This article considers the danger of monopoly interests in data engendered by the European legal frameworks which protect the gathering and storing of information, illustrated by the intrepretation of the Court of Appeal in the United Kingdom of new sui generis database rights in British Horseracing Board v. William Hill (2001). This article also seeks to demonstrate that this is a wider issue. Paradoxically, technology both facilitates wide access to digitally stored information and gives right owners control over that access. This control is protected both by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Copyright in the Information Society Directive. Competition proceedings do not provide access to a non-competitor. Alternatives lie in co...