Realising the Right to Data Portability for the Domestic Internet of Things
Lachlan Urquhart, Neelima Sailaja, Derek McAuley

TL;DR
This paper explores the legal, technical, and regulatory aspects of implementing the right to data portability within the Internet of Things, emphasizing privacy by design and practical challenges.
Contribution
It provides an in-depth analysis of the legal requirements, technical solutions, and barriers for realizing data portability rights in IoT environments.
Findings
Legal requirements for data portability in IoT are complex and evolving.
Technical architectures can support increased transparency and user control.
Barriers include legal limitations, technical complexity, and business model challenges.
Abstract
There is an increasing role for the IT design community to play in regulation of emerging IT. Article 25 of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) 2016 puts this on a strict legal basis by establishing the need for information privacy by design and default (PbD) for personal data-driven technologies. Against this backdrop, we examine legal, commercial and technical perspectives around the newly created legal right to data portability (RTDP) in GDPR. We are motivated by a pressing need to address regulatory challenges stemming from the Internet of Things (IoT). We need to find channels to support the protection of these new legal rights for users in practice. In Part I we introduce the internet of things and information PbD in more detail. We briefly consider regulatory challenges posed by the IoT and the nature and practical challenges surrounding the regulatory response of…
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