2024-2025 Global AI Trends Guide
The Data Act aims, amongst its main objectives, to enable customers of data processing services to switch between providers offering equivalent services, as well as to make use of multiple services from different providers simultaneously. The Act looks for the removal of commercial, technical, contractual and organizational obstacles for this purpose and establishes a set of organizational and technical measures to facilitate these processes (apart from the general obligation to cooperate in good faith).
The now enacted Data Act reflects EU’s concern about the lack of competitiveness and the burdens that customers of data processing services have to face to switch to another provider, introducing the right of switching (including to on-premise ICT infrastructures). The intention of the legislator is to enable the change of provider while extracting all exportable data and to restore the functionalities of the service with the new provider without any impediments (including, in the future, charges).
Similar principles should apply when a customer wants to make use of several data processing providers simultaneously while ensuring the continuity of service and the interoperability, without undue obstacles and data transfer costs.
Note that the Data Act will be enforceable as a general rule as from 12 September 2025.
Data processing services are defined by the Data Act as a digital service that is provided to a customer and that enables ubiquitous and on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable, scalable and elastic computing resources of a centralised, distributed or highly distributed nature that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction. Going a bit deeper into this definition in accordance with Recital 80:
This broad definition includes a wide spectrum of cloud and edge services, ranging from simple data storage services to highly customized software-as-a-service solutions. Among others, IaaS (infrastructure-as-a-service), PaaS (platform-as-a-service) and SaaS (software-as-a-service) are expressly indicated.
Data Act excludes from some obligations those data processing services that are majorly custom-built for the customer (e.g. a specific software tailored to the organization's requirements) and which are not offered at a broad commercial scale via provider´s service catalogue.
Data Act establishes that to facilitate switching between data processing services, all parties involved (both source and destination) should collaborate in good faith with a view to enabling an effective switching process, maintaining the continuity and the secure and timely transfer of necessary data in a commonly used, machine readable format.
The Data Act seems to differentiate between three different scenarios, even though, as we explain below, its applicability in practice is not crystal-clear:
There seems to be some inconsistences and lack of clarity about whether the right to switch to a different provider applies only when the source provider and the destination provider perform the same type of service. The definition of “switching” refers to “data processing service of the same service type, or other service”. However, the general right to switch to a different provider (art. 23 of the Data Act) states that, when allowing customers to switch to a data processing service covering the same type of service, the source providers shall take the measures provided for in the following articles. Finally, art. 30 specifically refers in some of its paragraphs to the "same type of service", suggesting that switching can be carried out in relation to other types of services, different then the initial service subject to switch.
We will have to keep an eye on future guidelines to confirm that the right to switch to a different data processing provider applies also to other types of service different then the source services.
The Data Act sets out the minimum content that must necessarily be included in such contracts with customers, such as (i) clauses allowing the customer to switch to another provider or to port all exportable data and digital assets to an on-premise ICT infrastructure, within a maximum period of 30 calendar days; or (ii) a detailed specification of all data and digital assets that can be ported during the switching process, including, at a minimum, all exportable data. It also establishes that rights relating to the termination of such contracts, including those introduced by Directive (EU) 2019/770 (we have published another post about this Directive, available here) on certain aspects concerning contracts for the supply of digital content and digital services.
Additionally, minimum information must be available on the websites of data processing services providers (which must be up to date): (i) the jurisdiction to which the ICT infrastructure is subject; and (ii) a general description of the technical, organizational and contractual measures adopted in order to prevent international governmental access to or transfer of non-personal data held in the Union and which would create a conflict with Union law or the national law of the relevant Member State. The website must be indicated in the due contract.
The Data Act also imposes a series of technical obligations aimed at ensuring the interoperability of their services, so that once the switching is completed the customer can benefit from functionally equivalent services.
These technical obligations (excluding providers of resources limited to infrastructural elements without access to operating services, software and applications that are stored, otherwise processed, or deployed on those infrastructural elements) include making open interfaces available to an equal extent to all their customers and the concerned destination providers.
Speaking of compensation for companies' efforts, the Data Act’s main aim is for customers to be able to change of provider without any charges. For this purpose, it provides for a transitional period during which providers may charge fees to their customers for the processing of switching services (with limits). This period ends on 12 January 2027. Standard subscription fees and charges (i.e. anything that goes beyond the provider’s switching obligations ) shall not be considered switching charges.
Authored by Santiago de Ampuero, Joanna Rozanska, Julia Sáenz and Juan Ramón Robles