The Kenyan government is using technology to improve governance, service delivery and national security. The progress, while welcome, has brought with it concerns about state surveillance, data protection, and violations of fundamental rights and freedoms. Following anti-government protests in Kenya that began in June 2024, for instance, there were several reports of state-led abductions and arbitrary arrests. With Kenyans’ personal data being collected at an unprecedented scale, the balance between ensuring security and safeguarding individual privacy has come under scrutiny. Mugambi Laibuta, who’s studied state surveillance and data protection in Kenya, explores the issue.
State surveillance: Kenyans have a right to privacy—does the government respect it?
Tech News
-
Free Dark Web Monitoring Stamps the $17 Million Credentials Markets
-
Smart buildings: What happens to our free will when tech makes choices for us?
-
Screenshots have generated new forms of storytelling, from Twitter fan fiction to desktop film
-
Darknet markets generate millions in revenue selling stolen personal data, supply chain study finds
-
Privacy violations undermine the trustworthiness of the Tim Hortons brand
-
Why Tesla’s Autopilot crashes spurred the feds to investigate driver-assist technologies – and what that means for the future of self-driving cars