Fragility of Cyberspace in Liberia: Instituting Legislative and Technological Interventions (LTI)


By Mory DA Sumaworo

The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
January 19, 2019

The Internet Penetration on the Rise in Liberia:
Few years ago, it was widely and internationally reported that the Liberian Internet system was entirely shut down by 30 years old British hacker Mr. Daniel Kaye, whose case has recently been adjudicated by the United Kingdom’s judicial system at Blackfriars Crown Court in London. the Varus that was used to jeopardize the Internet Providing System (IPS) in Liberia is known as Mirai #14 botnet, which is one of the dangerous distributed denial of service (DDoS) botnet that cause Internet to sustain serious shutdown at a large scale.  

Therefore, Mr. Daniel Kaye has been sentenced under the UK’s Computer Misuse Act of 1990 to three years in jail because of his hacking activities on Liberia’s internet infrastructures in 2016 that caused millions of dollars in damages on businesses and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) mainly Lonestar Communication Incorporated (MTN).

Ironically, this event occurred, the local authorities did not know about unless when it was headlined by international Information Technology sites and news outlets. This was due to lack effective and sophisticated defense system of this newly engaged and highly saturated space with data, information and other valuable materials of the public sector, private enterprises and individuals in Liberia. Besides, the Internet penetration is on the exponential rise in the country as depicted in the below Chart (Figure 1), which shows the rise from 0% in 2000 to 8.6% in 2016 that comparably higher than some its neighboring countries such Sierra Leone (2.4%) and Guinea (1.8%) as for 2016 . Therefore, this calls for a need to protect the cyberspace through legislative and technological intervention against illegal intrusions; hacking the banks accounts, extrajudicial accessing to the nation’s critical IT infrastructures and causing financial and technical harms to businesses.   

Figure 1

Source: Internet Live Stats (www.InternetLiveStats.com)

Global Movement of Stringent Legislation of Cybersphere: 
The seriousness and danger of the illegal intrusion of Cyberspace and computer misuse have persuaded many countries around the World to revisit their traditional laws and legislative instruments in order to harmonize them with the threat and opportunities carried by Cyberspace. For instance, Singapore, Malaysia, USA, UK, South Korea Saudi Arabia and Estonia some leading jurisdictions that in this movement.   It is, however,  imperative to note that this movement is not only for the high- tech countries as it may be claimed by some people, it nonetheless, for every nation due to highly connectedness, cyber-globalization, and smelliness of our World because of technology and heavily usage of smart instruments and IT-connected activities; phones, personal computers and e-banking, e-commerce state but a few.

I and many concerned-IT guys have been calling on the government through publications and policy dialogues, and advocating for further regulation of Cyberspace in Liberia since 2016 internationally acclaimed hacking happened. However, some of those who have to really push the button told me in a policy dialogue on this issue that Liberia is not an high-tech country hinting that there is less need for rigorous regulation of the visual and Cybersphere. That means Cybersecurity law isn’t matter of concern. Now, the UK judiciary had jailed his own citizen for extrajudicially tempering our cybersecurity in Liberia. The point here is, we need a proper and effective cybersecurity law as a further deterrent measure for both internal and external intrusions into our Cyberspace. This move had been taken by most of our neighboring and African nations such as Ghana ( Data Protection Act 2012, Economic and Organized Crimes Act, 2010), Nigeria ( Cybercrime Act, 2015) Kenyan ( The Computer Misuse and Cybercrime Act of 2018), Uganda, ( Computer Misuse Act of 2011) and South Africa has prepared its Cybercrimes and Cybersecurity Bill but it yet to be passed into the law.

Technical and Financial Impacts of Kaye’s Hacking Action in Liberia:
According to Dominic Casciani, BBC Home Affairs Correspondent, Mr. Kaye’s attack on Lonestar Communication Incorporated (MTN), one of the Liberian largest ISPs caused the company serious damages in its revenues. “In the years preceding the DDOS attacks, Lonestar's annual revenue exceeded $80m (£62.4m). Since the attacks, revenue has decreased by tens of millions and its current liabilities have increased by tens of millions.” Furthermore, former Chief Executive Officer of Lonestar Babatunde Osho said describing the magnitude of Kaye ’s criminality and hacking as ‘devastating. Further, the action also denial thousands of Lonestar subscribers from calling one other during the period of the shutdown.

Technical and Policy Recommendation:
It is, therefore, recommended to the government of Liberia to first recognize the fragility of its cyberspace. Secondly, the fragility cybersphere is not less important than the fragility of its real space because thousands of transactions that can take place through the usage of the Internet. Thirdly, the authority has to emulate other advanced cyberlaw jurisdictions by legislating laws and design policies as a measure of further deterrent for any internal and external illegal intrusion into our cyberspace. It has to noted that Telecommunication Act of 2007 was a great step because it has some provisions criminalizing certain behaviors and activities by using computers. Nevertheless, there is still a need to further deepen legislative and technical interventions, especially by legislating a comprehensive and wholistic cybercrime act. Fourthly, as the nation trains its real space law-enforcement officers, Liberia has to invest in technology to train a team to at least minimize the fragility of our cyberspace in general and personal data of private citizens in particular from being criminally accessed thus causing financial damages and other ramifications of insecurity of Cyberspace. All in all, these proposed measures need to be instituted by the Liberian government “Actions and measures, both technical and non-technical, with the express purpose of protecting computers, networks, software, data and other related digital technologies from all threat… Professional activity of implementing the above-mentioned actions and measures, including research, analysis and policy development”

 


About the Author: Mory DA Sumaworo is a Ph.D. Researcher at Ahmad Ibrahim Kulliyah (Faculty) of Laws, International Islamic University, Malaysia. A Trained Internet Policy Researcher, Internet Policy Observatory, University of Pennsylvania and the Founder and Executive Director of the African Institute for Development Research (AIDER). @MSumaworo Email: mory6140@gmail.com


 

 Endnotes:


Conner Forrest , How the Mirai botnet almost took down an entire country, and what your business can learn, (2016), TechRepublic, https://goo.gl/FRvGVt

Internet Live Stats (www.InternetLiveStats.com), Guinea and Sierra Leon.

Dominic Casciani, Briton who knocked Liberia offline with cyber attack jailed, (Jan 11, 2019), https://goo.gl/yXmRfB

Cole, Kristina & Chetty, et  , Cybersecurity in Africa: An Assessment (2008), Sam Nuum School of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta. https://goo.gl/21XMWa.

 


 

 

 

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