European Union The right to data portability was laid down in the European Union's
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) passed in April 2016. The regulation applies to data processors, whether inside or outside the EU, if they process data on individuals who are physically located within an EU member state. Earlier the
European Data Protection Supervisor had stated that data portability could "let individuals benefit from the value created by the use of their personal data". The European-level
Article 29 Data Protection Working Party held a consultation on this in English lasting until the end of January 2017. Their guidelines and FAQ on the right to data portability contain this call for action: The French national data supervisor
CNIL hosted a discussion in French. Current participants offer opinions on how the legislation provides few benefits for companies, but many for users. In April 2017, new guidelines were published on the Article 29 Working Party website. In late 2019 the Data Governance Act was published by the Commission. In 2021 researchers, many of them French and Finnish, published a 46-page report covering the state-of-the-art. In 2022 the European Commission published the Data Act. Although the United Kingdom
voted to withdraw from the EU, it intends to incorporate much of the GDPR in its own legislation, which will include data portability, as "...the GDPR itself contains some noteworthy innovations – for instance… the introduction of a new right to data portability". In November at the Internet Governance Forum 2019 in Berlin panelists reported that Article 20 GDPR is not actionable, neither legally nor technically. In the UK—ironically post-Brexit—researchers are monitoring developments. Germany has called to strengthen the European Union's right to data portability using competition law. A commission was set up for the purpose of proposing improvements.
Switzerland Likewise, in Switzerland, a nation-state that is related to the EU only on a bilateral basis and as an
EFTA member state, there has been a trend moving in the same direction. The Swiss view was officially published in March 2018 (as a document in PDF). An association proposed to have a right to data portability anchored in the constitution of the Swiss Confederation. A law was passed that includes data portability; as described here in German and here in French. The association partners with a cooperative called MIDATA.coop, which will offer users a place to store their data. A second association has issued its guideline on the topic. Over the longer term, the Swiss may have to consider that data portability is in the GDPR. Given that the GDPR will raise compliance costs for EU-based companies, it is unlikely that the EU would tolerate a situation with third-party countries in which Swiss companies would not be held to the same standard in order to keep competition fair. The legal terms involved are adequacy and reciprocity.
United States: California The
State of California has a Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) of 2018, which introduces data portability to the USA.
United States: Utah The
State of Utah is the first state to pass the Digital Choice Act, which, among other provisions, requires social media service providers of any size to provide data portability export (but not import) starting July 2026.
Canada Canada anticipates a law in that it shows Transparency, Portability and Interoperability as Principle No. 4 of its Digital Charter.
India Data portability is included in the
Personal Data Protection Bill 2019 about to become law as section 26 in chapter VI.
Brazil Data portability is included in the Privacy law#Brazil as its Article 18.
Australia In Australia, a
Consumer Data Right has been proposed.
Thailand Data portability is included in the new law.
Kenya A right to data portability is enshrined in the new data protection law under clause 34. However, the intentions behind the new law, its enforcement and relation to the government's new
Identity management system have already been contested. ==Requirements for effective data interoperability==