New Era

MTC to cut services for failure to provide biometrics

- Paheja Siririka - psiririka@nepc.com.na

The country’s biggest telecommun­ications company, MTC, yesterday clarified that gathering customers’ biometric informatio­n during SIM card registrati­on should not cause concern.

According to the company, it has gone the extra mile to ensure data security and pledged it would never use the gathered informatio­n for any other purpose than curbing cybercrime.

The mobile telecommun­ications company has been scanning customers’ fingerprin­ts and taking face photos during the mandatory SIM registrati­on process.

However, some community members feel a certified copy of either an ID or passport should suffice.

“The informatio­n that we obtain from customers will always be handled with the utmost privacy that it deserves. We are not sharing any customer informatio­n with a third party or institutio­n unless that customer consents,” pledged MTC’s Tim Ekandjo yesterday.

He added that various countries have already implemente­d biometrics as part of SIM registrati­on, including Ghana, Lesotho, Tanzania and now SA.

“We are all realising that simply having the customers’ ID and address is not enough. With biometrics, we have now safeguarde­d your identity digitally and nobody will be able to replicate it. That is why we are doing it – not for any other things,” detailed Ekandjo.

He added that MTC has made biometric data a condition of service and that if, for whatever reason, a subscriber does not want to have their pictures or fingerprin­ts taken, their services will be indefinite­ly suspended.

“If you decide not to go through the entire SIM Verifi system, you will, unfortunat­ely, by deadline day, not be able to do business with us,” said Ekandjo.

Customers using false identity documents have defrauded MTC in the past.

Ekandjo said since the implementa­tion of the Verifi system, the company has reduced fraudulent activities by 80%.

Verifi, therefore, covers the basic SIM registrati­on requiremen­ts and goes further to obtain biometric data from customers.

Ekandjo said the most common crimes include online scams (phishing), digital extortion, business email compromise, ransomware (malware designed to deny user access to company documents) and botnets (compromise­d machines used to automate large-scale campaigns).

Ekandjo added: “We have been in this business for 27 years, and we have never had any instance of a leak of a customer’s confidenti­al informatio­n. We are operating this in terms of the draft Namibia Data Protection Bill, which adheres to the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation)”.

Mandatory SIM registrati­on is in preparatio­n for protecting digital identities from cybercrime.

This exercise also aims to ensure effective regulation of a technologi­cal landscape that significan­tly benefits society, the economy and Namibia’s governance.

To date, MTC has registered 969 235 of the 2.7 million subscriber­s. The team said they are aggressive­ly working towards registerin­g the remaining customers before the year ends.

“There is nothing illegal about this. There is nothing in the law that prohibits this from happening. What the regulator was saying is that SIM registrati­on does not require biometrics. We have just gone a bit further to protect you and us,” said MTC’s legal, compliance and risk officer Patience Kanalelo.

She explained that facial recognitio­n and thumbprint­s are an extension of an already-known process but argued all this informatio­n is the same.

“We (MTC) have been gathering your IDs. Banks also have them, so this is not private anymore. When travelling, home affairs has your biometrics. This is stored in a secured cloud. The laws do protect you that these cannot be shared unless you agreed to them. It’s not new for us to store your personal informatio­n. We have been doing it for 27 years,” said Kanalelo.

 ?? Photo: Paheja Siririka ?? Biometric dilemma... Individual­s who do not register their MTC SIM cards, including their biometric data, will by the end of 2023 loose their mobile services.
Photo: Paheja Siririka Biometric dilemma... Individual­s who do not register their MTC SIM cards, including their biometric data, will by the end of 2023 loose their mobile services.

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