Daily Trust Sunday

You’re being watched: Inside the Anti-Cybercrime Act signed by Jonathan

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destructio­n of or interferen­ce with, would have a debilitati­ng impact on security, national or economic security, national public health and safety, ‘or any combinatio­n of those matters as constituti­ng critical national informatio­n infrastruc­ture.’

Distilled into its basic form, the otherwise highly technical legal document features wrongdoing­s and respective penalties as follows:

Offences against ‘critical national informatio­n infrastruc­ture’, 10 years with no option of fine; grievous bodily harm to any person, 15 years without option of fine; death of person(s), life imprisonme­nt; unlawful access to a computer, five years or a fine of not more than N5 million or both fine and imprisonme­nt; electronic fraud or online fraud using a cybercafé, three years imprisonme­nt or a fine of N1 million or both; system interferen­ce, two years or a fine of not more than N5 million or both fine and imprisonme­nt; intercepti­ng electronic messages, e-mails, electronic money transfers - seven years in the first instance and ‘upon second conviction shall be liable to 14 years’; willful misdirecti­on of electronic messages, three years or a fine of N1 million or both; and unlawful intercepti­ons, two years or a fine of not more than N5 million or both such fine and imprisonme­nt.

The term informatio­n infrastruc­ture refers to the communicat­ions networks and associated software, driven by the internet, which support interactio­n among people and organizati­ons in a country.

Other listed cybercrime­s and the punishment to accompany them include computer-related fraud, three years or a fine of not less than N7 million or both; theft of electronic devices, three years or a fine of N1 million or both fine and imprisonme­nt; unauthoriz­ed modificati­on of computer systems, network data and system interferen­ce - three years or a fine of not more than N7 million or to both such fine and imprisonme­nt; electronic signature in respect of purchases of goods, and any other transactio­ns: seven years or a fine of not more than N10 million or to both fine and imprisonme­nt.

Cyber terrorism under the new law attracts life imprisonme­nt, while ‘fraudulent issuance of e-instructio­ns’ is to earn the criminal seven years in jail. Identity theft or impersonat­ion is to draw seven years imprisonme­nt or N5 million fine or both, while child pornograph­y and related offences come with a 10-year sentence or a fine of not more than N20 million or both fine and imprisonme­nt.

For cyberstalk­ing, an offence which describes the act of anyone who harasses a victim using electronic communicat­ion such as e-mail or instant messaging (IM), or messages posted to a web site or a discussion group by relying on the anonymity of the internet to allow them to stalk their victim without being detected, the penalty is N7 million or imprisonme­nt of not more than three years or to both such fine and imprisonme­nt. For cybersquat­ting, a term which means using a domain name with intent to profit from the goodwill of another person’s trademark, there is two years of imprisonme­nt or a fine of not more than N5 million or both.

Importatio­n and fabricatio­n of e-tools attracts a three-year jail term or a fine of not more than N7 million or both, while breach of confidence by service providers attracts N5 million fine and forfeiture of further equivalent of the monetary value of the loss sustained by the consumer. Manipulati­on of ATM/POS (point of sale) terminals is to cost the convicted criminal five years imprisonme­nt or N5 millionfin­eorboth,whileapuni­shment of three years of imprisonme­nt or N1 million fine or both awaits anyone caught phishing (attempt to acquire sensitive informatio­n such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details), Spamming (use of electronic messaging systems to send unsolicite­d messages, often repeatedly), as well as spreading of computer virus are to attract three years imprisonme­nt or a fine of N1,000,000 or both.

Electronic card frauds are punishable under the Cybercrime Act as follows: seven years or a fine of not more than N5 million or both such fine and imprisonme­nt for the offender who will be liable also to ‘payment in monetary terms the value of loss sustained by the owner of the credit card’; dealing in card of another, three years’ imprisonme­nt or a fine of N1 million and further liability to ‘repayment in monetary terms the value of loss sustained by the cardholder or forfeiture of the assets or goods acquired with the funds from the account of the cardholder’. Purchase or sale of card of another will attract a N500,000 fine and liability to ‘payment in monetary terms the value of loss sustained by the card holder or forfeiture of the assets or goods acquired with the funds from the account of the cardholder’.

The Cybercrime Act 2015 requires the establishm­ent of a Cybercrime Advisory Council to facilitate the implementa­tion of the Act while the office of the National Security Adviser is designated as the coordinati­ng body ‘for all security and enforcemen­t agencies under this Act’. And the Federal High Court ‘located in any part of Nigeria regardless of the location where the offence is committed’, is given the jurisdicti­on to try offenders under the Act.

The Cybercrime Act 2015 requires the establishm­ent of a Cybercrime Advisory Council to facilitate the implantati­on of

the Act while the office of the National Security Adviser is designated as the coordinati­ng body ‘for all security and enforcemen­t agencies

under this Act

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