Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja
A United Kingdom-based information
technology expert, Mr. Davies Bamigboye, has raised the alarm over the
ease at which data belonging to Nigerians are sold and harvested
illegally.
The expert who stated this while
speaking with journalists in Abuja, also blamed the failure of the
National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), in enforcing
the Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) since January 2019, for
the brewing security crisis.
Bamigboye, who is the Chief Executive
Officer of Conceptsworld Academy, UK, explained that lack of data
protection laws in Nigeria had exposed Nigerians to grave risk.
While he hailed NITDA for taking a bold
step in constituting the Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) in
January 2019, he, however, expressed dissatisfaction about the agency’s
inability to do enough to publicise the law and communicate deadlines to
all organisations across the nation.
Bamigboye stated: “Public and private
institutions will continue to process Nigerian citizens data through
third parties especially where due diligence has not been undertaken,
contractual clauses are not favourable to Nigerians, data loss
prevention methods have not been verified, or where such information is
transferred outside of Nigeria.
“Children’s data (e.g pictures) for
example, will continue to be used to support advertisements that aim to
seek aids from foreign countries by NGOs.
“There is no reason to believe that such NGOs seek approval from Nigerian regulators before using these pictures.
“Even, if they (the NGO) had wanted to
seek permission, there was no designated body in Nigeria which could
serve as the Information Commissioner Office (ICO) that such requests
should be directed to.”
According to him, “The current monitoring of Nigerians by other Nations and large organisations will continue to go unchecked.
According to him, “The current monitoring of Nigerians by other Nations and large organisations will continue to go unchecked.
“For example, multinationals possessing
location data of Nigerians gleaned from smartphones, laptops, iPad,
smartwatches, smart TVs and other intelligent devices will continue to
exploit this information for their own advantage to profile our
citizens.
“The level of access that these
organisations have means that the privacy rights of Nigerians are at
risk. It means that information in the hands of private companies can be
used to identify where an individual Nigerian is, where they have been,
who they have been in contact with, and who was situated around them.
“This has a major impact on the privacy and security of Nigerians,” he said.
“This has a major impact on the privacy and security of Nigerians,” he said.
He alleged that the risk of selling of
Nigerian citizens’ data for nefarious activities would continue,
especially as it pertains to children for sex-trafficking among others,
adding that it will decimate the future of our country, if unabated.
He further said by not enforcing the
NDPR means that legitimate organisations and criminal gangs can continue
to target Nigeria with the sole purpose of trawling up information that
could be used in a criminal or discriminatory manner.
“Without clear breach notification and
process of seeking redress, when a breach occurs or indeed a crime is
initiated, the lack of effective NDPR coupled with a judiciary with
limited cyber awareness capabilities makes it hard to prosecute alleged
offenders.
“The need to be able to prosecute and
fine foreign companies for me sit on the top list of what needs to be
addressed as soon as possible. If you compare Nigeria to other countries
with effective data protection regulation, foreign companies are
careful to exploit the privacy of their citizens,” he added.
He further expressed concern that if
NITDA does not proactively push the initiative, it would further erode
business confidence in Nigeria and international organisations would
perceive the nation as formulating a policy with the intent of “looking”
the part but not serious about carrying out its mandate.
Bamigboye, stressed that the Buhari’s administration could pride
itself in the history of Nigeria as being the administration that
facilitated this trillion-dollar industry.
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