💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 161.gmi captured on 2023-09-08 at 19:09:21. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2007-06-18 12:08:58
Swedes revolt against online snooping
By LOUISE NORDSTROM, Associated Press Writer Sun Jun 17, 2:21 PM ET
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Want to know how much your boss earns? Or whether your
daughter's fiance is in debt? For Swedes, it takes just a few clicks on the
Internet to find out.
But many feel the Web has taken things too far, and proud though they are of
Sweden's unusual history of openness, they have pressured providers to put some
limits on a service that allowed Swedes to snoop through each other's finances
anonymously and free of charge.
"Your neighbor knows what you're making, your brother-in law knows what you're
making, and people around you can know whether you're on any records for
outstanding payments. It's private and a bit embarrassing," said Hans Karnlof,
a lawyer at the Swedish Data Inspection Board.
Things came to a head in November when a Swedish Web site, Ratsit.se, started
publishing financial details, free of charge, from the national tax authority.
The site has some 610,000 registered users in a country of 9 million and
handled an average of 50,000 online credit checks a day.
Regular credit check companies are required to notify those they check. But on
Ratsit, anonymous snoops could uncover financial information simply by typing
in a name and clicking "search."
Authorities said Sweden's transparency laws were being abused, and pressured
Ratsit and similar Web sites to impose some restrictions.
Information on personal income and debt is still available, but now costs money
$21 for 10 requests a week, and $3.60 for each additional request. A more
extensive report, including information on financial and property assets, costs
$6.90 per search.
And there's no more anonymity; anyone whose finances are viewed will be
notified by mail and told who asked.
Openness is ingrained in Swedish society its freedom of information act dates
to 1766. Today Swedes have unfettered access to almost all records that the
state keeps on the population. Only some 10,000 people who live under some form
of threat, are excluded from the public records.
"This type of access to financial information is in no way available in other
countries like it is here," said Karnlof, the data board's lawyer. "Visitors
we've had from Ireland and Germany, for example their jaws just drop when
they hear about it."
But until the Internet arrived, citizens had to visit the local tax office to
ask about others' finances.
"There's a big difference between sitting hidden at home and being reasonably
anonymous, and trotting off to the tax office and ... telling a person
eye-to-eye whom you want to check," said Karolina Lassbo, a 27-year-old lawyer.
Lassbo said she used Ratsit once "because I wanted to see what it said about
me." But her curiosity got the better of her: "Then I checked friends and
celebrities."
"I do think our service is justified because things like wages should be
transparent," said Ratsit's chief executive, Anders Johansson. Employers use it
to check whether potential hires are in debt, he said, and "A lot of people use
it to negotiate their pay."
Ratsit's service was made possible by a 2003 change in the law protecting media
freedom, which allowed Web sites to get publishing rights. That enabled Ratsit
to become one of Sweden's most popular Web sites, but also one of the most
controversial.
The Data Inspection Board was inundated with complaints, "like an avalanche,"
said Karnlof.
Apart from the privacy issue, fears that the online openness would aid identity
thieves also pushed the National Tax Board into action.
While the law obliges the board to give out tax information, it doesn't say in
what form. So tax authorities simply threatened to supply the information on
paper, instead of electronically, which would have forced credit checkers to
scan millions of records.
To avoid the hassle, the companies agreed to the new restrictions on how the
material is accessed.
Before the new rules kicked in a week ago, Ratsit's traffic nearly tripled to
over 140,000 hits a day, said Johansson, the company boss.
Ratsit expects credit-snooping to fall off by half, but is offering new
attractions, such as a "singles index" showing how many people in a particular
zip code live alone. It plans to include phone numbers.