Journalists, Others Receive Training on How to Avoid Digital Thefts

Journalists, Civil Society Organisation and Digital Right Defenders have been trained on how to secured information without interference.

Webfalla Digital Skills for All Initiative (Wdsfai) gave the training in Ilorin to commemorate Global Encryption Day and to sensitize public on privacy and freedom of expression with the theme:
Empowering Voices: ‘ Safeguarding Free Expression & Privacy Through Encryption’ .

The Guest Speaker and Executive Director of Paradigm Initiative, Mr Gbenga Sesan said to protect the integrity of their clients, Journalists need to reliably created trustworthy content and ensure it matches what their intended audience can see online.

He described encryption as a tool designed to help Internet users keep their online data and communications private and secure.

According to him, encryption plays a critical role in protecting day-to-day digital activities making sure private messages stay private.

He also advocated the need for journalists and the public to have digital security tools that prevents powerful entities, domestic or foreign from accessing and altering their research, conversations, and sources.

” Protect freedom of the press by advocating for strong end-to-end encryption and ensuring journalists and the public are free to use it.

” Journalists need to be safe online in order to hold governments and institutions accountable, tell important and impactful stories, protect their sources, and promote healthy democracies,” he echoed

Sesan said End-to-End (E2E) encryption provides the strongest level of security and trust, because by design only the intended recipient holds the key to decrypt the message as no third party should have a key.

” Encryption is essential for protecting freedom of expression and privacy.It is an essential tool for CSOs, Digital Right Defenders and journalists.

” Encryption is especially crucial for keeping people safe and ensuring a healthy freedom of the press.

” End-to-end encryption helps journalists protect their communications from surveillance and interception by third parties.

” If journalists cannot communicate in confidence with colleagues and sources or cannot protect the anonymity of their sources, they will loose public confidence,” he said.

He suggested Internet protocols like HTTPS , which help protect data as it passes between news websites and reader.

He also warned government not to embrace ‘exceptional access’ whereby government will have the access to private information.

” Embracing exceptional access puts private information and conversations at risk because it allows government access to your private information, and simultaneously creates a doorway for bad actors,” he said.

He stressed the need to take the advocacy campaign to schools,market places ,religious houses to be sensitive about sharing their privacy on social media.

The Convener of the event and the Co-founder of Webfalla, Mr Wale Bakare, who said the training focus was on journalists and CSOs as they will help spread the information to the public added that the training was organized to create awareness and provide the public with knowledge about encryption.

” We want to take the campaign to the grass root. We know media practitioners will do that for us.

” We want to keep the public inform on the happenings and information management. How to secure their privacy.

” Through encryption campaign,we want to help the public prevent theft of sensitive information in data breaches,” he said.

End .