Data Transfer Project

The Data Transfer Project (DTP) is an open-source initiative which features data portability between multiple online platforms.[2][3] The project was launched and introduced by Google on July 20, 2018, and has currently partnered with Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter,[4][5] and Apple.[6]

Data Transfer Project
Commercial?No
Type of projectData portability
FounderGoogle
Established20 July 2018 (2018-07-20)
StatusActive
Websitedatatransferproject.dev
DTP software
Developer(s)DTP community members
Stable release
0.3.49[1] / 8 December 2020 (8 December 2020)
Repositoryhttps://github.com/google/data-transfer-project
Written inJava
LicenseApache 2.0

Background

The project was formed by the Google Data Liberation Front in 2017, hoping to provide a platform that could allow individuals to move their online data between different platforms, without the need of downloading and re-uploading data.[7][4] The ecosystem is achieved by extracting different files through various available APIs released by online platforms and translating such codes so that it could be compatible with other platforms.[8][9]

On July 20, 2018, the joint project was announced. The source code, which has been uploaded to GitHub, was mainly written by Google and Microsoft's engineers.[10]

On July 30, 2019, Apple announced that it will be joining the project, allowing data portability in iCloud.[6]

Implementations

On 2 December 2019, Facebook announced the ability for users to transfer photos and videos to Google Photos, originally available only in a select few countries. This expanded over the following months, and on 4 June 2019 Facebook announced full global availability of this feature.[11]

See more

References


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