Who Decides Social Media Policy Vfinal
Who Decides Social Media Policy Vfinal
Who Decides Social Media Policy Vfinal
DISCLAIMER
This document is being shared only with the intended receipts whom it was originally sent to
and no one else. The information in this document is for background purposes only and is
subject to material updating, completion, revision, and amendment by the authors.
As of December 18 , 2020
th
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SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY: WORKGROUP REPORT
This document was developed by the office of the Chief of Staff to the President in
collaboration with the Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria (ISPON) based on the
deliberations and meeting notes of the workgroup meeting on December 3rd and 4th 2020.
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Workgroup Members
President's Communications Team
Vice President's Communications Team
Office of the Chief of Staff to the President
National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) Representatives
Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria (ISPON) – Chinenye Mba-Uzoukwu,
Workgroup Chairperson
Abdul-Hakeem Ajijola
Chioma Chuks Agwuegbo
Funmi Iyanda
Gbenga Sesan
Saadatu Fali-Hamu
Salaudeen Hashim
Tomiwa Aladekomo
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Contents
Disclaimer………………………………………….…………………………………..……………2
Acronyms and Abbreviations ............................................................................................... 4
Preface: Social Media In Nigeria......................................................................................... 5
Workgroup Members ............................................................................................................................................5
Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 7
Digitization and The Changing Media Landscape ...............................................................................................7
Engaging Platform Owners ..................................................................................................................................9
Workgroup Objectives ....................................................................................................... 10
Dimensioning Social Media: What, Why, How, Where? .................................................. 11
What? .................................................................................................................................................................. 11
Why? ................................................................................................................................................................... 11
How? .................................................................................................................................................................. 12
Where? ................................................................................................................................................................ 13
Key Perspectives ................................................................................................................ 13
Who Is Classified as ‘Youth’? .............................................................................................................................. 13
Youth Predispositions, Social Media Bill & Government Information Management ......................................... 14
Editorial and Content Management on Social Media ......................................................................................... 15
Free Speech as early foundation of Internet and Social Media Platforms ........................................................... 15
Differentiating Between The “Government” And The “Administration”? ......................................................... 16
National Security and The Fragile State in the Internet Age .............................................................................. 17
Existing Legal Framework of Nigeria ................................................................................................................ 17
Is Regulation a Viable Option? ........................................................................................................................... 19
Key Framing Questions ..................................................................................................... 21
Way Forward ...................................................................................................................... 23
Digital Transformation of Government .............................................................................................................. 23
Bridging Government and Youth in Social Media Management ........................................................................ 24
Use of Social Media by Government Organizations ........................................................................................... 25
Guiding Principles for the Policy Roadmap ....................................................................................................... 26
Next Steps .......................................................................................................................... 27
Private Sector ...................................................................................................................................................... 27
Public Sector ....................................................................................................................................................... 27
Conclusion ......................................................................................................................... 28
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Introduction
This report serves as documentation of progress made to date in Phase One of the multi-stage
programme envisaged. A 2-day Workgroup forum was conducted to get a clear understanding of
the issues of Social Media usage as well as to articulate a possible high-level roadmap for policy
development. The sessions also covered a deconstruction of Social Media and its impact on the
Nigerian society. The Workgroup was of the view that a mutual understanding of these issues would
support the development of a strategy linking Social Media to nation-building and economic
development.
By making people feel a sense of belonging and secure in groups or communities of like-minded
individuals, Social Media has also helped to fragment civil society into cliques, promoting
insularity, echo chambers and a distancing that complicates the social relations in the offline world.
Ultimately, this is an ideological battle over defining the social space the internet should be, and it
is not over yet.
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As observed earlier, the landscape has also changed regarding roles within the ecosystem. Prior to
the age of Social Media, there was a clear dichotomy between the producers and consumers of
content, with the former exercising editorial functions over what was served to the latter, the
consumers whose media habits were expressly passively through selecting and maintaining
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subscriptions to channels that best matched their idiosyncrasies. With Social Media and self-
publishing however, these lines are blurry as consumers are also producers creating a new
superseding category -Prosumers who exercise editorial functions autonomously. This has had
fundamental implications for society and its interplay with the media. While traditional ‘broadcast’
media continued to operate in a structured centralised, authoritative (editorialised) and largely time-
delimited manner, the unmoderated, self-governing, autonomous collective of Social Media has
become a dominant and disruptive socio-political force in all countries of the world. And nations
are grappling with developing a framework for utilizing this powerful force of digitalisation to the
needs of transformation in the 21st century.
From the foregoing, the dimensions of Social Media that together form the common substrate for
developing an approach to Social Media management are:
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According to the Hootsuite report, 169.2 million Nigerians have mobile (phone) connections. This
represents 83% of the total population of 203.6 million people. 50% of the population live in urban
areas. 85.49 million Nigerians have internet access. This represents 42% of the total population.
However, only 27 million (13%) of them have Social Media accounts that they run actively.
Anecdotal evidence however suggests that this minority have an amplified impact on society because
of the network effects inherent to all Internet technologies. Social Media has an asymmetry in its
influence on society, beneficial or otherwise. and consequently, must be front and centre in all
strategic considerations of a future Nigeria.
Workgroup Objectives
The key objective of public, private, and user sector engagement is to establish a clear definition of
Social Media, the users, and the usage with a view to formulating a position and ultimately develop
an understanding of a progressive Social Media management approach that is agreeable to all key
stakeholders.
Social Media represents more than new communication technology because of its reach and
pervasiveness alone. According to Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen in The New Digital Age, “On the
world stage, the most significant impact of the spread of communication technologies will be the way in which they help
reallocate the concentration of power away from states and institutions and transfer it to individuals.”
This then suggests that a perception study is needed to understand the impact of New Media in
Nigeria as the emerging future state of the media and formulate a model of its integration with
traditional media and related implications for issues such as identity. Schmidt and Cohen observe
that “for citizens, coming online means coming into possession of multiple identities in the physical and virtual
worlds…(because) what we post, email, text and share online shapes the virtual identities of others, new forms of
collective responsibility will have to come into effect.” It was also agreed that the platforms have evolved from
a peer-to-peer system to one that is influenced by location and interest based on algorithms.
In contrast to traditional media that broadcast via channels that aggregate large and broad social
segments that share the editorial tendency they can relate with, Social Media by default narrowcasts
in much granular fashion to individuals and allows for a higher degree of filter on the information
shared and stronger internal cohesion amongst its subscribers.
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In this context also, there is an urgent need to come to grips with the phenomenon of “fake news”
and to curb its influence on individuals and national security.
Examples of the major platforms that have emerged are in Figure 2 above with the most pervasive
being Facebook, WhatsApp, Pinterest, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.
Why?
As previously observed, the world is becoming more social and Generation X are the world’s first
digitally native generation viz. born into the prevalence of internet technologies and dependent on
it for their daily activity as they live, love, work, and play. For Africa, and Nigeria especially, with its
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growing youth bulge means that the rate at which most of its population (urban initially but
spreading to the rural areas as internet penetration increases and prices of devices and connectivity
fall in keeping with Moore’s Laws), will discover their voices in socio-economic and political
dialogues will grow exponentially as will the influence of the social media on their preferences,
attitudes, and behaviours with the inevitability of adoption and usage.
How?
Do we plan for a future with Social Media as its dominant influence with the rise in technology
adoption, penetration and innovation? Clearly, any strategic formulation must include the use and
technology being embedded early in schools (as early as age 5 in urban areas) while ensuring that the
curricula in primary, secondary, and higher institutions are modified to include technology and study
the use of Social Media.
With increasing rural-urban migration, poverty and population growth is projected to reach 350m
by the year 2030, Nigeria faces daunting challenges in its ability to provide education for all children
and youths in the country. The challenge is compounded by the changing nature of Education itself
in terms of the instruction curriculum, pedagogy, delivery channels and even purpose, as the 21st
century drivers of technology, workforce diversity, globalisation and lifelong learning significantly
impact the sector. Access to, and the provision of, quality education for all children and students
must be a priority for the country if its aspirations are to be attained. If it must enable its youth with
the fundamental skills required to be participants in the 21st Century Digital Economy, technology
will be critical in offering national content for leveraging multiple learning modalities, so students
can experience learning differentiated to their needs and learning styles. The pathway to achieving
this goal that has long eluded Nigeria, may possibly have been revealed by the opening of the portal
of the unprecedented rolling impact of the tragedy of the Covid-19 pandemic in the past eight
months. A global shift has been forced by the Covid-19 pandemic towards online education
which Nigeria can only ignore at its peril and social media must be an integral part of a near
to medium term strategy.
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Where?
The conclusion was reached that communication, media and information flow happens in real time
on Social Media. The speed at which information is transmitted on Social Media is one of the key
attractions for the generation of young people who use the platforms and the tools.
It is expedient that the Government (Administration) understands that the youths are currently
dominating the Social Media space. Having established this fact, the next step is to set up a
framework to work collaboratively with the youths to develop a defined role that the Government
and the youths can play to harness the role being played by the youths in nation building.
Key Perspectives
Who Is Classified as ‘Youth’?
While there are definitions in policies such as the National Youth Development Policy, for the
purposes of understanding Social Media (especially in the context of a digitally native generation as
earlier mentioned), our definition must consider age demographics in different cadres as listed
below:
• Age 5-12: Justification is premised on the need to include the younger generation
considering the changing times and the role of technology and its adoption at a very early
age.
• Age 13 – 17: Early teenage years, usually the formation years with the highest level of social
media adoption.
• Age 18 – 35: This age as suggested are the young and vulnerable.
The right understanding of the platform owner’s perspective, objective and initiative, and the
purpose for developing the application should be put into consideration in identifying and classifying
the dominant target group (youth). It is also noted that the average Nigerian loses approximately 10
years due to inefficiencies in the tertiary education institutions. This ultimately creates a cadre of
extended adolescence of youths.
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• Youth want an openness and access to engagement with the world and global platforms.
Social Media presents this opportunity and opens the vista for them to engage. When
opportunities are restricted or perceived to be restricted, there is usually a push back from
the youth as observed regarding the various engagements of Social Media related Bills that
have been put forward on the floor of National Assembly.
• The Government (administration) is seen as unnecessarily controlling and out of sync with
the youth population of Nigeria. The youth perceive that the Government (administration)
sees Social Media as a threat to the “government/system”.
• The young people recognise the fragility of the Nigerian state but ascribe it to the mindset
and actions of older generations. The evidence of a recent Twitter poll indicates that they
generally support a policy that would distil Social Media platforms for the use of everyone
and for the sake of national interest and unity.
• There is a perceived capacity deficit in the information management of the Government -
focus is expected to be on providing information (proactive) rather than defending
(reactive).
• The engagement style “level of maturity” of Government handles and handlers in the digital
space is seen to be quite poor. Information management and modernising the way
information is disseminated is key to the improvement of digital evolution of Nigeria. The
representatives of Government in the Workgroup confirmed that there is an ongoing
capacity training drive for MDAs aimed at repositioning how Government communicates
its policies.
• The youth believe the Government should be pushing for digital access and literacy to
empower young Nigerians to engage in productive means of livelihood using Social Media.
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The Workgroup noted that Internet technologies are by nature, open networks designed to
encourage the unfettered flow of information and services across the traditional borders and
boundaries imposed by geography and other constraints (see section, Digitisation And The Changing
Media Landscape above) and from a technical perspective have been designed to meet this objective
therefore creating significant challenges to imposing conventional paradigms on the platforms.
Global trends have also shown that the Public sector needs to undergo a digital transformation to
keep abreast of the rapid and inexorable changes coming largely through Private Sector innovation
and product development in response to market and government demands by citizens. The
Workgroup noted that in Nigeria, such a digital transformation would necessarily demand a faster
and more agile adoption of Social Media use by the public sector more so against the backdrop of
the overwhelming recognition by its youth of the Digital Economy as the ladder to economic success
and self-actualisation.
The latter will determine the availability and communications capabilities such as 5G, and the
deployment of the Internet of Things which will exponentially increase the connected device space
to 30 billion or more, a development that will hugely impact Nigeria’s relevance in the 21st Century.
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Social media is the first domain of the internet that will be impacted by this especially from the
perspective of security. Quoting extensively from IPv6: Politics of the Next Generation Internet by
Laura Ellen DeNardis,
“IPv6, a new Internet protocol designed to exponentially increase the global availability of Internet
addresses, has served as a locus for incendiary international tensions over control of the Internet. Esoteric
technical standards such as IPv6, on the surface, appear not socially significant. The technical community
selecting IPv6 claimed to have excised sociological considerations from what they considered an objective
technical design decision. Far from neutrality, however, the development and adoption of
IPv6 intersects with contentious international issues ranging from tensions
between the United Nations and the United States, power struggles between
international standards authorities, U.S. military objectives, international
economic competition, third world development objectives, and the promise of
global democratic freedoms. …How did IPv6 become the answer to presumed address scarcity?
What were the alternatives? Once developed, stakeholders expressed diverse and sometimes contradictory
expectations for IPv6. Japan, the European Union, China, India, and Korea declared
IPv6 adoption a national priority and an opportunity to become more competitive
in an American-dominated Internet economy. IPv6 activists espoused an ideological belief in
IPv6, linking the standard with democratization, the eradication of poverty, and other social objectives.”
- IPv6: Politics of the Next Generation Internet (vt.edu)
These and other battles are a continuing feature of the 21st century as nations and societies strive to
cope with the double-sided coin of the Internet.
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While the Administration consists of the elected and appointed officials or the Executive, the
Government is equally made up of the other arms i.e. the Legislative (National Assembly) and the
Judiciary. An often ignored yet pivotal component of Government is the Civil Service, or the
bureaucracy entrusted with the mandate to execute on the plans of Government. The Civil Service
has tenure unlike the Administration or Executive Branch, and it is structured intentionally in a
manner that is not subject to the frequent changes in the political administration. The consequence
therefore is that the capacity of the Executive to respond to the pace and scale of Internet
technologies such as social media is severely constrained. This is explored further below.
It was established that to handle the trust deficit challenge especially as it relates to communications
on Social Media, the Government needs to accelerate its learning and iteration of proven strategies
from other countries who have seemingly perfected the art of communicating effectively.
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and it does not specifically provide for the Cloud as a ‘border’ over which it exercises jurisdiction,
neither does the National Broadcasting Commission Act, Cap. NII, laws of the Federation, 2004
which vested with the responsibilities of, amongst other things, regulating and controlling the
broadcasting Industry in Nigeria apply seamlessly to Social Media.
A National Digital Transformation strategy would determine how the Government runs its
communications working in line with the extant laws of the land, while leveraging on the need to
update some of these laws in line with current realities and international best practices that relate to
communications.
1. “Protection from Internet Falsehood and Manipulation and for other related matters bill
2019” (Social Media Bill) is pending the publication of the report of a public hearing
concluded in March 2020.
2. Bill to establish a Commission on Hate Speech is listed as having passed First Reading and
is yet to be withdrawn completely.
Other policies and laws that will need to undergo significant review include amongst others:
1. Cybercrime Prohibition and Prevention Act etc. (2015) Clause 21, Section 41, in particular
2. National Broadcasting Commission Act, Cap. NII, Laws of the Federation, 2004
3. National Digital Economy Policy and Strategy
4. Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) was issued in January 2019 pursuant to Section
6 (a,c) of the NITDA Act 2007.
The legal and policy framework that will guide the Government’s Digital Evolution journey should
support a process that is iterative and flexible, not stagnant. It should also support active stakeholder
engagement that leverages their expert understanding of the terrain. Key to this is understanding
that the younger generations will go along with the trends and there is a need to be agile in interfacing
with them while addressing the challenge between Social Media management and regulation.
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The table below presents the differing level of regulatory severity scale sampled from several
countries:
Country Law Key Requirement Fine/Penalty Regulation
Scale
Germany NetzDG law To set up procedures to review Individuals up to €5m ($5.6m; Low-
complaints about content they £4.4m) and companies up to €50m Moderate
were hosting, remove anything for failing to comply with the
that was clearly illegal within 24 requirements
hours and publish updates every
six months about how they were
doing
Australia Sharing of Set up an eSafety Criminal penalties for social media High
Abhorrent Commissioner's office with companies, possible jail sentences
Violent powers to issue companies with for tech executives for up to three
Material Act 48-hour "takedown notices" years and financial penalties worth
up to 10% of a company's global
turnover
Russia Sovereign To switch off connections For showing "disrespect", first-time Extremely
Internet law within Russia or completely to offenders face fines up to 100,000 high
the worldwide web in an roubles (£1,150; $1,500). Repeated
emergency. violations could bring double or
Disrespect of
Ban the "blatant disrespect" of even triple the amount in fines, or a
Authorities
the state, its officials and Russian 15-day jail sentence.
society
Spreading of
Sanctions for publishing so-called
Fake News
Prohibits sharing "false fake news vary. Individuals,
information of public interest, officials, and businesses face fines
shared under the guise of fake of 300,000, 600,000 or 1 million
news roubles respectively if the spread
information affects "functioning of
critical infrastructure" like transport
or communications
Singapore Protection Requires online platforms — Media companies that fail to comply Severe
from Online including social networking, face a fine of up to 1 million
Falsehoods and search engine and news Singapore dollars (about $722,000).
Manipulation aggregation services — to issue Individuals found guilty of violating
Act corrections or remove content the law, both inside and outside the
that the government deems false tiny Southeast Asian country, could
face fines of up to $60,000 or prison
for up to 10 years.
China Governance of Sites such as Twitter, Google As the government pleases. Severe
the Online and WhatsApp are blocked in
Information China. China has hundreds of
Content thousands of cyber-police, who
Ecosystem monitor social media platforms
and screen messages that are
deemed to be politically sensitive
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Nigeria must be careful to ensure its signalling does not place it in the list of countries that have
been deemed as anti-free speech with its attendant implications for global partnerships required to
advance the Digital Economy.
1. Do we need to regulate, why do we need to regulate Social Media and how do we put
together a body to manage this space? The word “regulate” or “control” was a big issue as
established by the Workgroup after a thorough discussion. Nigeria’s imperative must pivot
around the need to harness Social Media to achieve its national aspirations for a vibrant youth-
led economy and society that ensures social justice and well-being for all in keeping with the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 provisions for Fundamental Objectives
and Directive Principles of State Policy, under its Chapter Two.
The Workgroup specifically recommended that the Government should recalibrate its approach
and adopt communications and posture that introduces the concepts of “progressive
management” and “safety”, rather than double-down on the restrictive concepts implied by the
use of words like “regulation” and “control’’. The recommendation is intended as a means of
lowering the apprehension in the public linked to several legislative proposals pending, as well
as critical to on-boarding the citizenry to the development of a beneficial framework for the
intentional use of Social Media to advance society and economy.
2. How do we manage the proliferation and propagation of fake news and institute legal
action against proven offenders without inadvertently triggering suspicion, distrust, and
the potential for pushback on Nigeria and global Social Media ecosystem arising from
arbitrariness and lack of clarity in the application of the law? There is a need to create and
possibly update laws that criminalizes libel, spreading unverified and false information. In
addition, there was the recognition that in the absence of an overarching legislation on Internet
and Related Technologies Governance, several laws and policies that guide Government MDAs
are contradictory, overlapping and possibly anachronistic or obsoleted by the developments in
the technology space. The Workgroup advocated the development and strict implementation
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of a new policy to ensure regularization of a Social Media policy that would work effectively for
the Government, while fostering positive engagement between the Government and the
citizenry.
The Workgroup agreed that we cannot ignore the laws of the land, but rather work
collaboratively to provide solutions that would work to further enhance the productive aspect
of social media for both Government and Nigerians. The Workgroup would develop inputs for
a draft policy that accommodates and mediates these challenges and distils the recommendations
into a framework that is accessible to everyone.
It is also important to consider globalisation and the role of our culture in adapting to new concepts
to ensure that the private sector does not regulate the government. In engaging platform owners,
there is a need to contextualise issues e.g., what is considered as harmful?
The Workgroup agreed that Nigeria’s interest is better served by a progressive policy that creates an
enabling environment for local entrepreneurship and the ecosystem on which it depends on to
thrive. A key consideration of this would possibly be the accelerated development of Local Content
in the form of alternative platforms and services that are better aligned to the national context rather
than for instance, banning technology platforms and owners that may be not aligned to the nation’s
aspirations. There is a need to shift the focus of engagements from citizens to the companies
(producers) and platforms (tools).
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Way Forward
Digital Transformation of Government
As noted earlier, the challenges and opportunities of Internet and Social Media technologies are
inextricably linked to the capacity of the Public Sector to adapt in the constant and rapid changes
brought on by the technologies themselves. The data clearly shows that the wholesale adoption of
communications, internet, and Social Media technologies (where available) by the citizenry as led by
the Private Sector, placing Nigeria on the global map within a decade as one of the fastest growing
in terms of mobile communications and internet adoption. This phenomenal growth and
acceleration are yet to be matched by the Public Sector in breadth, depth, or scale, leaving policy,
legislation, and management far behind in the expected role of supporting the economy and society
in its participation in the 21st century global economy.
While the beginning of Nigeria’s journey to digital transformation dates back almost two decades to
January 2001 when three GSM spectrum licences were awarded thereby triggering the revolution
that took communications capacity and internet connectivity from 450,000 telephone lines to over
120 million in a decade, it has been marked mostly by a lack of coherence and synchronized
execution. The establishment of the National Information Technology Development Agency (Act
2007) signalled a recognition of the need for a strategic approach to managing Public Sector
adoption as enablers and internal drivers, the formal adoption of the Digital Economy as a cabinet-
level priority and recent redesignation of the Federal Ministry of Communications as the Federal
Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy (FMoCDE) on the 17th of October, 2019.
Further evidenced that Government appeared to have developed an improved understanding of the
landscape.
The Workgroup noted therefore that a prerequisite and driving force for a progressive approach to
Internet and Social Media technologies was professional use by Government itself through a “whole
of Government” paradigm specifically addressing the following aspects of the communications in
Government:
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The Workgroup highlighted the urgent need to ramp up the deployment and management of
technology in Government communications and institutions with emphasis on the rate of adoption,
and the coordinated implementation of digital transformation.
Drawing on the experience of other countries that are working through similar challenges, the
process and pace of developing a policy roadmap that would align internet and Social Media
technologies to Nigeria’s aspirations for a strong, resilient, and progressive economy and society will
be enhanced by creating a safe space for the youths to thrive on Social Media while being active
participants in promoting Nigeria as a nation. There are 2 new models that were suggested for
possible exploratory and subsequent adoption by Nigeria if deemed fit.
The Workgroup was of the view that there is an immediate and urgent opportunity for a refresh in
the present strategy of Government for engaging the Nigeria Social Media community in the shared
work of nation-building. It noted that Nigeria’s youth are already demonstrating to the world their
capacity to leverage Internet and Social Media technologies and platforms for jobs, wealth creation
and social good under the Digital Economy agenda that the Administration is actively driving. A
transparent and mutually accountable strategy that better integrates and on-boards the stakeholder
community in the shared goal for a prosperous, vibrant digital economy begins with clarity in
communication between the Government and the youth, and an openness in taking a shared
accountability for using the influence of social media technologies and platforms for the good of all.
The focus of an engagement of this sort must also be adopted by the other arms and tiers of
government.
The Workgroup identified the need to curb fake news as an urgent and critical responsibility of
Government and the citizenry. Indeed, available data reinforces the fact that while the Government
clearly recognises and is acting on that responsibility, there is an apparent absence on the part of the
public of the deleterious effect of fake news on society itself. The citizens are greater victims of fake
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news and cybercrime than the Government and there is a need for all stakeholders to intentionally
promote fact-checking as an effective counter while also enhancing the capacity for accurate
information and non-malicious content to reach the public through Social Media.
The Workgroup identified the existing guidance in the National Digital Economy Policy and
Strategy (2020-2030) for public institutions as well as the on-going initiatives by NITDA on a digital
registry and the Cybercrime Prohibition and Prevention Act etc. (2015) Clause 21, Section 41, as
offering a basis for required policy review and formulation. It noted that at present, issues of national
security appear to overwhelmingly influence the considerations of Government regarding the Social
Media space while the opportunity to build trust in government is under-emphasised and under-
utilized consequently inadvertently widening the trust deficit.
The Workgroup identified the need for reorientation and sensitization on the digital journey that
can be mobilized by the private sector and civil society in partnership with Government to build
trust and maintain open channels for effective communication. It noted that the National
Orientation Agency is now active and should play a critical role for government in disseminating
information and monitoring public perception utilising its nationwide coverage while the public-
facing activity of the security apparatus of Government is downplayed.
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● A better society as defined by the Constitution should be the focus on Social Media
management, reframing the challenge around proactively building strategies for leveraging social
media for employment, entrepreneurship, and well-being of society
● All existing policies and legislation should be reviewed and harmonised to ensure consistency as
a ‘whole of Government’.
● Government should openly state its position on the restrictive nature of the Social Media bill
presently on the legislative agenda and clarify its perspective on principle of regulation to create
guidance within which it can safely and productively operate, not being synonymous with
control of the Social Media space.
● Fighting fake news is urgent and starts with digital literacy and online safety awareness. Digital
literacy as a means of empowering the citizenry to engage productively in the Social Media
domain should be formally inculcated into relevant curriculum and training to combat
cybercrime.
● A true partnership with stakeholders – Government, public, content prosumers and platform
owners - is required to find a common ground and close the gap in terms of trust and shared
goals.
● Intentionally supporting the emergence of local options for technologies and platforms that
align with the context of the nation as the desired long-term means of addressing the peculiarities
of Nigeria.
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Next Steps
Private Sector
(1) Proposed poll on Social Media engagement with Government. This can be handled by the
Advocacy Workgroups.
(2) Conduct a workshop on fact-checking to support the dissemination of authentic and
verified news on Social Media platforms and reduce fake news to a bare minimum.
(3) Improvement on approach to enlightenment for citizens on consequences of cybercrime
and publishing of fake news.
(4) Draft a statement to be agreed by the Workgroup on the engagements held so far. The
statement would be shared with members of the Workgroup and comments contributed
to reach a final agreement.
(5) Proposed plan to commission the mapping and development of data of Social Media usage
across Nigeria.
(6) Enlightenment on digital literacy for vulnerable groups and on the consequences of
cybercrime.
(7) Public poll to confirm the acceptability of the Social Media bill.
Public Sector
(1) Review the MDAs with a related mandate to Social Media and digital transformation such
as NITDA, Galaxy Backbone, NCC, etc with a view to gaining insights on how best to
integrate new media and its purposes into the functions of the arms of government.
(2) Scope the requirement for capacity-building for MDAs to ensure there is an effective,
coordinated online presence for all and a structure for managing Social Media
(3) With respect to the Digital Economy Policy, consider how best to coordinate with MDAs
on policies that contribute to its framework, and ensure all tiers of government are
synchronised in implementing the overarching strategy.
(4) Consider if the intended policy document will lead to legislation in the form of a bill.
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SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY: WORKGROUP REPORT
Conclusion
While inexhaustive, this Report represents a basis for a progressive approach to better understand
the Internet and Social Media technologies in Nigeria. The recommendations from this initial
meeting of the Advisory Workgroup meeting should inform the policy roadmap for a national
strategy on leveraging Social Media for nation-building and socio-economic development.
The next meeting of the Advisory Group has been tentatively scheduled for the 3rd week of January
2021, at a date to be agreed.
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