A full shutdown of TikTok got tossed aside as Kenyan lawmakers doubled down on tighter rules instead.
Parliament rejects TikTok shutdown
Parliament rejects TikTok shutdown
- Kenyan lawmakers ditched a total TikTok blackout.
- Members of Parliament opted for stricter guardrails within four months.
- The Public Petitions Committee warned that a ban would hit digital growth.
- Karemba Muchangi called a blanket prohibition unrealistic.
- Bob Ndolo from Bridget Connect Consultancy filed the 2023 petition.
- Ndolo argued the app feeds minors graphic and harmful material.
- Tom Joseph Kajwang backed Parliament’s oversight role.
- The National Assembly sided with regulation over a hard stop.
- The Ministry of Interior must team up with the Ministry of ICT and the Digital Economy.
- Plan requires tighter age checks and local data storage.
- Authorities must outline cybersecurity upgrades for platforms like TikTok.
- The House expects a progress report before the four-month clock runs out.
- The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner will press firms on compliance.
- ODPC must brief Parliament on filtering and privacy enforcement.
- Departmental Committee on Communication, Information, and Innovation will tweak the Kenya Information and Communications Act.
- The Communications Authority of Kenya could gain broader control over social platforms.
- Ministry of ICT and the Digital Economy will audit AI moderation systems.
- Lawmakers want algorithms fluent in local languages and laws.
- Platforms are urged to build clearer reporting channels.
- TikTok and peers are nudged to boost monetization for Kenyan creators.