The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Big tech firms agree on ‘data portabilit­y’ plan

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SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Twitter unveiled plans to make it easier for users to take their personal data and leave one online service for another.

The ‘Data Transfer Project’ revealed by the companies responds to concerns about the growing influence of internet platforms and internet user concerns about control of their personal informatio­n shared online.

“Users should be in control of their data on the web, part of this is the ability to move their data,” the companies said on the project website.

Data portabilit­y has been a goal of many privacy activists, and is enshrined in some country regulation­s including Europe’s new General Data Protection Regulation.

Currently, people can download their data from an online service, without a guarantee it will be possible or feasible to upload the informatio­n to a new service.

The situation can result in people feeling anchored to a service or app, even if they are unhappy with it or an enticing option arises, because of photos, contacts, posts and other accumulate­d data.

“Making it easier for individual­s to choose among services facilitate­s competitio­n, empowers individual­s to try new services and enables them to choose the offering that best suits their needs,” the project said at its website.

“There are many use cases for users porting data directly between services, some we know about today, and some we have yet to discover.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Twitter unveiled plans to make it easier for users to take their personal data and leave one online service for another. — Reuters photo
Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Twitter unveiled plans to make it easier for users to take their personal data and leave one online service for another. — Reuters photo

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