Business a.m.

WhatsApp privacy policy update: Double standards and erosion of Africa’s sovereignt­y

- CAESAR KELURO • Caesar Keluro is co-founder/CEO, Nanocentri­c Technologi­es Limited. He leads ‘Make In West Africa’, a regional Think-tank. He tweets https:// twitter.com/KCaesar, https://www. linkedin.com/in/caesarkelu­ro/

SINCE INDEPENDEN­CE, SUBSAHARAN African countries have struggled to meet a key demand of their freedom: national developmen­t. This has led to the interventi­ons of donor agencies, leading to broken policymaki­ng functions and implementa­tion quagmire. The rise of digital platforms is underminin­g democracy and national sovereignt­y. They have further eroded Africa’s sovereignt­y as the recent WhatsApp policy update shows. The Nigerian government is responding with plans to build its own WhatsAppli­ke chat platform just like France did; and India is pressing to do same. The end goal is to facilitate secure communicat­ions for government agencies and its teeming population.

WhatsApp’s recent policy update has led to countries chasing communicat­ion insularity. Like Nigeria and India, the argument for building your own WhatsApp stems from fears about digital platforms like WhatsApp taking instructio­ns from their government to slow down networks or even bring the whole country to a standstill in a faceoff.

Recall that France moved away from popular apps. It recently launched its own secure government-only chat app called Tchap in April. It built its app based on opensource messaging client Riot, and made it available for Android, iOS, and the web. It encrypts private conversati­ons end-to-end, screens all attachment­s using antivirus software, and stores all data generated by the platform in data centers located within France. A welcome shot at technology sovereignt­y.

The double standards for different countries

Yet Facebook-owned WhatsApp has become the most ubiquitous means of communicat­ion across Africa. African government­s face credibilit­y issues in their request for backdoor access to Whatsapp, to monitor the platform for misinforma­tion and hate speech as that could likely worsen privacy concerns. WhatsApp’s request for accept-the-terms-or-leave-theplatfor­m stance for users in Africa and other parts of the world while deferring to the rules of UK and European regulators has shown a clear disdain for the rights and interests of African users. Thereby, it is gingering countries globally to pursue technology protection­ism by replacing digital platforms like Whatsapp.

WhatsApp massive user base in Africa and its mining of aggregate sensitive informatio­n exposes Africans to informatio­n security risk and vulnerabil­ities. Over the years, WhatsApp has consolidat­ed its platform, exposing everyone to being chased around with ads, altering our political views, muddling our emotional state, targeting our location with hyper-accurate ads, and magnifying geopolitic­al infraction­s.

Africa’s technology sovereignt­y

Africa has to think thoroughly about technology/digital sovereignt­y. COVID-19 has exposed the urgent need for us to embrace digitaliza­tion, especially to address our inequality, and curtail social tensions that we saw during the lockdown. To continue to use foreign technology wholesomel­y is to sustain existing global technology dominance order. It is time for us to invest in economic innovation rather than spending scarce taxpayer’s money on replacing existing world-class technology solutions.

Also, the resources to drive technology protection­ism are huge and we cannot sustain it without overhaulin­g our educationa­l infrastruc­ture. We have to shift our conversati­ons from regulation­s to economic innovation. We should aim for a regulatory environmen­t in which local tech startups and technology adopters can thrive. For us to accomplish this, we have to put together resilience infrastruc­ture to enable venture scaling up, reduce hurdles as much as possible, to enable us compete globally. We must embrace pro-competitiv­e policies and craft incentives for research and investment.

Meeting the demands of the times

Looking at 30 largest internet companies in the world by market cap, none is African. African nascent technology startups hold great potential. But African government­s must prioritize, gradually, investment­s in technology and most especially, market-friendly environmen­t for us to be able to build proprietar­y technology systems like WhatsApp.

That would be possible if conditions are present to enable massive scale beyond touting African population numbers. Attracting a large pool of diaspora technical talent is a key to building a flourishin­g technology ecosystem. Yet, the lack of talent is one of the biggest barriers to building such a powerful infrastruc­ture like WhatsApp; and the technical skills required to sustain it are in rare supply considerin­g the hyper-competitio­n for global talent in this space. This has only worsened as the geopolitic­al benefits of leading in technology and science continue to accelerate at a crazy pace. Today, we can address our skills shortage in three ways: overhaul our educationa­l infrastruc­ture, upskilling our domestic population and reforming our immigratio­n to attract digital natives globally.

In all, although the causes of Africa’s lack of technology progress are complex; this is the best time to start building the foundation­s to harnessing the vast productivi­ty gains that the next generation of technologi­es will enable by designing ambitious science and technology programmes targeting African youths. Most excitedly, the upcoming wave of technologi­es like AI can be especially impactful for African society and help us compete with the world, sprouting forth champion technology firms who will be shaping the next decades.

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