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The Spanish Supreme Court has upheld a decision of the Spanish Data Protection Agency imposing a 300,000 fine on a publishing house for passing the personal information of former clients to third parties for marketing purposes without obtaining the prior consent of the individuals concerned.
In accordance with the Spanish Data Protection Agency, the privacy notice used by the publishing house in question in its magazines had a lack of specificity as to the purposes of the assignment of data to third parties and, as a consequence, the privacy notice was insufficient for the data subject's consent to be deemed duly given.
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