, especially in the US, exercising your rights, or even just reading every paper you're expected to put your name to, not only constantly pisses people off for some reason, but also puts you at a significant disadvantage compared to the people that never push back in the interest of not making waves, or even because "whatever it's fine."

    • deepsun 18 minutes ago
      Once I rented an apartment in US, and the documents said that they can make videos, pictures and audio recordings of me and my family, and use it for their own purposes including commercial. I objected, but their position was that no one is going to involve legal department for me, and I am free to go away.
      • smcleod 8 minutes ago
        Pretty sure that's a violation of fundamental human rights as it's your place of living. Surely that can't be legal, even in the US can it?
        • monkpit 5 minutes ago
          It doesn’t mean _inside_ the apartment. It means if they decide to film a commercial and you’re walking your dog in the background, they don’t have to ask you.
      • bsder 9 minutes ago
        > and I am free to go away.

        This is the crux of the problem when landlords are allowed to form or join an "association" that gets too pervasive.

        This was at the heart of the RealPage lawsuits.

    • solid_fuel 28 minutes ago
      > Unfortunately, especially in the US, exercising your rights, or even just reading every paper you're expected to put your name to, not only constantly pisses people off for some reason

      Yup. It's particularly sad seeing other people in this very thread talking about how they would "ban this customer for life" just for knowing their rights.

      I think it's pathetic that this has become the culture amongst large swathes of Americans - especially ones who consider themselves patriotic. This country was founded in rebellion and the assertion of our rights, and somehow the exact opposite is now the ideal of many citizens now.

  • 0xfffafaCrash 30 minutes ago
    > The reply I received a few days later did me the favour of putting the violation on the record. Their position, in their own words, was that "in order to receive marketing / offers, it is a condition to be a member of the customer club." That one sentence is the whole case. They had taken a right I am entitled to exercise for free and turned it into the price of admission.

    I don’t understand… it would be one thing if it said “receiving marketing/offers is a condition of being a member of the customer club” but that’s not what is being stated above… rather that being a member of the club is required to receive marketing — perhaps something has been misworded or lost in translation?

    • drdaeman 9 minutes ago
      Yea, I don't get it either. Receiving being a condition on membership means (in my understanding) only that non-members can't (shouldn't) receive anything, not that members will or must receive something. Which sounds perfectly normal and sane to me.
    • LearnYouALisp 27 minutes ago
      sounded exactly like translation error from a German-related lang.

      e.g. "to receive offers...is a condition to be in..."

  • Telaneo 46 minutes ago
    Datatilsynet, the Norwegian DPA, from my experience, consistently has the user in mind. It (sadly) takes a long time for things to pass through the system, but they consistently come to good decisions.
  • pavel_lishin 1 hour ago
    The image isn't loading for me, all I see is the prompt used to generate it - which is genuinely preferable.
    • QuantumNomad_ 27 minutes ago
      For me it was showing the image and the prompt, but the whole page was unstyled. But when I reloaded the page now, the css loaded also and the prompt is not shown.

      I guess the web server was temporarily overwhelmed by traffic resulting in images (like for you) and css files (like for me) not being consistently served to all visitors.

  • echoangle 49 minutes ago
    Good to know that this is illegal. One of my email providers also does this, maybe I’ll also have to try reporting them and see what happens.
  • pixelpoet 1 hour ago
    Love to see this, and love our privacy and data handling laws!
  • peaseagee 1 hour ago
    And how much did it make them over those 5 years?
    • Retric 1 hour ago
      The fine is only part of the story. They likely spent more money than the fine fighting it over 5 years as fines increase next time if you don’t stop.
      • coldtea 52 minutes ago
        And how much did it make them over those 5 years?
        • aucisson_masque 48 minutes ago
          You don't know how much it did cost them. Why would you care about how much they gained ? You can't compare something when you have neither value.
          • anakaine 43 minutes ago
            Because if, as the regulator, you fail to benchmark what they gained then your laws can be ignored and your fines paid as simply a cost of doing business.

            Its why you find the Australian regulator for consumer affairs handing out $200m+ fines to telecommunications companies, for example.

            • Retric 42 minutes ago
              By that logic regulators should lower fines if the action wasn’t profitable. Which creates an expensive legal fight.

              Instead, it’s much better to scale fines based on the scale of the entity involved which is easier to measure and more broadly effective. Then escalate if they don’t stop.

              • tux1968 15 minutes ago
                Like in Finland where speeding ticket fines are based on your income. For instance, in one well known case a businessman was fined €121,000 for going 82 km/h in a 50 km/h zone.
                • aidenn0 1 minute ago
                  That's considerably more than someone near me who was doing 245km/h in a 90 zone (Well 55mph which is 89km/h). I still don't know why that person didn't lose their license (other than the obvious fact that they were rich enough to afford the Lamborghini that they were driving in); it wasn't just any 55 zone, it was one with a reputation for being dangerous.
                • dataflow 2 minutes ago
                  [delayed]
  • ryandrake 1 hour ago
    Excellent outcome. I wish we had these rights in the USA! Too bad justice took 5 years though.
  • RobRivera 13 minutes ago
    Lol. Brookfield Place wifi had an OPT IN for their wifi to receive marketing.

    If you unclicked it, the 'connect to wifi' button greyed out and a notification appears saying that Opt In is required for wifi.

  • tomtom1337 1 hour ago
    This is extremely cool reading! I'm impressed that they actually fined Elkjøp (as they should!) but very surprised that they didn't keep you informed!

    Thank you for sharing!

  • QuantumNomad_ 41 minutes ago
    > the only way to stop the marketing was to cancel my membership of the club altogether

    I have experienced this same thing with at least one other big company in Norway.

    I could opt out of either SMS or e-mail, but not both, or I would not be able to keep the membership.

    Unfortunately, I never made a note of which one that was exactly so I can’t name them and shame them on the spot.

    Despite half-hearted attempts at stopping marketing emails now and then by individually logging in and opting out, or clicking unsubscribe links embedded in the email, my email continues to be flooded with marketing both from domestic and foreign companies that I’ve done business with. There is so many companies that even going through a handful of them at a time and unsubscribing there is a seemingly endless amount of companies that remain to unsubscribe from.

    It is great to see that someone fights back, and that it is resulting in fines.

  • pixelneon 52 minutes ago
    Hahaha, the sticker looks really funny, but I like it.
  • throw9394494 19 minutes ago
    I wonder if anyone who are cheering this fine, actually read and tried to implement GDPR. It is a nightmare to be fully compliant for small companies.

    It is mostly just a theater (like endless cookie consent dialogs in anonymous browsing), to employ more experts and bureaucrats.

    EU is now pushing privacy laws that severely undermine privacy.

  • londons_explore 38 minutes ago
    If I did business in the EU, I would be banning this chap from my services on the basis that the risk he poses to the business is too great...
    • dataflow 0 minutes ago
      [delayed]
    • Broken_Hippo 29 minutes ago
      In other words, you'd ban someone because they might notice that you are doing illegal stuff and you might get caught.

      Follow the laws and it isn't an issue. I'm pretty sure banning someone for that stuff is probably illegal, too.

    • onli 33 minutes ago
      You would do no such thing, because if you tried, you wouldn't have a business in the EU anymore.
    • solid_fuel 33 minutes ago
      Frankly, this attitude is pathetic. Absolute loser behaviour.

      I don't think you should be doing business anywhere if customers being familiar with the law and knowing their rights scares you. Frankly if you are running a business, you should be familiar with the laws and regulations, doing otherwise - especially when someone points out that your behaviour is illegal - is negligence and punishment with a fine is completely appropriate. Welcome to living in a society.

    • throw9394494 27 minutes ago
      Just awoid some jurisdictions. Bulgaria is in EU, has all the same access, and has no time for this BS.