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Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? - Politics - Nairaland

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Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by uche87(m): 10:25am On Feb 13
The conversation about regulating social media in Nigeria has refused to go away for some years now. It has been raised again by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, and has been supported by other public figures. What makes the idea of social media regulation very intriguing is that it is being raised by politicians. It makes the issue very questionable and highly insidious because Nigerian politicians have sworn never to act in the public interest. This is as alarming as an armed robber complaining about the security architecture in Nigeria. I will be analyzing the issue in sub-sections to make the piece an easy read.


The transition of the Nigerian social media space

I have watched the transition of the Nigerian social media space as an active participant over the years. It used to be like dating networks. The real essence never made sense to a host of Nigerians. Later it became an avenue to connect with old friends who were scattered across the world. Some people would later turn it into a comparative tool for classism i.e. 'I better pass you'. Others used it to monitor the progress of people, especially the ones abroad. Businesses and music artistes soon started taking advantage of the increasing population of netizens. The politicians also came in for 'political business' in the process. Social media soon became a battleground among opposing political groups for who are the saints, sinners, and saviours of the hapless masses. It became a viable field for image-laundering for public figures and the profiles of politicians running for offices were highly exaggerated. Sponsored lies and gross misinformation were also orchestrated by political opponents against themselves. This was how the defilement of social media gradually started. Incrementally, these political rivalries on social media raised the political consciousness of Nigerians. They developed an interest in politics, started following political developments, and jumped on trends.

How the problem started

Today, the Nigerian social media space remains more polarised than ever. If you ever want to experience the heterogeneous structure of Nigeria, wait until the election period and you will be shocked about how people are divided across political, religious, tribal, geographical, economic, and even educational lines. After that, do a comparative study between the electioneering campaign period and the mood during the recently concluded AFCON 2024 where Nigeria united and stood behind the Super Eagles.

As political actors plot their campaign strategies, they factor in the control of mostly Twitter in their political plots. Almost all mainstream politicians have social media influencers/operators under their payroll. These individuals are tasked with spreading desirable narratives including falsehoods. In my view, the downside of social media is a monster created by the same people calling for the regulation of the system.


Enters the legendary Lai Mohammed

The Nigerian social media space was significantly polluted in the heat of the 2015 general elections by the then National Publicity Secretary of the ruling APC - Lai Mohammed. He hounded his party's political antagonists with humongous lies that left the devil shell-shocked. His winning strategy of disinformation was the needed catalyst for other questionable individuals in Nigeria highly skilled in spreading lies. The nodus of fake news went out of hand that the pioneer, Lai Mohammed became baffled at some point. He later advocated for the regulation of social media using his capacity as the Minister of Information.
It is not advisable to trust the intentions of Nigerian politicians. Their original plan is to muzzle the social media space. They are fully aware of the dire economic situation of Nigerians. Their concern is that they wish Nigerians could suffer in silence and allow them to plunder public resources in peace. They don't want to be accountable for their actions. Politicians by nature have no definite stand in life on any public discourse. Today, they are the defenders and tomorrow they play the aggressors. They keep swinging both ways like bisexuals!


Social media is already self-regulatory

Do we have issues with social media in Nigeria? Yes! Do we need regulation? No! The social media space is already self-regulatory. The best way to fact-check any news report is to check the comment section of the news article. If you have a critical and discerning mind, you will see that comment that will either enlighten you or increase your doubts about its validity and reliability. In case the report matters to you, go further by searching for it on other mainstream media platforms. Social media platforms also flag fake content, reduce their visibility, block certain keywords, and sanction fake news peddlers. Furthermore, the laws of libel and slander in Nigeria already cover social media activities. Now and then, lawsuits are seen flying around against people accused of defamation. The Nigerian police also have a structure to combat fake news.
The Nigerian politicians don't have genuine intentions as I have overemphasized. Fake news to them is that scathing news report that doesn't favour them. Social media regulation is the resemblance of a legal way of suppressing dissenting voices. It is the Chinese and Malaysian blueprint of social media censorship. You can't solve a problem that you are a party to.


Osahon George Osayimwen writes from England.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Catapault: 10:31am On Feb 13
Yes they should.

Definitely.

If it will save us from Aisha Yesufu’s screeching voice… undecided

21 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by freeGiftOfGod: 11:32am On Feb 13
Regulation or not, free speech must not be gagged.


Jesus heals, Jesus delivers, He helps . Come to Him today and you will be brought out of darkness into His wonderful light, out of the dungeon into His glorious liberty.

Pray this: Heavenly Father, I believe that Jesus is the son of God, that He died on the cross for my sins and rose again on the third day to my justification. I repent of my sins (mention them) and ask that you forgive me and wash me clean by the blood of Jesus.
I receive and confess Jesus as my personal Lord and saviour. Thank you Lord. DM

36 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Birdbyrde440: 11:34am On Feb 13
uche87:
The conversation about regulating social media in Nigeria has refused to go away for some years now. It has been raised again by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, and has been supported by other public figures. What makes the idea of social media regulation very intriguing is that it is being raised by politicians. It makes the issue very questionable and highly insidious because Nigerian politicians have sworn never to act in the public interest. This is as alarming as an armed robber complaining about the security architecture in Nigeria. I will be analyzing the issue in sub-sections to make the piece an easy read.


The transition of the Nigerian social media space

I have watched the transition of the Nigerian social media space as an active participant over the years. It used to be like dating networks. The real essence never made sense to a host of Nigerians. Later it became an avenue to connect with old friends who were scattered across the world. Some people would later turn it into a comparative tool for classism i.e. 'I better pass you'. Others used it to monitor the progress of people, especially the ones abroad. Businesses and music artistes soon started taking advantage of the increasing population of netizens. The politicians also came in for 'political business' in the process. Social media soon became a battleground among opposing political groups for who are the saints, sinners, and saviours of the hapless masses. It became a viable field for image-laundering for public figures and the profiles of politicians running for offices were highly exaggerated. Sponsored lies and gross misinformation were also orchestrated by political opponents against themselves. This was how the defilement of social media gradually started. Incrementally, these political rivalries on social media raised the political consciousness of Nigerians. They developed an interest in politics, started following political developments, and jumped on trends.

How the problem started

Today, the Nigerian social media space remains more polarised than ever. If you ever want to experience the heterogeneous structure of Nigeria, wait until the election period and you will be shocked about how people are divided across political, religious, tribal, geographical, economic, and even educational lines. After that, do a comparative study between the electioneering campaign period and the mood during the recently concluded AFCON 2024 where Nigeria united and stood behind the Super Eagles.

As political actors plot their campaign strategies, they factor in the control of mostly Twitter in their political plots. Almost all mainstream politicians have social media influencers/operators under their payroll. These individuals are tasked with spreading desirable narratives including falsehoods. In my view, the downside of social media is a monster created by the same people calling for the regulation of the system.


Enters the legendary Lai Mohammed

The Nigerian social media space was significantly polluted in the heat of the 2015 general elections by the then National Publicity Secretary of the ruling APC - Lai Mohammed. He hounded his party's political antagonists with humongous lies that left the devil shell-shocked. His winning strategy of disinformation was the needed catalyst for other questionable individuals in Nigeria highly skilled in spreading lies. The nodus of fake news went out of hand that the pioneer, Lai Mohammed became baffled at some point. He later advocated for the regulation of social media using his capacity as the Minister of Information.
It is not advisable to trust the intentions of Nigerian politicians. Their original plan is to muzzle the social media space. They are fully aware of the dire economic situation of Nigerians. Their concern is that they wish Nigerians could suffer in silence and allow them to plunder public resources in peace. They don't want to be accountable for their actions. Politicians by nature have no definite stand in life on any public discourse. Today, they are the defenders and tomorrow they play the aggressors. They keep swinging both ways like bisexuals!


Social media is already self-regulatory

Do we have issues with social media in Nigeria? Yes! Do we need regulation? No! The social media space is already self-regulatory. The best way to fact-check any news report is to check the comment section of the news article. If you have a critical and discerning mind, you will see that comment that will either enlighten you or increase your doubts about its validity and reliability. In case the report matters to you, go further by searching for it on other mainstream media platforms. Social media platforms also flag fake content, reduce their visibility, block certain keywords, and sanction fake news peddlers. Furthermore, the laws of libel and slander in Nigeria already cover social media activities. Now and then, lawsuits are seen flying around against people accused of defamation. The Nigerian police also have a structure to combat fake news.
The Nigerian politicians don't have genuine intentions as I have overemphasized. Fake news to them is that scathing news report that doesn't favour them. Social media regulation is the resemblance of a legal way of suppressing dissenting voices. It is the Chinese and Malaysian blueprint of social media censorship. You can't solve a problem that you are a party to.


Osahon George Osayimwen writes from England.

CC Lalasticlala Seun Ishilove Mynd44 Dominique MissyB3 Fynestboi NLfpmod


It's a global policy, Id2020.
Every individual on this planet will have their bank account linked to their social media.

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by YorubaDemonswag: 11:50am On Feb 13
No ooo,I like this gbas gbos we're giving each other,longer may it continues

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Anguldi(m): 12:02pm On Feb 13
Regulate social media Kukuma kill us all tongue
With this set of polithiefcians.
Yeye write up

18 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Risingblue008(m): 12:02pm On Feb 13
Dame

This niggas are not even thinking of solving the hyper-rise in price of food commodities.

Na social media come dñb dier issue like dis so

34 Likes 1 Share

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Fuckyoumod: 12:02pm On Feb 13
Has there been anything this useless govt have done to help Nigerians?

Since Tinubu came in has he done any good things? Did the suffering not start during his swearing in?
At this time of untold hardship and poverty, instead of alleviating the sufferings. They want to gag the people so they can't cry out.

It is your fault, 270 million Nigerians it's your fault. For sitting and watching few criminals loot and steal away our collective wealth. Yet we remain docile.

Nigerians it's your fault.
To every youth of this country it's your fault.
To the elderly you failed.

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by slaawomirr: 12:02pm On Feb 13
Damnnn niggar
Hell no

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by vesselchino(f): 12:03pm On Feb 13
😠😠

7 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by ClearFlair: 12:04pm On Feb 13
No. It is unnecessary.
Nigeria has far bigger issues that need urgent attention.

6 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by casualobserver: 12:04pm On Feb 13
freeGiftOfGod:
Regulation or not, free speech must not be gagged.



free speech has consequences and responsibilities. everyone has a right to free speech. everyone has a right to spread lies and abuse but they also have a right to face the consequences of spreading lies and abuse.

11 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Bliztzer: 12:04pm On Feb 13
uche87:
The conversation about regulating social media in Nigeria has refused to go away for some years now. It has been raised again by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, and has been supported by other public figures. What makes the idea of social media regulation very intriguing is that it is being raised by politicians. It makes the issue very questionable and highly insidious because Nigerian politicians have sworn never to act in the public interest. This is as alarming as an armed robber complaining about the security architecture in Nigeria. I will be analyzing the issue in sub-sections to make the piece an easy read.


The transition of the Nigerian social media space

I have watched the transition of the Nigerian social media space as an active participant over the years. It used to be like dating networks. The real essence never made sense to a host of Nigerians. Later it became an avenue to connect with old friends who were scattered across the world. Some people would later turn it into a comparative tool for classism i.e. 'I better pass you'. Others used it to monitor the progress of people, especially the ones abroad. Businesses and music artistes soon started taking advantage of the increasing population of netizens. The politicians also came in for 'political business' in the process. Social media soon became a battleground among opposing political groups for who are the saints, sinners, and saviours of the hapless masses. It became a viable field for image-laundering for public figures and the profiles of politicians running for offices were highly exaggerated. Sponsored lies and gross misinformation were also orchestrated by political opponents against themselves. This was how the defilement of social media gradually started. Incrementally, these political rivalries on social media raised the political consciousness of Nigerians. They developed an interest in politics, started following political developments, and jumped on trends.

How the problem started

Today, the Nigerian social media space remains more polarised than ever. If you ever want to experience the heterogeneous structure of Nigeria, wait until the election period and you will be shocked about how people are divided across political, religious, tribal, geographical, economic, and even educational lines. After that, do a comparative study between the electioneering campaign period and the mood during the recently concluded AFCON 2024 where Nigeria united and stood behind the Super Eagles.

As political actors plot their campaign strategies, they factor in the control of mostly Twitter in their political plots. Almost all mainstream politicians have social media influencers/operators under their payroll. These individuals are tasked with spreading desirable narratives including falsehoods. In my view, the downside of social media is a monster created by the same people calling for the regulation of the system.


Enters the legendary Lai Mohammed

The Nigerian social media space was significantly polluted in the heat of the 2015 general elections by the then National Publicity Secretary of the ruling APC - Lai Mohammed. He hounded his party's political antagonists with humongous lies that left the devil shell-shocked. His winning strategy of disinformation was the needed catalyst for other questionable individuals in Nigeria highly skilled in spreading lies. The nodus of fake news went out of hand that the pioneer, Lai Mohammed became baffled at some point. He later advocated for the regulation of social media using his capacity as the Minister of Information.
It is not advisable to trust the intentions of Nigerian politicians. Their original plan is to muzzle the social media space. They are fully aware of the dire economic situation of Nigerians. Their concern is that they wish Nigerians could suffer in silence and allow them to plunder public resources in peace. They don't want to be accountable for their actions. Politicians by nature have no definite stand in life on any public discourse. Today, they are the defenders and tomorrow they play the aggressors. They keep swinging both ways like bisexuals!


Social media is already self-regulatory

Do we have issues with social media in Nigeria? Yes! Do we need regulation? No! The social media space is already self-regulatory. The best way to fact-check any news report is to check the comment section of the news article. If you have a critical and discerning mind, you will see that comment that will either enlighten you or increase your doubts about its validity and reliability. In case the report matters to you, go further by searching for it on other mainstream media platforms. Social media platforms also flag fake content, reduce their visibility, block certain keywords, and sanction fake news peddlers. Furthermore, the laws of libel and slander in Nigeria already cover social media activities. Now and then, lawsuits are seen flying around against people accused of defamation. The Nigerian police also have a structure to combat fake news.
The Nigerian politicians don't have genuine intentions as I have overemphasized. Fake news to them is that scathing news report that doesn't favour them. Social media regulation is the resemblance of a legal way of suppressing dissenting voices. It is the Chinese and Malaysian blueprint of social media censorship. You can't solve a problem that you are a party to.


Osahon George Osayimwen writes from England.

Abeg make dem leave social media. Na person wey live don frustrate dey rant for social media. Many people now don dey enter depression, before person go get mind begin commit suicide, make govt start by regulating hunger first.

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Watianoengineer(m): 12:05pm On Feb 13
Social media should be banned in Nigeria if the federal government wants to restore sanity in our society. Let's go back to the Era of transistor radios for information dissemination

2 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Goodnewsforlife: 12:05pm On Feb 13
I think social media should b regulated cos I can’t just imagine how some people will wake up one day n start writing thrash about people simply because they don’t like them

How can someone sit in the comfort of his room n b writing things he knows nothing about

I wish government can keep picking those miscreants up cos me n u can b their victim someday

6 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by yewit37486: 12:05pm On Feb 13
Nope. Nigeria has bigger issues to contend with, fix those and the "need to regulate social media" i.e. avoid criticism, will fix itself.
If we have a leader that is making the country work, no one would care whichever part of the country he is from, all Nigerians are asking for is BASICS - food, security, shelter. Fix those and the need to complain on SM will sort itself out.

5 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Akwamkpuruamu: 12:05pm On Feb 13
Is this a question? If PDP had regulated social media, would APC be in power?

5 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by EJEHSON(m): 12:05pm On Feb 13
E
Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Wawelexy(m): 12:05pm On Feb 13
They want to silent the masses finally

6 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by jaxin119: 12:06pm On Feb 13
It could be perceived as trying to gag the masses. The media is regulated worldwide, but the problem with Nigeria is that this will be grossly mismanagement and politicised.

Though I disapprove of content creators going about assaulting and frightening people in the name of naking contents. What if the assaulted party is a BP/ heart disease patient?

I also disapprove of the idea of people videoing private individuals minding their private business and posting it online with their consent.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Genuinepro: 12:06pm On Feb 13
Akwamkpuruamu:
Is this a question? If PDP had regulated social media, would APC be in power?
Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by EJEHSON(m): 12:07pm On Feb 13
The same social media that was use by APC to deceive and rigged their way into power, this is the same social media they want to regulate.

3 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by superCleanworks(m): 12:07pm On Feb 13
Yes. for their own selfish reasons

2 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by PortHarcourtcit(m): 12:07pm On Feb 13
Yes oooo, so that the GBAJUE'S will not throw Nigeria into pandemonium...

2 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by bentenny(m): 12:07pm On Feb 13
There are already strong regulatory laws embedded by owners of the social media platform!

It's up to them to ensure that defaulters are severely punished!
However,if nothing happens to the perpetrators,they get emboldened and keep doing the same thing unabated!

Take for instance, nairaland......there are regulatory measures taken to clamp down on culprits responsible for cyber bullying but the MODs saddled with the responsibility to enforce such laws have been turning a blind eye or seemingly partisan due to political affiliation or tribal bias!

Unfortunately,nothing has been done to remove such MODs!

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by olisaEze(m): 12:07pm On Feb 13
They’re not interested in regulating fake news, they’re the pioneers. They just want the unfettered access to intimidate the opposition whenever the news is unfavorable since NBC has been rendered obsolete by SM. 😏

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Couldntfigurean: 12:08pm On Feb 13
This same APC?

3 Likes

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by U09ce: 12:08pm On Feb 13
Ss
Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by Seunpapa65: 12:09pm On Feb 13
Nigerian are foolish sometimes you wonder

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by ugodson(m): 12:09pm On Feb 13
Please you guys should make me understand o. Wetin concern regulating social media and the Hard life Nigerians are facing
The same social media he used before they came into power

The prayer is they should shut social media so it will give us the youth time to face this government head on
[b][/b]

1 Like

Re: Should The Nigerian Govt Regulate The Social Media Space? by BigDawsNet: 12:09pm On Feb 13
Nope...

If you take Nigerians freedom of speech away from them... then you will cee EndSars2.0

We don't want that now... just let them keep using the social media to make money and catch cruise... that will keep them busy... till the government fund a solution

5 Likes

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