Inkasso-Team AG – €3,392 Fine (Switzerland, 2025)

€3,392DPA EDBPFPDTIFPDT28 April 2025Switzerland
final
Fine

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.

Inkasso-Team AG published personal information about suspected debtors on its website without their consent. The Swiss Data Protection Authority found this practice violated data protection rules. This case highlights the importance of respecting privacy when handling personal information online.

What happened

Inkasso-Team AG published names, addresses, and other personal details of suspected debtors on its website.

Who was affected

Individuals whose personal information was published by Inkasso-Team AG, including suspected debtors and their associates.

What the authority found

The Swiss DPA ruled that Inkasso-Team AG violated data protection rules by failing to inform individuals about the publication of their data.

Why this matters

This ruling emphasizes that companies must be transparent about how they use personal data. It serves as a warning to businesses about the consequences of ignoring privacy regulations.

National Law Articles

AI-identified

Article 6 Federal Act on Data Protection
Source verified 15 March 2026
articles corrected
national law identified
amount discrepancy
authority corrected
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

In 2021, the DPA was first alerted to Inkasso-Team AG’s (the controller) activities after receiving a complaint from a person in Germany. This complaint, forwarded by the Bavarian DPA, indicated that the controller was publishing information on suspected debtors and persons associated with them on its website and was soliciting information on their whereabouts. On 9 September 2021, the Swiss DPA sent an initial notice to the controller, highlighting that such publication of personal data violates data protection regulations. The controller did not respond, later citing postal and email delivery issues during the company’s early operational months. Two years later, on 23 October 2023, and following the entry into force of the revised Swiss Federal Data Protection Act (FDPA), the Swiss DPA received another complaint via the Bavarian DPA, again raising concerns that the controller continued publishing personal data on its website. The investigation confirmed that the controller operated the website, which featured personal information including names, addresses, and other details of suspected debtors and associated persons, such as place of residence and alleged outstanding debts. In some cases, photos and videos of family members, including children, were also published. Based on these findings, the Swiss DPA formally opened an ex officio investigation on 3 September 2024. In its defence, the controller argued that it represented an overriding private interest for creditors or a public interest in combatting fraud. It claimed that all listed debtors were “confirmed” through legal titles or available documentation. The controller also offered to notify debtors in future or restrict website access through some form of user verification. The Swiss DPA found that the controller violated the principles of transparency by failing to inform the data subjects that it published their data on its website. The Swiss DPA further held that the controller violated the principle o

Related Enforcement Actions (0)

No other enforcement actions found for Inkasso-Team AG in CH

This is the only recorded action for this entity in this jurisdiction.

Details

Fine Date

28 April 2025

Authority

DPA EDBPFPDTIFPDT

Fine Amount

€3,392

3,200 CHF

GDPRhub ID

gdprhub-9371

About this data

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

Cite as: Cookie Fines. Inkasso-Team AG - Switzerland (2025). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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