A woman accesses her Facebook account. Social media platforms such
Facebook and Twitter were cited as the second biggest sources of
distrust of the internet, only second to cyber criminals. PHOTO |
COURTESY
Kenyans are less troubled about the security of personal data
posted on internet, a global survey shows, implying they could be an
easy target for cyber criminals.
Only four in every 10
internet users in Kenya are concerned about their privacy online, a new
report by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD) Wednesday shows.
This is the lowest level in
the world according to the report and ranks poorly against the global
average of eight in every 10 users.
“While there
appears to be increasing concerns about data privacy and online security
around the world, there is somewhat a ‘data privacy paradox’, as users
continue to give away personal data and thus their privacy in exchange
for different services,” says UNCTAD Digital Economy report published
last (Wednesday) evening.
“The lowest level of concern was noted in Kenya at 44 per cent.”
DISTRUST
Kenya does not have a data protection law, something that has
made citizens suspicious of the State’s data collection efforts such as
recent biometric (Huduma Namba) registration and national census.
UNCTAD’s
conclusion is based on findings of the 2019 Global Survey on Internet
Security and Trust on 25,229 internet users in select 25 countries in
the world between December 21, 2018, and February 10, 2019.
Social
media platforms such Facebook and Twitter were cited as the second
biggest sources of distrust of the internet, only second to cyber
criminals.
“Many of these services (internet searches,
social media and online reservations) are offered by various platforms
free of charge or on a take-it-or-leave-it basis,” UNCTAD says.
“This
situation has been described as someone who is not paying for a
product, becomes the product. Therefore, paradoxically, privacy becomes
part of the economy.”
CYBER ATTACKS
Communications
Authority of Kenya (CA), the telecoms sector regulator, said in July
Kenyan firms were hit by about 11.2 million cyber threats between
January and March this year, a 10.1 percent rise compared with a year
earlier.
CA’s cyber intelligence team consequently
issued 14,078 cyber threat advisories to the affected organisations, an
increase from the 12,138 alerts during the previous period.
Cyber
security attacks are estimated to have cost Kenya’s economy about
Sh29.5 billion in 2018, a 39.15 percent jump from Sh21.2 billion in
2017, tech consultancy firm, Serianu, said in May.
Kenya,
South Africa, Nigeria and Egypt were the only countries in Africa
selected for the survey conducted by Paris-headquartered global research
firm, Ipsos, on behalf of the Centre for International Governance
Innovation (CIGI) in partnership with UNCTAD and the Internet Society.
This story was first published by theBusiness Daily.
No comments :
Post a Comment