Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control

Data portability is a fluid concept that can be used in multiple contexts and can be defined in various ways. In the EU General Data Protection Regulation, it is given the legal status of a data subject right. The key objectives of the right to data portability in the GDPR are privacy, protection of...

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Main Author: Helena Ursic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2018-08-01
Series:SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://script-ed.org/?p=3542
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spelling doaj-4c5465af00144526b3f73f8354b6be4c2020-11-25T01:07:20ZengUniversity of EdinburghSCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society1744-25671744-25672018-08-01151426910.2966/scrip.150118.42Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject ControlHelena UrsicData portability is a fluid concept that can be used in multiple contexts and can be defined in various ways. In the EU General Data Protection Regulation, it is given the legal status of a data subject right. The key objectives of the right to data portability in the GDPR are privacy, protection of personal data, and data subjects’ control over their data. However, it remains open how these goals materialise through the new-born right. This article suggests four possible ways in which the right to data portability could unfold in the future: (i) establishing control over personal data transfers, (ii) enabling (re)use of personal data, (iii) enabling better understanding of data flows, and (iv) facilitating equality and allowing the free development of personality. Data portability could increase transparency of data processing and could allow data subjects to control their online identities. It could also be instrumental in enhancing other rights and principles, such as equality. However, the provision on data portability in the GDPR faces many legal and practical constraints. The prospects of the right will depend on regulatory interpretation and interactions with other legal areas.https://script-ed.org/?p=3542portabilityGDPRprivacydata protectionbig dataPersonal dataPersonal databig data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helena Ursic
spellingShingle Helena Ursic
Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
portability
GDPR
privacy
data protection
big dataPersonal data
Personal data
big data
author_facet Helena Ursic
author_sort Helena Ursic
title Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
title_short Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
title_full Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
title_fullStr Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
title_full_unstemmed Unfolding the New-Born Right to Data Portability: Four Gateways to Data Subject Control
title_sort unfolding the new-born right to data portability: four gateways to data subject control
publisher University of Edinburgh
series SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
issn 1744-2567
1744-2567
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Data portability is a fluid concept that can be used in multiple contexts and can be defined in various ways. In the EU General Data Protection Regulation, it is given the legal status of a data subject right. The key objectives of the right to data portability in the GDPR are privacy, protection of personal data, and data subjects’ control over their data. However, it remains open how these goals materialise through the new-born right. This article suggests four possible ways in which the right to data portability could unfold in the future: (i) establishing control over personal data transfers, (ii) enabling (re)use of personal data, (iii) enabling better understanding of data flows, and (iv) facilitating equality and allowing the free development of personality. Data portability could increase transparency of data processing and could allow data subjects to control their online identities. It could also be instrumental in enhancing other rights and principles, such as equality. However, the provision on data portability in the GDPR faces many legal and practical constraints. The prospects of the right will depend on regulatory interpretation and interactions with other legal areas.
topic portability
GDPR
privacy
data protection
big dataPersonal data
Personal data
big data
url https://script-ed.org/?p=3542
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