ADVERTISEMENT
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Tech | Business | Economy
No Result
View All Result
  • Technology
    • Trends
    • Telecoms
      • Broadband
    • ConsumerTech
      • Gadgets and Appliances
      • Apps
      • Accessories
      • Reviews
      • Unboxing
    • EnterpriseTECH
    • Security & Data Protection
    • How To
    • GameTech
  • Business
    • Company News
    • StartUPs
      • Founder’s Story
      • Funding
    • Deals
    • People & Moves
    • SME & Entrepreneur Focus
    • BUSINESS SENSE FOR SMEs
    • Competition & Market Positioning
    • Commerce & Mobility
    • Travel
    • WomenPreneurs
  • Economy
    • Macroeconomic Trends
      • Macro Monday
      • TE Insights
    • Finance
      • Banks
      • Fintech
      • Insurance
      • Digital Assets
      • Personal Finance
    • Policies
      • Tech & Society
    • Market Analysis
    • Jobs & Workforce Economy
  • Features
    • Guest Writer
      • Chidiverse
      • Digital Assets
    • EventDIARY
    • IndustryINFLUENCERS
    • MarkTECH
    • TBS
    • NewsEXTRA
  • Editorial
  • Brand Content
  • TECHECONOMY TV
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Tech | Business | Economy
No Result
View All Result
Tech | Business | Economy
No Result
View All Result

Home » Strengthening Nigeria’s Digital Safety Laws – Why the VAPP Act is not Enough

Strengthening Nigeria’s Digital Safety Laws – Why the VAPP Act is not Enough

| By: Olasupo Abideen

Techeconomy by Techeconomy
March 3, 2026
in Security & Data Protection
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Artificial Intelligence | VAAP Act

Abideen Olasupo, the Global Director BrainBuilder Youth Development Initiatives (BBYDI).

Nigeria’s digital economy is expanding at remarkable speed. From mobile banking and e-commerce to social media and artificial intelligence–powered services, the internet has become central to how Nigerians learn, trade, govern, and express themselves.

Yet as our digital footprint grows, so too do the risks. Cybercrime, data breaches, online harassment, misinformation, and technology-facilitated abuse are no longer abstract threats.

They are lived realities. This moment calls for a serious strengthening of Nigeria’s digital safety laws; beyond what currently exists to protect citizens and build trust in the digital ecosystem.

Nigeria is not starting from zero. The Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Act (VAPP Act) was a landmark law that expanded legal protections against physical, sexual, psychological, and emotional abuse. Importantly, the Act recognizes forms of harassment, intimidation, and harmful conduct that can occur through electronic means. In theory, this provides a legal basis for addressing certain online abuses.

In practice, however, the VAPP Act was not designed for today’s complex digital environment, and that limitation is increasingly evident.

Subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

Follow the latest developments with instant alerts on breaking news, top stories, and trending headlines.

Join Channel

One major gap is scope. The VAPP Act treats online abuse largely as an extension of offline violence, rather than as a distinct category with its own dynamics.

Technology-facilitated harms such as coordinated cyberbullying, doxxing, non-consensual sharing of intimate images, deepfake abuse, algorithm-driven amplification of harassment, and large-scale disinformation campaigns fall into legal grey areas. Victims are often forced to stretch existing provisions to fit harms the law never anticipated.

Another gap is clarity and accessibility. Many Nigerians experiencing online abuse do not know whether the VAPP Act applies to their situation, where to report digital harm, or which agency has jurisdiction.

This uncertainty discourages reporting and leaves victims; particularly women, journalists, activists, and young people without effective remedies.

A digital safety framework should offer clear definitions, reporting pathways, and timelines for action. The VAPP Act, as currently structured, does not provide this clarity for online contexts.

There is also a significant enforcement gap. Even where the VAPP Act could apply to online harm, enforcement is weak. Law enforcement agencies often lack training in digital evidence preservation, platform data requests, and cyber investigations.

Cases involving online abuse are slow, inconsistently handled, or quietly abandoned. A law that cannot be effectively enforced offers little protection, no matter how well intentioned it is.

Perhaps most critically, the VAPP Act does not adequately address platform responsibility. Modern digital harm is rarely caused by individuals alone; it is often enabled or amplified by platform design choices, weak moderation systems, and opaque algorithms.

Nigeria’s legal framework places minimal obligations on technology companies to prevent harm, respond quickly to reports, or design safer digital spaces. Without clear duties and penalties for non-compliance, platforms have little incentive to prioritize user safety.

Child online protection further exposes the limits of existing laws. While the VAPP Act criminalizes abuse, it does not provide a comprehensive framework for preventing children’s exposure to harmful content, online grooming, or exploitation on digital platforms.

Stronger, child-specific digital safety standards; combined with public education, are urgently needed.

Strengthening Nigeria’s digital safety laws, therefore, does not mean discarding the VAPP Act. It means building on it. Nigeria needs a modern, dedicated digital safety framework that works alongside existing criminal and human rights laws. Such a framework should clearly define technology-facilitated harms, establish platform obligations, protect personal data, prioritize child safety, and equip institutions with the tools to enforce the law effectively; while safeguarding freedom of expression.

Crucially, these reforms must be developed through inclusive consultation with civil society, legal experts, journalists, technology companies, and everyday users. Laws written without stakeholder input risk being either toothless or dangerously overbroad.

Nigeria stands at a crossroads. We can continue trying to force 21st-century digital harms into 20th-century legal frameworks, or we can acknowledge the limits of existing laws and act decisively. The VAPP Act was a milestone; but it was never meant to be the final word on digital safety.

A safer digital Nigeria will not emerge by accident. It will be built through deliberate, thoughtful reform; one that recognizes that online harm is real harm, and that citizens deserve protection wherever they exist, including online.

*Olasupo Abideen is the co-founder of HerSafeSpace Initiative and TFGBV enthusiast.
Please send comments and feedback to abideenolasupo@gmail.com. He tweets @opegoogle.

0Shares

Previous Post

Why Digital Trust Matters: Secure, Responsible AI for African SMEs?

Next Post

Hisense Tops Global TV Shipments in 2025 across 100-Inch+, Laser TVs

Techeconomy

Techeconomy

Related Posts

Oluwole Asalu on data and privacy, Personalisation and AI | infrastructure in Nigeria | Nigeria digital defences

Why Nigeria’s Digital Defences Must Evolve or Risk Being Overwhelmed

April 30, 2026
Dr Vincent Olatunji - Nigeria Data Protection Commission - NDPC speaks on DPCOs | Nigeria records cyber attacks

Nigeria Records 4,000 Weekly Attacks amid $10.5tn Global Cybercrime – Olatunji

April 30, 2026

DG NITDA Calls for Urgent Action on AI-Driven Cyber Threats

April 23, 2026
Load More
Next Post
Hisense global no 1 100 inches TV

Hisense Tops Global TV Shipments in 2025 across 100-Inch+, Laser TVs

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Techeconomy Podcast
Techeconomy Podcast

The Techeconomy Podcast is a thought-leadership show exploring the powerful intersection of technology, business, and the economy, with a strong focus on Africa’s fast-evolving digital landscape.

PROTECTING INNOVATION IN AFRICA’S STARTUP ECOSYSTEM
byTecheconomy

Protecting Innovation in Africa’s Startup Ecosystem . A timely conversation for the future of African entrepreneurship.

PROTECTING INNOVATION IN AFRICA’S STARTUP ECOSYSTEM
PROTECTING INNOVATION IN AFRICA’S STARTUP ECOSYSTEM
April 29, 2026
Techeconomy
BUILDING TRUST IN AFRICA ECOSYSTEM
February 27, 2026
Techeconomy
Navigating a Career in Tech Sales
January 29, 2026
Techeconomy
How Technology is Transforming Education, Health, and Business
November 27, 2025
Techeconomy
INNOVATION IN MOBILE BANKING
October 30, 2025
Techeconomy
Search Results placeholder
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2026 TECHECONOMY.

No Result
View All Result
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Features
  • Editorial
  • Brand Content
  • TECHECONOMY TV

© 2026 TECHECONOMY.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.