Skip to content
Tech

Why does data I export from one platform mean nothing to the next one?

80

Opportunity

The EU Data Act (effective September 2025) and the Digital Markets Act both require platforms to let users export their data in a machine-readable interoperable format, but neither law requires that a receiving platform can understand what the data means. A JSON dump of your project history, notes, or accounting entries is syntactically valid but semantically opaque to any competing tool because every platform has its own data model with different field names, relationships, and units. The Data Transfer Initiative's portability compendium identifies this semantic layer as the central unresolved gap: format standardization is tractable but meaning standardization is not. The EU's Data Interoperability Rolling Plan for 2026 acknowledges the need for semantic standards but schedules implementation years out, leaving the current wave of DMA compliance exercises producing exports that technic

Why it matters

A shared semantic layer for common data types is what turns the legal right to portability into a real ability to switch platforms, and competition in software markets only becomes meaningful when switching costs actually fall.

How I score the opportunity

The Opportunity Score is my own read, not a measurement: how much it hurts, how often it bites, and how little exists to solve it today. Higher means I think it is more worth building.

Severity7/10

How much pain it causes when it shows up.

Frequency8/10

How often people actually run into it.

Whitespace8/10

How little good tooling exists for it today.

More problems worth solving