| ‘Maga
No Need Pay’: Nigeria Gets Creative to
Fight Cyber Scams - Tim Cranton,
Associate General Counsel, Microsoft
This
week, a new pop song hits the airwaves in West
Africa with a highly unusual message: Don’t
be seduced by cybercrime.
Cybercrime is a global issue,
but perhaps no form of cybercrime has been more
associated with a region
than the advance fee fraud collectively known as “Nigeria” or “419” scams
(419 is the section of the Nigerian Criminal Code
dealing with fraud). Through schemes such as fake
lotteries, bogus inheritances, romantic relationships,
investment opportunities or – infamously – requests
for assistance from “officials,” scammers
promise an elusive fortune in exchange for advance
payments.
West Africa is by no means the only source of these
scams, but the region is stepping up to address their
impact in a variety of creative ways.
419 scams have taken root
in Nigeria’s popular
culture. Scammers enjoy a rebellious, “cool” mystique,
even producing songs and music videos that celebrate
their own audacity. At the same time, 419 scam victims
around the world are often stigmatized as naïve
or gullible, which discourages many from coming forward.
This week in Abuja, Nigeria, members of the Microsoft
Digital Crimes Unit and Microsoft Nigeria are meeting
with the Economic and Financial Crime Commission
of Nigeria (EFCC) and other international stakeholders
to plan programs to combat Internet fraud in West
Africa.
One particularly innovative
effort is a campaign to redirect the energies of
young Nigerians drawn
into cybercrime, which is known locally as “yahoo-yahoo.” On
the campaign’s front lines are 24 ambassadors
for the Microsoft Internet Safety, Security and Privacy
Initiative for Nigeria (MISSPIN). These young Nigerians
work with local communities throughout the country
to help establish productive online alternatives
to Internet fraud and educate the youth of Nigeria
on avoiding the trap of cybercrime.
MISSPIN
Ambassador Ohimai Godwin Amaize is working to shift
cultural perceptions of scammers and their victims
through the B.L.I.N.G. project, which unites some
of Nigeria’s most influential musicians around
the problem of cybercrime. Their song, “Maga
No Need Pay,” challenges young Nigerians
to resist the temptation of “yahoo-yahoo” and
avoid creating more maga, or victims. The song,
an Afro Hip-Hop and R&B fusion, is intended
to help inspire both national and international
audiences.
I’m also proud to announce
that on September 7-10, the EFCC will convene the
1st West-African
Cybercrime Summit in Abuja. Coordinated by the EFCC,
Microsoft, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, Economic
Community Of West African States (ECOWAS) and the
International Mass Marketing Fraud Working Group
(IMMFWG), this conference will bring together an
international group of political leaders, decision
makers, criminal justice authorities, industry representatives
and other stakeholders from Africa and around the
world to help:
* Raise political awareness and commitment to combat
cybercrime
* Build capacity for scalable and sustainable solutions
* Develop multi-lateral cooperation
These are by no means the first steps taken to fight
advance fee fraud. In 2008 Microsoft joined with
Yahoo!, Western Union and the African Development
Bank to establish the Advance Fee Fraud Coalition.
Last fall, Microsoft, Western Union, the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service and the Federal Trade Commission
launched a public safety ad campaign in Bing to help
warn consumers about financial fraud.
Cybercrime knows no national
boundaries. To fight it effectively we must embrace
a variety of approaches – technological,
legal, and cultural. Motivating individuals to reject
cybercrime and pursue legitimate ventures begins
with campaigns like MISSPIN and the B.L.I.N.G. project.
With awareness, education and partnership, we can
help make the Internet safer for the whole world.
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