Skip to content
  • «
  • 1
  • »

The search returned 2 results.

The Proposed Australian Consumer Right to Access and Use Data: journal article

A European Comparison

Samson Yoseph Esayas, Angela Daly

European Competition and Regulatory Law Review, Volume 2 (2018), Issue 3, Page 187 - 202

This article examines the new Australian consumer Comprehensive right to access and use data, also known as the Consumer Data Right, recently proposed by the Australian Productivity Commission, and adopts a comparative analysis with data protection, competition and consumer developments in the European Union (EU). Firstly, a brief overview is given of the legal context and relevant Big Data developments in Australia. Then, current EU developments, particularly the data portability right under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and recent proposals from the Commission aiming at fostering access and transfer of data including the data producer’s right to use and authorise the data and the portability of non-personal data for professional users are considered. This is followed by an explanation of the Australian Productivity Commission’s proposed Consumer Right to access and use data, before an analysis is conducted to understand the extent to which this proposed right accords with the European situation. Given the coming into force of the GDPR and its extraterritorial reach, and the EU-Australia Free Trade Agreement currently under negotiation, as well as the transnational reach of Big Data and Cloud services, standardisation across the two jurisdictions is desirable. In this regard, the article examines to what extent the recent initiatives contribute to such standardisation and their implications for the extent to which Australia’s legal framework for data may be considered ‘adequate’ by the EU. Keywords: Data Economy, Data Portability, Consumer Data Right, Data Access, GDPR


  • «
  • 1
  • »