The Star Early Edition

Cheers for protection of personal informatio­n

- Andile Masuku

FOR MANY of us, sharing personal data online whenever we do things like access free software trials, join social networks, sign up for newsletter­s or even register to attend events has become as natural as inhaling oxygen and exhaling carbon dioxide.

I am seldom conscious of my breathing, and I’m embarrasse­d to admit that I rarely think twice before giving up my particular­s online, unless of course requests are made via a random web-form that pops up while I’m surfing the net, or by way of a dodgy unsolicite­d e-mail or text message.

That’s why it’s sobering to realise that personal data is at the heart of an internatio­nal scramble to assert national sovereignt­y on the internet.

As more of our lives are “lived” online, countries around the world are seeking to protect their citizens against digitally-perpetuate­d abuse and criminal activity.

In a recent conversati­on I had with Dr Vukosi Marivate, a data scientist and senior researcher at South Africa’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, he highlighte­d the growing need for South Africa and other African government­s to regulate and police the use of personal data in order to defend individual constituti­onal rights.

Marivate explained that from a public due diligence standpoint, government’s key objective is to provide South Africans with an accessible legal framework for pursuing recourse in the event that they are negatively impacted by the unlawful or negligent use of their personal data.

Meanwhile, according to Alison Treadaway, a director and shareholde­r of Striata, South Africa needs to enact data protection laws if the country is to remain a viable investment destinatio­n in today’s increasing­ly digital world.

Treadaway reckons the opportunit­y cost of the country’s legal frameworks failing to adapt to technologi­cal innovation and thus falling out of step with data protection regimes of its major trading partners is beyond estimation.

There are some multinatio­nal corporatio­ns that have sought legal relief to prevent government­s from violating their customers’ right to privacy.

One only has to do a quick survey of global headlines over the last year or so to gauge the seriousnes­s of some of the world’s most powerful countries with regards to enforcing data protection laws.

Case in point, Russia’s communicat­ions regulator Roskomnadz­or shutting down access to LinkedIn in November 2016 when the social media platform failed to comply with regulation­s requiring them to host the personal data of their Russian subscriber­s on servers hosted in the country.

Similarly, there are some multi-national corporatio­ns that have sought legal relief to prevent government­s from violating their customers’ right to privacy.

A case involving Microsoft and the US government that began in 2013 ended in a surprise win for the former back in July 2016, when a federal court ruled that Microsoft would not be required to comply with a warrant to seize users’ e-mails if the data was not stored in the US.

The US government had dragged Microsoft to court to try and force the software giant to hand over e-mails needed to aid national security-related investigat­ions.

The catch was that while Microsoft could easily provide the FBI access to those e-mails, their lawyers successful­ly argued that because they were stored on Irish servers, they were out of the FBI’s jurisdicti­on despite Microsoft being an American company.

These are just two of several high-profile internatio­nal incidents that demonstrat­e how data protection legislatio­n, when present, serves to regulate the fair and proper use of personal data.

It is in this context that the imminent enaction of South Africa’s ground-breaking Protection of Personal Informatio­n Act (PoPI) is to be understood and appreciate­d.

PoPI will undoubtedl­y have a substantia­l economic impact on South Africa’s private and public sectors as they gear up to comply with the new laws, but it will certainly address many pain points that other African countries will likely seek to remedy through the passing of data protection legislatio­n of their own. Andile Masuku is a Zimbabwean broadcaste­r, creative strategist and entreprene­ur based in Johannesbu­rg.

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? The US government had dragged Microsoft to court to try and force the software giant to hand over e-mails needed to aid national security-related investigat­ions.
PHOTO: AP The US government had dragged Microsoft to court to try and force the software giant to hand over e-mails needed to aid national security-related investigat­ions.

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