CybAfriqué is a space for news and analysis on cyber, data, and information security on the African continent.
HIGHLIGHTS
Cameroon delivers digital ID
For the first time in their adult life, scores of Cameroonians received national ID cards earlier this week. For a population used to waiting three years or more, the reaction to receiving their new generation biometric national ID card within just two days has been positive.
The ID card contains an electronic chip, a Machine Readable Zone (MRZ), and a QR code. The biometric component of the card captures the ten fingerprints of the owner which can be verified digitally, using hand-held scanners, for reliable identity verification.
Getting a national ID card in the West African country used to be an ordeal for citizens. Several citizens who have applied for the card have had to carry an old, fading receipt of payment in lieu of an ID card. An average person can go through a waiting period of over five years after applying for the card which is mandatory for all citizens who are 18. Some pay about $40 or more for faster processing. This ID card issue has also disenfranchised many Cameroonians because it is a prerequisite for voter registration during elections.
The journey to this new era of ID issuance started in 2021 when Cameroon first launched a biometric passport deal with Augentic. The deal changed the passport issuance situation in the country and made it possible for citizens to get biometric passports within 48 hours of applying.
The adoption of biometric identity means is currently growing in Africa as countries continue to campaign for a transition to digital governance typical of modern societies. Which we have discussed in other issues as putting the cart before the horse.
ICYMI: Hot take; there's a problem with digital IDs in Africa
Despite warnings, implementation has continued, and modest growth is being recorded across the continent. Regional projects like the ECOWAS Regional Biometric ID Cards, and national initiatives in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya have yielded contested results.
Issues like corruption in contracting and administration of deals, overpromise and under-delivery, abuse of collected data for discrimination and surveillance, delayed access and affordability are among many other issues that continue to hinder adoption.
In Cameroon for instance, while the government seems to have solved the problem of producing the cards in record time, the cost of getting one is still an issue for the citizens who still have to pay around FCFA 16,000 (US$26) to obtain the card, which is around one-third of the country’s minimum wage of 41,875(US$69). This is also an issue in South Africa where citizens have also complained about the fee, along with the hassle of waiting.
Data Privacy is on a roll in Nigerian courts
Another foundational Data Privacy case has been adjudged in Nigeria this week. A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered Eat'n'Go, owners of the Domino’s Pizza and Cold Stone Creamery franchise in Africa, to pay ₦3 million ($1,997) to Chukwunweike Akosa Araka for sending direct marketing messages to his mobile line without his consent.
Chukwunweike’s case against Eat’n’Go started in July 2024 when he filed a lawsuit against Jumia Food and Eat'n'Go alleging the breach of his privacy right under the Nigerian Data Protection Act 2023, by sharing and retaining his contact details for direct marketing purposes without his consent.
Chukwunweike had earlier in March 2023 used the now-defunct Jumia Food to order from Domino's Pizza only to be “bombarded with direct marketing messages from Domino's Pizza” several months later. His request via email for Domino’s Pizza to stop sending the message was ignored.
Olumide Babalola, a Nigerian Data Privacy lawyer had earlier sued Soko Lending Company Limited, also known as Soko Loans, over alleged invasion of privacy, among other reasons in 2022 and Prince Ebeano Supermarket, located in Lagos Nigeria in August 2023 for a personal data breach.
Another lawsuit was filed by a UTME applicant’s mother, against the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board in 2024, a CBT centre, and an employee when the telephone number of the minor was illegally used to send her inappropriate message.
Our highlight last week covered the case against BD East Africa and Safaricom in Kenya where the ODPC fined the two companies for processing the contact information of a former BD East Africa employee illegally.
The direct contact information like telephone numbers, and email addresses constitutes Personally Identifiable Information (PII) which according to Data Protection laws must be guarded against unnecessary access and can only be processed based on the consent of the data subject.
FEATURES
The recent rescue of thousands of victims of pig butchering scams has, again, brought to the limelight how unsuspecting humans looking for opportunity get exploited by criminal syndicates. This study by Suleman Lazarus, Mina Chiang and Mark Button examines how cybercriminals exploit deceptive recruitment tactics and digital platforms to entrap and exploit victims in human trafficking within the cybercrime context.
HEADLINES
Kenyan internet connection market is expanding as the London Internet Exchange (LINX) announces launch of new interconnection hub, LINX Mombasa
Observers say lack of liveness detection in BVN registration cost Nigeria’s financial institutions millions in fraud as reported in the latest NIBSS Fraud report
Continuing the campaign for digital transformation of government infrastructure, Nigeria’s President Tinubu tasks policymakers to spearhead Nigeria’s digital
Togo’s E-governance platforms gets a boost as users get access to more service options.
Aside from the extra days of downtime and disrupted the connection, it costs an average of $2million dollars to fix each fibre cable cut in Africa
Deepening its cloud service industry penetration in Africa where only a few exist Chinese Huawei cloud is expanding in Africa with new availability zones in Egypt and Nigeria
Targeting micro-finance institutions and solution providers, Ethio Telecomms launches seven new cloud-based enterprise services.
With a digital strategy tagged “New Technological Deal” Senegal set for transform into a digital hub by 2034 with a more than 1,100 billion FCFA to commitment
In the wake of digital development in MENA data breaches targeting individuals, online stores keep rising in Egypt: Report says.
ACROSS THE WORLD
Meta fixes error that flooded Instagram Reels with violent videos.
‘12,000 Hardcoded Live API keys and Passwords Exposed in DeepSeek Data Leak
OPPORTUNITIES
LivDet 2025: Fingerprint Liveness Detection Competition. Online. Feb 1 – April 20, 2025