01 Oct 2021

Release of Data Mobility Infrastructure Sandbox Report

Guest Blog: Ctrl-Shift for techUK's Data Analalytics week #DataWeek

Earlier this year we published the 1st Ctrl-Shift Personal Data Mobility Sandbox report, a significant first step to enable us all to access the substantial economic and social benefits that Personal Data Mobility offers. Building on the individual’s right to data portability, as defined in GDPR, Personal Data Mobility is the market capabilities needed to make data sharing safe, easy and valuable.

We’ve published the report with a compendium of detailed findings, openly published, designed to support anyone seeking to create new value from Personal Data Mobility. 

Here are the main take away from the report: 

  1. The end-to-end process of personal data sharing can be made safe 
  2. Personal Data Mobility can enable valuable new services, and the capabilities already in market mean that progress can be made in developing these. 
  3. However, gaps still exist which require co-ordinated intervention to fully unlock the value of safe Personal Data Mobility and a clear way forward has been mapped to resolve these gaps. 

The first in a series of Personal Data Mobility Sandboxes, we’ve been collaborating over the last 5 months with market leading organisations that represent a range of sectors – Barclays, the BBC, BT, Centrica, Facebook and digi.me, a leading data facilitator. The Personal Data Mobility Infrastructure Sandbox focuses very specifically on the infrastructure needed to safely share data. Addressing this requires collaboration and in addition to these business participants, we have also worked a number of independent observers – the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation, Consumers International, the DCMS, the ICO and the Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton. Their input has been hugely valuable. 

The question we asked ourselves was ‘can you as an individual safely share your data from your existing data sources, with your data facilitator at your behest, and working on your behalf, can the data facilitator make that data available to other organisations who can use it to deliver value for you.’ The answer is a resounding YES. 

Before we get to the meat of what we discovered, let’s ask ourselves why this is so important today? In a post Cambridge Analytica world creating digital trust has become a bit like hunting the snark, just when you thought you’d found happiness, it evaporates before your eyes with new revelations of data loss, data misuse and growing concerns over the influence that data can have over the individuals decisions and lives. And yet for many countries growth in their digital economies is central to economic well-being, and central to that is the use of personal data. There are many experiments being progressed today to create new fairer more transparent ways of sharing data – the Data Transfer ProjectOpen Data Initiative and Data Trusts. Personal Data Mobility is significantly different as it puts the individual firmly in control, able to share data with organisations who provide apps and services that enable them as individuals to make better and better-informed decisions and more easily manage the complexity of their lives.

Over the years Personal Data Mobility it has been a much-discussed option for data sharing in a world where data has in the past been regularly shared without sight or explicit permission from the individual and often with minimal if any value flowing to the individual. Our market analysis for the DCMS (UK Governments Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport) and report published in late 2018 Data Mobility: The Data Portability Growth Opportunity For The UK Economy concluded that Personal Data Mobility can be a major accelerator of innovation and economic growth – creating new forms of value for individuals, businesses and society as a whole. It identified a prize of £27.8bn productivity and efficiency for the UK economy, and a far greater opportunity from recombinant innovation and growth. Being able to make Personal Data Mobility work safely will, we believe, be transformational, creating opportunities to develop new trusted information sharing relationships between individuals and organisations, while providing new opportunities for value. Offering senior leaders, the capabilities to actively pursue agendas for both privacy and growth.

So what have we been doing? The report published today covers this first phase of work and describes the current in-market enabling capabilities for data sharing and importantly defines the gaps that need to be filled for it to be safe and valuable.  To signpost the way forward, it also identifies the gaps that the Data Mobility Infrastructure Sandbox has prioritised for attention in its next phase of work.

Findings and Outcomes

  1. Our primary conclusion is that the end-to-end process of personal data sharing can be made safe.  Much of the infrastructure and capabilities required for safe data sharing already exists.  Significant in this are the services provided by Data Facilitators, in helping individuals share and gain value from their data whilst controlling it securely.
  2. Personal Data Mobility can enable valuable new services, and the capabilities already in the market mean that progress can be made in developing these. This sandbox included a first exploration of how increased Personal Data Mobility can create value.   Working with data innovators, the Sandbox demonstrated how combining multiple data types, made accessible by Personal Data Mobility, can lead to the creation of more valuable services, with increased personalisation, better prediction and more timely interventions.
  3. Critical gaps exist, which require co-ordinated intervention to fully unlock the value of safe Personal Data Mobility.  These fall into the two categories of Governance structures and Integrated end-to-end customer journeys.   
  4. A clear way forward has been defined to address these gaps, based on two streams of activity:
    1. Governance issues of Liability and 3rd Party Validation. Building rigorous frameworks for the development of practical governance solutions, which also embody relevant and effective capabilities currently in market, to achieve rapid progress.
    2. Enabling the integrated end-to-end customer journey for Personal Data Mobility. Making the user experience easy and safe is critical for there to be widespread uptake of Personal Data Mobility services.  This work-stream will focus on the design and technical challenges of enabling people to share their data with minimal effort and risk.  
  5. The Ctrl-Shift Data Mobility Sandbox Programme also includes a series of Data Mobility Value Sandboxes.  Realising value from sharing their personal data will be what drives individuals to use Personal Data Mobility services. The Value Sandboxes will concentrate on the Customer Value Opportunities, which can offer the greatest benefit to individuals and therefore, businesses, society and overall economic growth.

The role of Businesses, Governments and Consumer and Citizen groups

The findings from the first phase of work of the Data Mobility Infrastructure Sandbox reinforce the primary conclusion from our 2018 report, namely that Data Mobility presents a significant opportunity for all parties – individuals, businesses, government and society as a whole. 

Most importantly, Personal Data Mobility has the potential to unlock significant value for Individuals in the form of service enhancements or valuable new services.  However this will only happen if businesses embrace the innovation opportunity that Personal Data Mobility offers.

For Businesses, the opportunity to create value from Personal Data Mobility already exists. The market is still immature, and some data sourcing will be manual.  But participation even in these early stages will deliver valuable learning and accelerate the creation of innovative new services and value as the range of data sources becomes broader and the flow of data becomes more automated. 

Governments have the opportunity to build on existing Personal Data Mobility to accelerate the development of a new growth engine for the digital economy and ensure that the additional value created is fairly shared. They have an important role to play as legislators, data exporters and potentially data importers. Regulators also have an important role to play with sector regulators needing to collaborate to make cross-sector data sharing a reality.  

As guardians of the wellbeing of individuals, Consumer and Citizen groups have an exciting opportunity to collaborate with businesses on how to use Personal Data Mobility to create fairer value exchanges that deliver enhanced benefit to both individuals and the organisations who serve them.

And get prepared for more to follow. This is the first in a programme of Ctrl-Shift Personal Data Mobility Sandboxes designed to develop safe and easy personal data sharing and create new value for individuals, organisations and our societies. We’re hoping to involve all that want to be as no doubt between today and a fully fledge market there will be many iterations. To this end all of the materials from the Sandbox will be made available to the growing community of businesses, research firms, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and academics that are together building the future of Personal Data Mobility. They will be at the forefront of new service creation and the opportunity that in this dynamic new market.

If you are a business that would like to participate in the Data Mobility Sandbox Programme, please get in touch  [email protected]. If you would like to receive updates on our findings, please go to www.ctrl-shift.co.uk and sign up to Market Watch. 

 

Author:

Liz Brandt, CEO, Ctrl-Shift

Ctrl-Shift is a business innovation consultancy that specialises in the strategic value of trusted personal data.  Ctrl-Shift helps organisations realise the unprecedented growth opportunity in personal data by creating strategic, sustainable and practical solutions that deliver new value in peoples’ lives.

 

Katherine Holden

Katherine Holden

Associate Director, Data Analytics, AI and Digital ID, techUK

Katherine joined techUK in May 2018 and currently leads the Data Analytics, AI and Digital ID programme. 

Prior to techUK, Katherine worked as a Policy Advisor at the Government Digital Service (GDS) supporting the digital transformation of UK Government.

Whilst working at the Association of Medical Research Charities (AMRC) Katherine led AMRC’s policy work on patient data, consent and opt-out.    

Katherine has a BSc degree in Biology from the University of Nottingham.

Email:
[email protected]
Phone:
020 7331 2019

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