The cost of such breaches is expected to top $5 trillion by 2024. This undesirable projection is one that experts warn that Africa, just like the rest of the world, must objectively look into and attempt to stay ahead of.
This week, as the world celebrated Safer Internet Day, it was impossible to avoid statistical realities around internet penetration in Africa, which currently stands at 22%.
Although significantly behind the rest of the world, 22% of 1.4 billion Africans is a massive number of people whose everyday lives which include; financial transactions, shopping, movement using maps, connecting with friends, family and associates, work, entertainment, among a host of many other activities, are shaped by the internet.
While all these activities involve data sharing, it also means – according to a UN Chronicle article – that our personal information is increasingly open to attack and misuse. The level of attacks we are prone to unfortunately are sometimes institutional in structure. Brad Smith, president and chief legal officer at Microsoft in 2017 openly called out this situation during the 10th Edition of the Geneva Lecture Series.
Maintained by Mr. Smith also, and agreeable to many of us in ICT leadership, including at the African Telecommunications Union (ATU); is that the future of cybersecurity on the internet will require many steps by many people. Strengthening levels of cooperation by various players in this ecosystem, without neglecting the contribution of individuals, is our best chance forward.
Although statistically, the virtual world of the Internet still takes second place to the real world as the place to accomplish daily tasks or enjoy recreation, the two are not in competition, and similar to how we strive to ensure security in the real world, the cyberspace must be accorded the same effort if not more. This is more so the case since over the past decade, African countries, working with various local and international partners, have made great strides in making the internet accessible for the continent’s 1.4 billion people.
Consequently, next year, just as last year and other years before, on 8th February the world will certainly mark another of the many Safer Internet Days to come. The question that must ring in our minds should revolve around the day’s engagement, and one must wonder whether we will still be discussing the possibilities of progress, or we will be evaluating progress made. In this regard, cybersecurity, in the opinion of the African Telecommunications Union, is a subject that needs less words and more action. After all, it carries the burden of our lives.
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