The parliament in South Africa has raised a bill that seeks to regulate how users share nudes and other intimate contents on WhatsApp.
The controversial laws are part of the Cybercrimes Bill that was passed in Parliament a week ago, on 2 December 2020 and are only awaiting the President’s approval.
In essence, the laws are a step in the right direction towards the criminalization of revenge porn and crack down on some cyber crimes associated with the instant messaging application.
Ever since the bill was mooted back in 2017, it has undergone a lot of changes.
Recently, the Parliament revealed the bill had been passed.
If the bill’s strict laws are anything to go by, personal data of WhatsApp users will be subject to scrutiny by both the law enforcement agencies and the electronic communications service providers and financial institutions which have been tasked to monitor such cyber crimes on the instant messaging app.
The bill makes it clear that the sending of intimate content which can be seen as harmful without the subject’s consent has been criminalised.
It also stipulates that any person, be it on WhatsApp, Facebook or Twitter, who discloses a data message to a single person, group of persons, or the public with the intention to incite damage or violence is guilty of an offence.