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Tech giants, including Facebook, promise to facilitate data portability
San Francisco – Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Twitter have decided to collaborate to facilitate the portability of personal data of Internet users who want to transfer their data from one service to another, they announced Friday.
This project called "Data Transfer Project" aims to "help users to move their personal data safely and smoothly between service providers "Microsoft says in a blog post, while technology groups are regularly criticized about their use of personal data of their users.
Currently, some online services and social networks, including Facebook, already allow to download to his computer all his data: photos, messages, contacts, various documents etc.
But it is not necessarily obvious or even possible to re-download these files to another service because they are not technologically compatible, making de facto impossible to leave a service or a social network to choose another without lose all his data.
Hence the idea with "Data Transfer Project" to create a common open-source platform that allows the services to transfer data directly via a compatible digital format, explain the groups in the tickets. blogs, calling other companies to join this initiative.
The "General Data Protection Regulation" (GDPR), which entered into force in the European Union in May, provides, among other new rights for Internet users, the principle of "data portability".
Personal data and their use by technology companies are a particularly sensitive topic, especially since the Cambridge Analytica scandal that broke out in March around Facebook user data.
These groups multiply advertisements and initiatives supposed to show their will to be more transparent.
jc / Dt / pb
(© AFP / July 20, 2018 20h07) <! –
(AFP / 20.07.2018 22:08)
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