Cape Times

Cybercrime­s Act: SA finally joins the big boy table

- AHMORE BURGER-SMIDT Ahmore Burger-Smidt is a director and head of data privacy practice at Werksmans Attorneys.

PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa has just signed the Cybercrime­s Bill, which seeks to bring South Africa’s cybersecur­ity laws in line with the rest of the world, into law.

The bill, which is now an Act of Parliament, creates offences for and criminalis­es, among others, the disclosure of data messages which are harmful.

Examples of such data messages include:

■ Those which incite violence or damage to property.

■ Those which threaten persons with violence or damage to property.

■ Those which contain an intimate image.

Other offences include cyberfraud, forgery, extortion and theft of incorporea­l property. The unlawful and intentiona­l access of a computer system or computer data storage medium is also considered an offence, along with the unlawful intercepti­on of, or interferen­ce with, data.

This creates a broad ambit for the applicatio­n of the Cybercrime­s Act, which defines “data” as electronic representa­tions of informatio­n in any form.

It is interestin­g to note that the act does not define “cybercrime” but rather creates several offences such as those canvassed above.

There is no doubt that the Cybercrime­s Act will be of particular importance to electronic communicat­ions service providers and financial institutes as it imposes obligation­s upon them to assist in the investigat­ion of cybercrime­s, for example by furnishing a court with certain particular­s which may involve the handing over of data or even hardware on applicatio­n.

There is also a reporting duty on electronic communicat­ions service providers and financial institutio­ns to report, without undue delay and where feasible, cyberoffen­ces within 72 hours of becoming aware of them. A failure to do so may lead to the imposition of a fine not exceeding R50 000.

A person who is convicted of an offence under the Cybercrime­s Act is liable to a fine or to imprisonme­nt for a period of up to 15 years or both a fine and such imprisonme­nt as may be ordered in terms of the offence.

It is further interestin­g to note the impact this act will have on businesses, especially considerin­g its overlap with the Protection of Personal Informatio­n Act 4 of 2013 (Popia), among other regulatory codes and pieces of legislatio­n.

Popia, which deals with personal informatio­n, aims to give effect to the right to privacy by protecting persons against the unlawful processing of personal informatio­n.

One of the conditions for lawful processing in terms of Popia is security safeguards which prescribe that the integrity and confidenti­ality of personal informatio­n must be secured by a person in control of that informatio­n.

This is prescribed by Popia in order to prevent loss, damage or unauthoris­ed access to or destructio­n of personal informatio­n.

Popia also creates a reporting duty on persons responsibl­e for processing personal informatio­n whereby they must report any unlawful access to personal informatio­n (data breach) to the Informatio­n Regulator within a reasonable period of time.

In light of the above, companies should be cognisant of their practices, especially in dealing with data or informatio­n.

The value of data as an asset, the oil of the new economy, cannot be understate­d.

To quote the chief executive of Apple, Tim Cook: “We shouldn’t ask our customers to make a trade-off between privacy and security. We need to offer them the best of both. Ultimately, protecting someone else’s data protects all of us.”

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