City
Epaper

Spotify fined over $5 mn for GDPR violations in Sweden

By IANS | Updated: June 14, 2023 12:10 IST

London, June 14 Music streaming platform Spotify has been fined about $5.4 million in Sweden for breaching the ...

Open in App

London, June 14 Music streaming platform Spotify has been fined about $5.4 million in Sweden for breaching the data access rights of users in the European Union (EU).

There were allegations that the company failed to provide full information about personal data it processes in response to individual requests, which is a violation of Article 15 of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), reports TechCrunch.

The complaint was filed at the start of 2019 by noyb, a privacy rights non-profit organisation.

According to the complaint, Spotify failed to provide all personal data requested, did not provide information on the purposes of the processing or recipients, and did not provide information on international transfers, among other allegations.

While the complaint was initially filed in Austria, the GDPR's one-stop-shop mechanism, which is intended to streamline case handling when data processing crosses national borders, resulting in the complaint being routed to Sweden, where Spotify has its main EU presence.

The complaint then sat unresolved for several years, according to noyb, because the Swedish authority conducted a parallel ex officio investigation to which the complainants were not invited despite the GDPR's requirement that data controllers respond to access requests within a month, according to the report.

Due to the lack of a decision, noyb ended up taking the Swedish data protection authority (IMY) to court.

Last year, it successfully challenged IMY's position that the complainant is not a party in procedures, with the Stockholm administrative court ruling that complainants have the right to request a decision six months after the complaint was filed, the report mentioned.

Meanwhile, Spotify has announced to lay off 200 employees, 2 per cent of its workforce, from its podcast division as part of a corporate reorganisation.


shs/ksk/

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: General Data Protection RegulationeuswedenLondonThe University Of LondonSouth LondonQueen Mary University Of LondonMadame Tussauds LondonEu CouncilKimpton Fitzroy London HotelEu Commission
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai Crime: Fraudsters Use Fake ED, SEBI Letters to Dupe Retired London Auditor of ₹15 Lakh; Cyber Police Recover Entire Amount

PuneNilesh Ghaywal, Pune Gangster and Accused in Kothrud Firing Case, Flees to London

BusinessTata Motors Shares Fall After JLR Faces ₹20,000 Crore Cyberattack Erasing FY25 Profits

InternationalDonald Trump Says London Mayor Sadiq Khan Among 'Worst' in World, Claims He Blocked Him from Royal Banquet

InternationalElisabet Lann: Sweden Health Minister Collapses During Live Press Conference; Video Surfaces

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyOYO faces allegations of 'daylight heist' over bonus share ballot

TechnologyMaruti Suzuki India, Tata Motors report resilient domestic sales in Oct over GST cuts

TechnologyCampaigns like Swasth Nari, Sashakt Parivar Abhiyaan to empower, transform women’s lives: PM

TechnologyTraders laud GST 2.0 reforms as PM Modi receives grand welcome in Raipur

TechnologyAutomakers report robust India sales in October over GST reforms