There has to be a source (transmitter), a destination (receiver), and the means to convert and utilize the data (peripheral devices and whatnot) if, in fact this is what's being transmitted.
Computer model:
"source (transmitter)"= push of "L" on keyboard [this is not data by the way]causes stress on a piezoelectric device, generating current which follows a path leading to
"means to convert and utilize the data" = processor which receives incoming electrons, generates and steers more electrons to specific transistors in the RAM for data storage and other electrons to a processor that sends electrons to specific sites in a LCD display, causing certain pixels to turn black which
"destination (receiver)"= leads to limited photon emission very locally and is detected by an optoelectric device (human eye)
Brain model:
"source (transmitter)"= external stimuli [this is not data yet]
"means to convert and utilize the data" = processed by cerebral cortex and stored as data in the form of synapses within neurons where the data can be
"destination (receiver)"= accesses and shared with other parts of the brain and networked to define working internal models of reality and sense of self, internal monologue, mental images, etc. ..
In either model, "data" doesn't exist until external signals are detected and transfered to a processor that can interpret/store such signals as something meaningful (data). RAM and brains work the same way. Get rid of the electrons/synapse, the data is gone. What brings data into being is the prescence of transistors/neurons and the ability to organize external signals.
Take away the source of electrons (pull the plug) and the electrons flow to ground (lowest voltage potential).
Take away the ability to generate electronic pulses between neurons (oxygen starvation) and the cells die permanently.
Unless of course if consciousness is "broadcast" from some source other than the brain.
For your version to work, you require consciousness/data to be formulated first, then transmitted into the brain through some means other than the senses that connect to the cerebral cortex.
You assume this repeatedly with no basis except metaphors. The two models I describe HAPPEN. If you'd like to address a point of contention, please do so.