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Data Access under the Draft Data Act, Competition Law and the DMA: Opening the Data Treasures for Cowmpetition and Innovation?

Authors :
Schweitzer, Heike
Metzger, Axel
Source :
GRUR International: Journal of European & International IP Law; Apr2023, Vol. 72 Issue 4, p337-356, 20p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

In the ongoing transformation from 'industrial capitalism' towards an 'informational capitalism', one of the core challenges is for the law to design and enforce an appropriate legal framework for access to and use of data. Focusing on access to data generated by the use of products or online services (product and online services usage data), the aim of this paper is to describe and systematize the core elements of this legal framework in the making and to provide some guidance on how it could be further developed. Access by the users of products or online services to the individual-level data that their usage generates must be distinguished from access to bundled individual-level and aggregated data by third parties. With regard to data co-generators' access to individual-level product usage data, the Draft Data Act proposes to create new rights to access that will become part of a new private law infrastructure of data rights. These access rights are granted independently of whether the data holder is dominant. With regard to data co-generators' access to individual-level services usage data, the Digital Markets Act (DMA) establishes rights of access only vis-à-vis gatekeepers within the meaning of the DMA. Third-party undertakings who request access to bundled individual-level or aggregated data can, as of now, only base their claim on Art. 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) and – in the case of search data – on Art. 6(11) DMA. A regulatory approach has been proposed as an alternative. This paper strives to systematize this hodgepodge of approaches and discern the broader principles that can guide the legislature in creating and fleshing out the legal framework for data. Ideally, markets for bundled individual level or aggregated data will emerge based on the rights of data co-generators to access individual-level data. For this to happen, data intermediaries will have to play a larger role and succeed in bundling and marketing such data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26328550
Volume :
72
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
GRUR International: Journal of European & International IP Law
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162875283
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/grurint/ikad012