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Four Sandbox Reports Explore Data Sharing to Combat Economic Crime

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Summary

The Norwegian Data Protection Authority and Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway have published four final reports from joint regulatory sandbox projects exploring data sharing to combat economic crime. Participants including banks (DNB, Nordea, SpareBank 1, Eika), Stø, Finans Norge Forsikringsdrift, and Eika Gruppen with KPMG received joint regulatory guidance on how data protection and financial regulations interact. The reports clarify where current regulations provide clear boundaries versus where there is greater scope for action within existing frameworks.

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What changed

The Norwegian Data Protection Authority and Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway jointly conducted regulatory sandbox projects in autumn 2024 to explore how financial institutions can share data to combat economic crime within existing regulatory frameworks. Four final reports were produced covering: information sharing between banks for payment fraud (DNB, Norwegian Computing Center, SpareBank 1, Nordea, Eika); BankID data collection and sharing (Stø); insurance fraud reporting channels (Finans Norge Forsikringsdrift); and centralisation of anti-money laundering work (Eika Gruppen and KPMG).

Affected financial institutions—banks, insurers, and financial services firms—can use these reports to understand where current data protection and financial regulations set clear boundaries and where there is greater operational flexibility for data sharing. The joint guidance provides a better basis for industry participants to leverage existing regulatory scope for combating payment fraud, insurance fraud, and money laundering without requiring new legislation.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

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New sandbox reports on data sharing

Increased data sharing can help combat economic crime more effectively. However, while current regulations set clear boundaries, they also provide scope that is not always fully leveraged. This is the conclusion of four new final reports from joint sandbox projects organised by the Norwegian Data Protection Authority and the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway.

In autumn 2024, together with Finanstilsynet, the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway, we invited financial institutions to participate in sandbox projects. The aim was to explore how data sharing can be used to combat economic crime within the framework of the current regulations. These projects have now delivered four final reports.

  • The collaboration between the Data Protection Authority and Finanstilsynet made it possible to examine multiple aspects of the issue and quickly determine whether the industry’s data-sharing challenges stemmed from perceived barriers or actual legal constraints. This provides a much better basis for clarifying the scope for increased data sharing, says Line Coll, Director General of the Data Protection Authority.

Over the past year, the participants have received joint guidance from the Data Protection Authority and Finanstilsynet. The work has helped both to clarify where the regulations set clear boundaries and to identify where there is greater scope for action within the current regulatory framework.

  • Our impression is that participating in the regulatory sandbox project has been valuable for everyone involved. Relevant issues were quickly identified and examined, the working method is effective and the projects produced useful results, says Per Mathis Kongsrud, Director General of Finanstilsynet.

Four reports highlighting current issues

The four final reports examine various forms of data sharing in efforts to combat economic crime. The reports also contain the legal assessments made by the participants. The following organisations have participated in the sandbox. Links are also provided here to summary articles and final reports:

  • DNB, the Norwegian Computing Center, SpareBank 1, Nordea and Eika have assessed the legal frameworks for information sharing between banks, particularly in relation to combating payment fraud.
  • Stø has analysed the legal issues related to the expanded collection, sharing and processing of data from BankID.
  • Finans Norge Forsikringsdrift has investigated the possibility of setting up a reporting channel to expose and prevent insurance fraud.
  • Eika Gruppen and KPMG have assessed legal issues related to the centralisation of anti-money laundering work in the banks in Eika Gruppen.

Joint guidance on a major societal problem

Economic crime is a serious problem for society. Considerable resources are invested in preventing and combating this type of crime. At the same time, there has long been a need for closer collaboration between public and private actors in the industry, as well as to clarify the limitations and possibilities within the regulatory framework and to improve existing systems for data sharing.

The Data Protection Authority and Finanstilsynet have separate regulatory sandboxes. In these projects, the supervisory authorities have worked together to provide joint guidance to the participants, clarifying how financial and data protection regulations interact in practice.

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External links
- Les på norsk Nye sandkasserapporter om datadeling
Published: 2/18/2026

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Datatilsynet
Published
February 18th, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks Financial advisers Insurers
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Regulatory sandbox participation Data sharing frameworks Anti-fraud compliance
Geographic scope
NO NO

Taxonomy

Primary area
Data Privacy
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
GDPR
Topics
Anti-Money Laundering Securities

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