z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Taking It With You: Platform Barriers to Entry and the Limits of Data Portability
Author(s) -
Gabriel Nicholas
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
michigan technology law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2688-5484
pISSN - 2688-4941
DOI - 10.36645/mtlr.27.2.taking
Subject(s) - software portability , panacea (medicine) , barriers to entry , interoperability , competition (biology) , implementation , industrial organization , computer science , business , computer security , world wide web , market structure , software engineering , medicine , ecology , alternative medicine , pathology , biology , programming language
Policymakers are faced with a vexing problem: how to increase competition in a tech sector dominated by a few giants. One answer proposed and adopted by regulators in the United States and abroad is to require large platforms to allow consumers to move their data from one platform to another, an approach known as data portability. Facebook, Google, Apple, and other major tech companies have enthusiastically supported data portability through their own technical and political initiatives. Today, data portability has taken hold as one of the go-to solutions to address the tech industry’s competition concerns.This Article argues that despite the regulatory and industry alliance around data portability, today’s public and private data portability efforts are unlikely to meaningfully improve competition. This is because current portability efforts focus solely on mitigating switching costs, ignoring other barriers to entry that may preclude new platforms from entering the market. The technical implementations of data portability encouraged by existing regulation—namely one-off exports and API interoperability—address switching costs but not the barriers of network effects, unique data access, and economies of scale. This Article proposes a new approach to better alleviate these other barriers called collective portability, which would allow groups of users to coordinate to transfer data they share to a new platform, all at once. Although not a panacea, collective portability would provide a meaningful alternative to existing approaches while avoiding both the privacy/competitive utility trade off of one-off exports and the hard-to regulate power dynamics of APIs.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here