The Director General, National Information Technology Development Agency NITDA, Mr. Kashifu Inuwa, has identified data as key to achieving a digital economy
He stated this during an online US-Nigeria Digital Trade standards workshop organised by the US-Trade and Development Agency USTDA.
The event which had the theme: ‘Current state of Data privacy and security in Nigeria’, is one of the activities to mark the Data privacy week which commenced on Monday January 25, 2021.
The DG noted that in a digital economy, data plays a huge role in everyday activities, as enormous amount of data is generated, collected and stored by all equipment which dominates our lives.
He gave example of the various uses to which a seemingly innocuous gadget such as mobile phones are being put behind the scene.
Inuwa examined it basically from three perspectives namely; what is data protection, how they differ and overlap, how both are affected by digitalization and finally, what government is doing to protect and strengthen right to privacy and data protection.
Data protection
Data protection, contrary to popular belief, is not the same thing as privacy. Privacy is a broad concept referring to the condition which enables basic foundation of human dignity, but data protection is more specific. It is concerned with the way third party handles the information they hold about us, how it is collected, processed, shared, stored and used. In other words, privacy is the big picture and data protection is one corner of it.
He said digitalization is creating new ways to collect, access, analyse and use data across multiple borders and jurisdiction, with challenges to data privacy.
Efforts of Nigerian govt in protecting and strengthening privacy
The DG said the policy that the Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) issued on January 25 2019 was crafted to meet global standard on data protection and provide unique and innovative implementation matrix. Part of the NDPR implementation strategy is sustained public awareness which was undertaken between May and October 2019.
“Indeed Nigeria is the first country on the African continent to dedicate a week to Data Protection Public Awareness. Other measures include Establishment of Data Protection Compliance Organizations (DPCOs), Data Breach Investigation Team and Police Enforcement Teams among others”, Inuwa said.
“The NDPR implementation framework has also succeeded in ensuring that within a year of coming on stream, a total of 635 data audit reports were filed by various entities across 13 sectors of the Nigerian economy, just as 15 investigations on alleged data breaches were undertaken while 2,686 jobs were created”
“A mark of Nigerian leadership in the digital world within the African continent explains why she currently sits as the vice chair of the Policy and Regulatory Initiative for Digital Africa (PRIDA) and full member of the Common Thread Network (CTN), a network of Commonwealth Nations Data Protections Authority”, he added.
Nneka Ukachukwu