Cyber Crime Act Ushers New Era of Freedom with Responsibilities

By Billy Mijungu

As you post on your socials, you must now be responsible enough to say the truth and nothing but the truth, without hurting anyone, any institution, or any legal person. The new Cyber Crime Act is not just another law; it is a social contract reminding us that freedom of expression must walk hand in hand with accountability. From today onward, I must strike a balance between speaking freely and speaking truthfully. It had become almost impossible to disabuse the falsehoods spread online by those motivated by hate, politics, or malice.

Many will argue that good manners cannot be legislated, but the Kenyan experience seems to have proved otherwise. When the unwritten rules of decency failed, the law had to intervene. The new legislation now draws a firm line between freedom and abuse, between expression and destruction. For far too long, social media platforms have been battlefields where reputations are assassinated, lies are polished into truths, and dignity is shredded in public view. It is time to restore order and civility to the digital space.

Under this new legal framework, you can no longer be cyberbullied in the name of freedom. Online violence, character assassination, and malicious propaganda will now have consequences. Freedom, after all, was never meant to be a license to destroy. It was meant to empower citizens to speak, to innovate, to engage, and to question, all while upholding respect and honesty. We now have the virtual and moral police guiding behavior in these digital spaces. The Cyber Crime Bill might finally steer online behavior toward productivity rather than toxicity.

We have seen situations where Kenyans online have gone to the extreme of metaphorically killing someone’s reputation, burying them in virtual caskets of slander, and celebrating their downfall. How did we come to normalize such cruelty? Words have power, and when used recklessly, they destroy more than any weapon can. This law may be the turning point, a chance to reclaim our collective morality and rebuild trust in the digital public square.

However, as much as citizens must learn to be responsible, the Government too must labor to apply this law justly. The measure of its success will not be in the number of arrests or fines but in the fairness of its enforcement. Justice must not be selective, and the law must never be used as a tool to silence dissent. When both citizens and the state embrace responsibility, freedom thrives in its purest form.

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