This repository contains a directory of contact information and privacy-related data on companies (and other organizations) under the scope of the EU GDPR, a directory of supervisory authorities for privacy concerns, a collection of templates for GDPR requests and a list of suggested companies to send access requests to.
It is used to power the Datenanfragen.de company database but we warmly welcome you to use the data for your own projects!
Due to the nature of the data we are collecting here, frequent changes, additions and deletions will be necessary. We invite you to contribute whatever information you have. The easiest way for us is if you just submit your changes as a pull request (feel free to group changes to multiple records in a single PR). You can use this tool to generate valid JSON records.
Alternatively, you can also submit suggestions for changes and new records directly through our website.
Please be aware that by contributing, you agree for your work to be released under a Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license, as specified in the LICENSE
file.
We have an automated testing script for the records. The script makes sure that all records follow our schema and catches common errors.
If you submit a PR, your changes will automatically be tested in our CI environment.
However, you can also run the script locally. To do so, first install Node.js and the Yarn package manager. In the repository folder, run yarn
to grab all necessary dependencies.
This will automatically install a pre-commit hook: Whenever you commit your changes, the testing script will automatically run and check for errors.
To use it manually, simply run yarn test
.
The company data is located in the companies
folder. Every company (or other organization) in our database is represented by a single JSON file (named after the slug in the JSON). The JSON has to follow the schema specified in the schema.json
file.
If a company requires a special template for requests under the GDPR, these can be stored in the templates
folder and referenced by their filename in the company JSON record.
The suggested-companies
folder contains suggestions on which companies users should send access requests to. It is grouped by country (where each country is represented by a file with the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code as the filename). The list should only contain companies that the user should definitely request because they are relevant to pretty much every citizen of that country (e.g. collection agencies and credit agencies). It should not contain companies that are relevant for many but not all users (like Amazon, Facebook etc.)
A list for a country is represented by a JSON array of the slugs representing the corresponding companies.
Finally, the supervisory-authorities
folder contains data on supervisory data protection authorities. They are structured similarly to the company records, following the schema in the schema-supervisory-authorities.json
file.
We prefer privacy-specific contact details (usually found in a company's privacy policy). In particular, email addresses like privacy@example.com
or dpo@example.org
and phone/fax numbers specifically of data protection officers are preferred. If no specific details are available, we use 'regular' contact details found on the company's website.
Please make sure that there is no personal data in your record. This means no names in the address and no emails that include names, either.
Some companies don't publish adequate contact information on their website. In these cases, you can resort to third-party sources but do check the information very thoroughly depending on the source.
- For US companies that are Privacy Shield certified, the Privacy Shield List is a valuable resource for uncovering missing contact information.
- Companies in the UK have their information listed in the Companies House Search Register.
- German companies are required by law to publish an 'Impressum' with their contact information. In addition to that, registered companies have to be listed in the Handelsregister. This is a paid service but some information can be accessed for free.
- Companies in Singapore are assigned a unique entity number (UEN) and can be researched via the Business Filing Portal of ACRA (BizFile).
We want the addresses to be formatted consistently, so don't just copy the information directly from the company's website. Try to format the address according to the standards of the respective country. For many countries, we already have records with examples on how to format the addresses. Otherwise, the Universal Postal Union has resources on how to properly format addresses for many countries. In addition, there is a very comprehensive guide offered by BitBoost Systems.
For incomplete addresses, you can use SmartyStreets' Single Address Validation Tool.
For addresses in Hong Kong, the Correct Addressing tool offered by Hongkong Post, is very useful.
Please don't include lines like Data protection officer
, Privacy department
or similar. They will be automatically added by our generator, anyway. Also, don't include any personal data (like names) in the address.
We want phone and fax numbers to be in a standard international format without any other characters than numbers, the plus for the international prefix and spaces. You can use the Phone Number Parser Demo based on libphonenumber to convert phone numbers to that format. Additional spaces may be inserted to improve readability.
If we know from previous requests (or from a privacy policy) which identification information is needed for requests to a company, we record that under the required-elements
key.
If required_elements
are specified, there should be one element with type name
. This does not have to be a real name but could also be a username or even an email address, if no other information is required.
In addition, the required_elements
should include some way for the company to respond to the request, be it an address, an email address, a phone number or something similar.