The Isle is the first jurisdiction in the world to establish a legal framework enabling governed data assets to be formally recognised within the law.
At a glance
Who: Department of Infrastructure, Western Cape Government, South Africa; Bentley Systems.
What: The Department of Infrastructure is working with Bentley to implement the AI-powered Blyncsy technology across sections of the provincial road network.
Why: To take a smarter, more proactive approach to monitoring critical roadway infrastructure.
Where: The technology will monitor approximately 5,000km of provincial roadway on the Western Cape.
The Isle of Man’s landmark Data Asset Foundations legislation has officially received Royal Assent. It brings into law the world’s first statutory framework enabling governed data assets to be formally recognised within law and managed within a clear legal structure.
Royal Assent is a major milestone for the programme, enabling the next phase of implementation activity to move forward, including development of the Data Asset Register, supporting regulations and the wider systems needed to operate the framework in practice.
A central component of the framework is the development of the world’s first statutory Data Asset Register, which will provide the operational mechanism through which recognised data assets can be recorded, classified and overseen. Consultation activity on the Data Asset Register and Registrar model has already taken place, with industry feedback now helping shape the next phase of regulations and operational guidance.
The Isle of Man is now moving toward implementation of something that has not previously existed anywhere in the world: a regulated operational framework for governed data assets.
“Many organisations already recognise data as a major business asset but have lacked the legal certainty needed to use it with confidence. That’s exactly what this new legislation enables”
The framework is designed to help provide greater legal certainty around how governed data assets can be controlled, shared and commercialised, supporting more trusted and scalable approaches to collaboration and value creation.
Designed for data-rich organisations across sectors including healthcare, finance, retail and digital services, the framework aims to support new commercial opportunities, trusted collaboration models and future investment across the emerging global data economy.
“Many organisations already recognise data as a major business asset but have lacked the legal certainty needed to use it with confidence. That’s exactly what this new legislation enables,” said Aga Strandskov, head of data strategy at Digital Isle of Man. “The focus now turns to building the wider ecosystem, operational capability and practical implementation needed to support the next phase of the programme. The Register, supporting regulations and operational infrastructure are all active workstreams already progressing at pace.
“For businesses, this creates real commercial opportunities that have previously been difficult to support within existing legal and operational models, from governed AI training datasets and trusted cross-organisational collaboration through to new approaches around data-sharing, financing and value creation.”
The legislation forms part of the Isle of Man’s broader ambition to position itself at the forefront of the emerging global data economy and reinforce its reputation as a trusted jurisdiction for innovation and digital business.
Digital Isle of Man has worked alongside the EDM Association, EDM Association (the world’s largest industry association dedicated to advancing trusted data, analytics and technology standards), local industry stakeholders and international partners throughout development of the framework, drawing on global expertise and best practice in trusted data governance.
“The Isle of Man taking this step reflects a growing shift towards more mature and scalable approaches to trusted data governance that support both innovation and accountability”
John Bottega, President at EDM Association, said: “Globally, organisations are increasingly looking for clearer structures around how valuable data can be governed, shared and used responsibly.
“The Isle of Man taking this step reflects a growing shift towards more mature and scalable approaches to trusted data governance that support both innovation and accountability.”
The next phase of the programme will focus on progressing the secondary regulations, operational infrastructure and wider implementation activity needed to support the framework in practice.
Organisations interested in exploring how Data Asset Foundations can be applied to their business can find out more and register their interest at Digital Isle of Man.
Digital Isle of Man acts as a conduit between industry and government, helping tech companies at all stages of their business journey, with expert-led assistance every step of the way.