Coop Finnmark SA – Court Ruling (Norway, 2021)

Court Ruling
Datatilsynet (Norway)31 August 2021Norway
final
Court Ruling

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

Coop Finnmark SA faced an appeal after a fine was imposed for sharing surveillance footage without proper legal grounds. The Privacy Appeals Board found that while there was a breach of data protection rules, the violation wasn't serious enough to warrant a fine. This case highlights the importance of understanding the legal basis for using personal data.

What happened

Coop Finnmark SA unlawfully disclosed personal data from surveillance footage.

Who was affected

Visitors captured in the surveillance footage at Coop Finnmark SA stores.

What the authority found

The Privacy Appeals Board agreed there was a breach of data protection rules but decided not to impose a fine due to the minor nature of the violation.

Why this matters

This case shows that even minor breaches can lead to scrutiny, but the severity of the violation matters in enforcement actions. Companies should ensure they have a valid legal basis for processing personal data.

GDPR Articles Cited

AI-verified

Art. 6(GDPR)
Art. 5(1)(a) GDPR
Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR
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Art. 5(1)(a) GDPR
Art. 6(GDPR)
Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR

Original data from scraper before AI verification against source document.

Decision AuthorityPVN
Reviewed AuthorityDatatilsynet (Norway)
Source verified 21 March 2026
articles corrected
amount discrepancy
authority corrected
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

This case is an appeal of the decision DT-20/01790 by the Norwegian DPA (Datatilsynet), in which it fined a store approximately €40,340 (NOK 400,000) for the unlawful disclosure of personal data from a surveillance footage, thus breaching Article 5(1)(a) GDPR and Article 6. The complainant argued that the size of the administrative fine imposed, was too high and therefore appealed the DPA's decision. After reviewing the complaint, the DPA decided to uphold it, and the case was therefore was submitted to the Privacy Appeals Board (Personvernnemnda) for consideration. Personvernnemnda (PVN) agreed with the DPA that the infringement in question was correctly defined as a breach of Article 5(1)(a) GDPR and Article 6(1)(f). However, the PVN did not agree that the infringement was as serious as interpreted by the DPA, quoting specifically the short duration of the footage (3 seconds), that it did not show any faces or the theft itself, did not concern any personal data as per Article 9 GDPR or Article 10 and was deleted after a few days. The PVN noted that forwarding the footage and the fact that it involves children, are aggravating circumstances, however there was no evidence that the data subjects were harmed in any way. After an overall assessment, the PVN concluded (under doubt) that an administrative fine for such a violation should be around €5042 (NOK 50,000), however they also removed the fine entirely due to the DPA's long case processing time (over two years). Following the PVN's decision, the complainant submitted a claim for coverage of their legal costs related to this case. The PVN agreed and awarded the complainant €6959 (NOK 69,000), cf. [https://www.pvn.no/pvn-2021-15 PVN-2021-15].

Outcome

Court Ruling

A ruling by a national court on a data-protection matter.

Details

Ruling Date

31 August 2021

Authority

Datatilsynet (Norway)

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
AI-verified and classified

Cite as: Cookie Fines. Coop Finnmark SA - Norway (2021). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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