this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2024
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pretty sure that having "credit agencies" keeping track of people credit history is a huge violation of GDPR and would be illegal in the EU. At least I never heard about that. The only similar things I know is the central bank keeping a listing of "unpaid credit" which make ban you from getting any new credit for a certain time. (And as it's a public institution, you have the right to contest any writing there in court if it 's not justified, stuff like identity theft being a classic one)
Indeed that’s what I’m talking about. In Belgium it seems consumers have no control over whether a creditor can access the central bank’s records. Apparently the central bank simply trusts that creditors are checking records in response to an application for credit. I would like to know if any EU countries make use of an access code so consumers can control which creditors can see their records.