THISDAY

Facebook, Google, Others Confirm Nigeria’s Requests for User Informatio­n

MTN not transparen­t on informatio­n provided

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Tobi Soniyi

A new report has confirmed what many Nigerians have long suspected to be true: that the federal government is spying on its citizens through the social media and email accounts.

The report titled, “The Growing Trend of African Government’s Requests for User Informatio­n and Content Removal from Internet and Telecoms Companies,” was released last month by the Collaborat­ion on Internatio­nal ICT Policy in East and Southern Africa (CIPESA) establishe­d under the Catalysing Access to Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technologi­es in Africa (CATIA) initiative­s funded by the United Kingdom’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID).

The organisati­on analysed transparen­cy reports released by telecommun­ications and social media companies.

The reports by these companies including Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Twitter and others showed that there has been a surge in African government­s’ requests for user informatio­n.

According to the report, African government­s’ requests are for subscriber­s’ data, content preservati­on, and content removal.

Facebook listed Nigeria, South Africa, Egypt and Sudan

as the African countries that made the highest requests.

The social media giant said that the government of Nigeria had specified the highest number of user informatio­n on its user informatio­n requests with 113 accounts.

South Africa made 32 requests for user accounts, Egypt (31) and Sudan (24).

Facebook said that Nigeria also made requests for content in six user accounts to be preserved.

It said that Nigeria made requests for 96 users’ informatio­n during the second half of 2015, meaning that the requests were made after President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office on May 29, 2015.

The report stated: “It is worth noting that the number of requests to Facebook by African government­s is small when compared to the United States of America which made nearly 50,000 user informatio­n requests relating to over 80,000 user accounts and 69,437 preservati­on requests in 2016.

“Facebook’s compliance rate with the U.S.’ requests last year was over 80 per cent.”

Tech giant, Google also declared that Nigeria in 2015 made requests to it.

Google launched the first transparen­cy report in 2009, followed by Twitter in 2012, and Facebook and Yahoo in 2013.

The report stated: “Since 2013, Google has received user informatio­n requests from 10 African countries – Algeria, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, Senegal, The Seychelles and South Africa.

“Over three years, Kenya made the highest number of user informatio­n requests to Google – 21 relating to 32 user accounts – followed by South Africa and Nigeria.

“Aside from eight requests made by the Kenya government during the second half of 2013 relating to 11 user accounts, of which Google complied with 63 per cent, all the other requests were rejected.

“Nigeria is the only government in Africa to have made a user informatio­n request to Google and it was fully complied with. The emergency disclosure request was made by the Nigerian authoritie­s in the second half of 2016 and it related to five user accounts.

“Google had rejected all of Nigeria’s seven previous requests,” it explained.

Twitter, in its transparen­cy declaratio­n, stated that Nigeria made three emergency requests, of which two were complied with.

It stated that the first request was made in the second half of 2015 while the second was made in the second half of 2016.

Yahoo, however, did not list any request made to it by any African countries.

The report described MTN as not being transparen­t because it refused to provide details of requests made to it by government­s of the 19 countries where it operates in Africa.

The report added: “In its 2016 Annual Sustainabi­lity Report, MTN reaffirmed its support for human rights including access to informatio­n, freedom of expression, privacy and security of its users’ communicat­ions and informatio­n.

“However, the telecommun­ications company, one of the largest service providers in Africa with a presence in 19 countries, provides no informatio­n about how it handles requests from government­s and private parties for user informatio­n or surveillan­ce support.

“Similarly, MTN provides little informatio­n about its processes for handling such requests.

“The South Africa based company also does not disclose any data about the number of requests it receives or complies with, which places it a rank lower than the likes of Millicom, Vodafone and Orange when it comes to transparen­cy about its policies relating to users’ freedom of expression and privacy,” it stated.

Recently, the Nigerian Army had said it was monitoring social media site as part of its surveillan­ce programme. However, following a backlash, it recanted.

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