[kictanet] Getting a hold on cybercrime against women (cyber pests!)

muriuki mureithi mureithi at summitstrategies.co.ke
Wed Feb 3 18:33:30 EAT 2010


Thanks Waudo

Our first stop is at home - ICANN Nairobi next month and then to other
international conferences  but we wish to create evidence based awareness at
home first as a test case

 

Cheers 

MM

 

From: waudo siganga [mailto:emailsignet at mailcan.com] 
Sent: 03 February 2010 18:26
To: muriuki mureithi
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Getting a hold on cybercrime against women (cyber
pests!)

 

Nice initiative MM. Can we think of a workshop in Vilnius for presentation
of the results of this interesting study? I am sure it would generate great
interest. 

 

Waudo

 

 

On Wed, 03 Feb 2010 18:14 +0300, "muriuki mureithi"
<mureithi at summitstrategies.co.ke> wrote:

HI colleagues 

Cybercrime against the person and in   this case the woman is real and is
rising . unfortunately, all the efforts to understand the vice focuses on
the cyber crime against property and against governments . the only other
notable effort against the person is against the child.  

 

While cyberspace  have provided secure tools and spaces where women can
enjoy their freedom of expression, information and privacy of communication,
the same benefits of anonymity and privacy also extend to those who employ
ICTs for criminal activities and use the internet to commit violence against
women.  The use of mobile phones and internet to stalk, abuse, traffic,
intimidate and humiliate women is palpable in developing countries including
Kenya. The lack of specific cybercrime/cyber security legislation makes it
even more difficult to punish those who use ICTs tools to conduct violence
against women. Kenya Communications ( Amendment) Act 2009  focused on the
cybercrime against property and not the person. Kenya is not alone  but that
is not a consolation.  With increased use of internet in Kenya with the
onset of broadband, it is necessary to create the necessary policy /
regulatory and the operational framework to reign in the vice . 

 

KICTANET has launched a study   on the vice whose research questions  are;

 

1.       What is the prevalence of cybercrime against women in terms of
degree, level, quantity, and distribution?

2.       How does cyber crime affect women differently? (Demonstrate spiral
effect and determine if women are already intimidated by cyber space e.g.
mailing lists, how active do women participate in debates? Is the design of
the cyber already woman unfriendly?)

3.       What are the current measures and gaps (technological, legal,
social, and psychological) to address cyber crime against women (local,
regional, and global)? Map the efforts (lessons of best practice).

4.       What mechanisms are appropriate for addressing cyber crime against
women?

 

 

Kictanet will   mount a validation workshop to review literature  as well as
the research strategy  on Feb 16th, 2010

 

If you wish to contribute to make the cyberspace safer for women , we have
limited spaces(free)  for Kictanet members  at the workshop- send your
request  for space OFFLINE not to clog the mailing list.

 

Cheers 

Muriuki Mureithi

 
"Those who say it cannot be done should not interrupt the ones
doing it."
-old proverb
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