| ▲ | spwa4 3 hours ago | |
Not even that. The government outsources a lot of their functions, so a LOT of organizations have access to extremely private data, where necessary. For example, Palantir gets access to "large and diverse (government) databases with Dutch citizens’ data for analysis" (including mental health treatment data) under the GPDR to help police in the Netherlands do terror investigations (from 2012 to 2019). I'm sure you can appreciate the wisdom and privacy-enhancement in that just as much as me! There are large lists of private organizations that get access to government data about citizens ... every country has multiple (public and secret ones). Oh, they also "failed to mention" this to parliament, and this was only discovered after a journalist got a tipoff and requested financial data about the deal ... for about 5 years. Of course, there was never even the slightest investigation into this. https://nltimes.nl/2025/08/22/dutch-police-also-use-controve... (paywalled) https://www.volkskrant.nl/tech/ook-nederlandse-politie-gebru... | ||