EU Eyes New Data Control Rules November 27, 2020
The
amount of data generated by public bodies,
businesses and citizens is constantly growing. It is
expected to multiply by five between 2018 and 2025.
These new rules will allow this data to be harnessed
and will pave the way
for sectoral European data spaces to benefit society,
citizens and companies. In the Commission's
data
strategy
of February this year, nine such data spaces have
been proposed, ranging from industry to energy, and
from health to the European Green Deal. They will, for example, contribute to the
green transition by improving the management of
energy consumption, make delivery of personalised
medicine a reality, and facilitate access to public
services.
Executive Vice-President for A Europe Fit for the
Digital Age, Margrethe Vestager,
said: “You don't have to share all data. But if
you do and data is sensitive you should be able to
do in a manner where data can be trusted and
protected. We want to give business and citizens the
tools to stay in control of data. And to build trust
that data is handled in line with European values
and fundamental rights.”
Commissioner for Internal Market, Thierry
Breton, said: “We are defining today a
truly European approach to data sharing. Our new
regulation will enable trust and facilitate the flow
of data across sectors and Member States while
putting all those who generate data in the driving
seat. With the ever-growing role of industrial data
in our economy, Europe needs an open yet sovereign
Single Market for data. Flanked by the right
investments and key infrastructures, our regulation
will help Europe become the world's number one data
continent.”
Delivering on the announcement in the
data
strategy,
the Regulation will create the basis for a new
European way of data governance that is in line with
EU values and principles, such as personal data
protection (GDPR), consumer protection and
competition rules. It offers an alternative model to
the data-handling practices of the big tech
platforms, which can acquire a high degree of market
power because of their business models that imply
control of large amounts of data. This new approach
proposes a model based on the neutrality and
transparency of data intermediaries, which are
organisers of data sharing or pooling, to increase
trust. To ensure this neutrality, the data-sharing
intermediary cannot deal in the data on its own
account (e.g. by selling it to another company or
using it to develop their own product based on this
data) and will have to comply with strict
requirements. The
Regulation includes:
More
dedicated proposals on data spaces are expected to
follow in 2021, complemented by a Data Act to foster
data sharing among businesses, and between business
and governments.
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