After an introduction by the ELI President, Prof Dr Pascal Pichonnaz, Malte Beyer-Katzenberger (Team Leader, Data Policy and Innovation, Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology) briefly presented the Data Act acknowledging that it built on the ALI-ELI Principles for a Data Economy. Among other things, he referred to the relationship between the proposed Regulation with trade secrets, data protection and privacy law, and third-party use of data. In addition, Christiane Wendehorst (ELI Scientific Director and Co-Reporter of the ALI-ELI Principles for a Data Economy) presented the Principles as well as the contents of the ELI Response to the European Commission's Public Consultation on Data Act. She expressed her contentment at the fact that the Principles were taken into consideration by the European Commission and identified some differences that remain between the Principles and the proposed Data Act. Her presentation can be accessed here.
Marc Rotenberg (President, Center for AI and Digital Policy (CAIDP); Adjunct Professor, Georgetown Law) analysed the Data Act from the point of view of privacy and data protection. He stressed the existence of real tension between the ambitions of the Data Act and already existing obligations on data protection. Specifically, he highlighted the difference in language between the Data Act and the GDPR. Ioana Hreninciuc (Chief Product Officer, Homa Games) delivered reflections on the Data Act from a practitioner’s perspective. She welcomed the principles introduced by the Data Act and expressed a wish for them to apply to a broader range of ecosystems in order to prevent big companies from setting rules that can create uneven market situations. Paul Keller (Director of Policy at Open Future) discussed Chapter V of the proposed Data Act and expressed his preference for more ambitious support for business-to-government data sharing. The presentations were followed by a lively Q&A session with participants.
The webinar recording can be viewed below.