1 / 10

“ Why the Right to Data Portability Likely Reduces Consumer Welfare:

“ Why the Right to Data Portability Likely Reduces Consumer Welfare: Antitrust and Privacy Critique ” Peter Swire Moritz College of Law Yale Law School Information Society Project November 12, 2012. The Topic. Right to Data Portability (RDP) A new right

Download Presentation

“ Why the Right to Data Portability Likely Reduces Consumer Welfare:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “Why the Right to Data Portability Likely Reduces Consumer Welfare: Antitrust and Privacy Critique” Peter Swire Moritz College of Law Yale Law School Information Society ProjectNovember 12, 2012

  2. The Topic • Right to Data Portability (RDP) • A new right • In draft EU Data Protection Regulation • Applies in EU and to all software/services with EU users • Will become a “fundamental” right, as defined further by EU Commission over time • Portability sounds good, but no critique to date

  3. Why Portability is Attractive • You post “your” data to the cloud, a social network, an app • High switching costs: manual downloads are slow, clumsy • Avoid lock-in: you can switch to a new social network or cloud provider • Openness is good: the second service can innovate and provide you with great new services • Right to informational self-determination: it’s “your” data

  4. RDP Requirements • Article 18 of draft Regulation: • Individual can download all “personal data” if in standard format • “Personal data” broad • Also, individual can transfer personal data and other info provided by consumer to 2d service • “Without hindrance” • Service must create “Export-Import Module” to ensure portability • No similar law tried elsewhere

  5. Assessing RDP • Idea of data portability very attractive • Antitrust perspective • RDP likely reduces consumer welfare • Privacy and human rights perspective • Whence this new human right? • Risk to existing privacy/security rights • Interop/openness often desirable • Previously, law has prevented first party from blocking second party • This is unprecedented mandate on how all software is written by first party

  6. Antitrust Concerns • Antitrust goal to max consumer welfare • Concerns with Art. 18: • Applies to all online services, even start-ups • No market power requirement • Fails to consider efficiencies of what software companies include in offerings • Interoperability difficult to achieve • Cost of creating EIM • Dynamic efficiency & incentives to compete for the market

  7. Antitrust (cont.) • In essence a per se rule requiring portability • Refusal to deal – lots of company discretion • Tying and Microsoft – rule of reason • They require showing of market power before regulating • Conclusion on antitrust • Differs greatly from consumer welfare goal in US and EU antitrust analysis

  8. Privacy & Data Portablity • EU idea – fundamental right to autonomy, individuals should control “their” data • Responses/questions: • A human right to “data portability”? • Created in statutory/reg process • Reasoning from autonomy without the state interest/nexus analysis of facts of US 1st Am analysis • Applies globally, with discretion in EU enforcement

  9. Privacy & Data Portablity • RDP as a privacy regulation? • Yes, is about personal data • But, mostly about lock-in • And, risk to user’s data security • One moment of ID theft away from a lifetime of data

  10. Some Conclusions & Questions • Consumers do benefit from portability, from avoiding lock-in & high switching costs • The rules should learn from antitrust experience with exclusionary practices • Market power, efficiencies, rule of reason • Be cautious about sweeping declaration of a new right, with no experience in practice • Applies to any online services that sell to EU • What to do now? • Jawbone, and major companies have shifted • Look for actual problems, and then act • Great caution in drafting or implementing Art. 18

More Related