2021
DOI: 10.20321/njps.2021.01.03
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Regulating social media in Nigeria: A quantitative perception study

Abstract: The advent of social networks as Blogs, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, among others, has revolutionized communications. The power of social media messages rests on its ability to instantly and simultaneously reach a wide, diverse audience, and transforming social life. While the public has overtime become accustomed to the regulation of conventional media like the Radio, TV and Print establishments by government regulatory agencies, the idea of regulating social media, a space which many users conside… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Since Snowden's leak, a debate over state secrecy, mass surveillance, and the balance between data privacy and national security has more recently been at the heart of discussions about Internet communication (Anderson, 2022;Bauman, et al, 2014;Lyon, 2014). According to Aradau and Blanke (2015), "President Obama argued that the NSA programme was not gathering data but metadata, namely how long a call was or where it was made from" [21]. President Obama actually noted that: "Nobody is listening to your telephone calls.…”
Section: Mass Surveillance and Big-data Spying Toolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since Snowden's leak, a debate over state secrecy, mass surveillance, and the balance between data privacy and national security has more recently been at the heart of discussions about Internet communication (Anderson, 2022;Bauman, et al, 2014;Lyon, 2014). According to Aradau and Blanke (2015), "President Obama argued that the NSA programme was not gathering data but metadata, namely how long a call was or where it was made from" [21]. President Obama actually noted that: "Nobody is listening to your telephone calls.…”
Section: Mass Surveillance and Big-data Spying Toolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At some point, the lawmakers started debating back and forth on how to curb these cyber-attacks which to them was already projecting a wrong image of the Nigerian government to the international community. The debate gave rise to the reintroduction of the social media bill which came into existence in 2016 and was met with wide criticisms (Mohammed, 2021). The social media bill aimed at strictly censoring the media, giving the government total control of all cyber accounts and activities.…”
Section: Industry 40mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The conventional media in Nigeria, consisting of journalists, reporters, and media houses engaged in news reporting, opinion sharing, and information distribution, are monitored, regulated, and even controlled by the government and its agencies. The government often perceives the media as a threat to national security, as the information they publish can be as harmful as it is informative and educational (Mohammed, 2021). The advent and widespread use of social media have given rise to citizen journalism, where both trained and untrained individuals generate and distribute content seamlessly, spontaneously, and simultaneously without moderation.…”
Section: Social Media Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It aimed at suppressing the financing, promotion and endorsement of false statements hence it projected mechanisms of detection, control and safeguard against misuse of online accounts with sanctions for defaulters. The bill seeks to address the issue of news and information commercialization by the press and more recently; owners and operators of online news media outlets such as social media pages, YouTube channels, websites, blogs and other social network platforms (Mohammed, 2021).…”
Section: Social Media Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%