Can companies sell personal information without permission?

Can companies sell personal information without permission?

Author
Discussion

tele_lover

Original Poster:

597 posts

22 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
I keep receiving emails from recruiters. I have not posted my email address online.

Sales "leads" companies are storing my address and selling it.

I'm aware GDPR means I can request a company deletes my data but how can it be legal to sell personal data without me ever giving permission?

To be honest none of these companies have been UK-based.

And are there any good services which will get my address deleted from most sellers?

Edited by tele_lover on Wednesday 22 May 17:28

FMOB

1,994 posts

19 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
tele_lover said:
I keep receiving emails from recruiters. I have not posted my email address online.

Sales "leads" companies are storing my address and selling it.

I'm aware GDPR means I can request a company deletes my data but how can it be legal to sell personal data without me ever giving permission?

To be honest none of these companies have been UK-based.

And are there any good services which will get my address deleted from most sellers?

Edited by tele_lover on Wednesday 22 May 17:28
It is called 'sharing information with select partners' that will be in the T&C's that you agreed to.

P.S. we selected everybody on the planet as a select partner.

Simpo Two

87,036 posts

272 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
Pragmatically, just mark them for the spam bin/blacklist and you'll never see them again.

Cyberprog

2,232 posts

190 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
tele_lover said:
I keep receiving emails from recruiters. I have not posted my email address online.

Sales "leads" companies are storing my address and selling it.

I'm aware GDPR means I can request a company deletes my data but how can it be legal to sell personal data without me ever giving permission?

To be honest none of these companies have been UK-based.

And are there any good services which will get my address deleted from most sellers?

Edited by tele_lover on Wednesday 22 May 17:28
Simply put, it's not legal!

Many people will try and get around it with fine print, but consent for marketing needs to be very specific. I've litigated against recruitment agencies in the past, and won, though that was under the older DPA leglislation, and I've not done anything under GDPR (albeit that has more teeth).

Robertb

2,078 posts

245 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
There are scams involving recruiting emails and text messages... nice job for you, you apply, they offer you a job, the company that offers you a job gets you to pay an admin fee to set up your HR details etc, or uses personal info obtained to steal money, identity etc.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-surrey-68110...

Possibly your email details have been obtained from a data breach, or just a bot getting lucky.

Or maybe via LinkedIn?

TheDrownedApe

1,203 posts

63 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
I steadfastly hunt out the "don't use/share my data" button on every new site i visit and buy from.

Occasionally they blatantly ignore my request and i get spammed by their daily emails. I just go to the unsubscribe link and never think about it again.

However I've often thought they are breaking the law, but how do you prove you clicked that box and how hard would it be to get the prosecution over the line?

It's one of those "Illegitimi non carborundum" things.

tele_lover

Original Poster:

597 posts

22 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Pragmatically, just mark them for the spam bin/blacklist and you'll never see them again.
Email addresses are used to access online banking and many other systems.

This isn't about spam.

tele_lover

Original Poster:

597 posts

22 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Cyberprog said:
Simply put, it's not legal!

Many people will try and get around it with fine print, but consent for marketing needs to be very specific. I've litigated against recruitment agencies in the past, and won, though that was under the older DPA leglislation, and I've not done anything under GDPR (albeit that has more teeth).
The problem is the few I've come across are mostly based in the US and one was Israel. Fortunately the US one is California and they do have a GDPR-equivalent law.

I absolutely despise scum who broadcast personal information for money.