Nigeria plans to reform its Data Protection Act to keep pace with artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies. The data protection regulator says the current legal framework, while useful, may need updating to address the rapid spread of AI, robotics and big data, and to close gaps the existing law was never designed to cover.

Why the Data Protection Act needs updating
The Nigeria Data Protection Commission says that although the present Data Protection Act includes provisions on automated decision-making, its language is too broad to govern the expanding applications of AI effectively. Officials have pointed to regulatory uncertainty and the risk of bias as key weaknesses in the country’s AI ecosystem, arguing that a law written before the current wave of AI tools cannot fully anticipate the challenges they pose.
Keeping humans in charge
The regulator has stressed that the planned reforms are not about replacing human judgment with automated systems. Instead, human oversight remains a central principle, ensuring that people retain control over decisions that affect their lives. As AI is used in areas from finance to public services, safeguards that keep humans accountable for outcomes are seen as essential to protecting citizens from opaque or unfair automated decisions.
Part of a broader push
The move sits within wider efforts to regulate Nigeria’s fast-growing digital economy. Lawmakers have been working on legislation that would give regulators new powers over data, algorithms and digital platforms, potentially placing Nigeria among the first African countries to set comprehensive AI rules. Reforming the data law is one strand of that larger agenda to balance innovation with protection and accountability.
Balancing innovation and rights
Regulators face a delicate task: encouraging the benefits of AI while guarding privacy and fairness. Overly rigid rules could stifle a promising sector, while weak ones could leave citizens exposed to misuse of their data. Officials say the aim is a framework that supports responsible innovation, gives businesses clarity and protects individuals, drawing on global practice while reflecting Nigeria’s own context and priorities.
What it means for Nigerians
For ordinary Nigerians, stronger data rules could mean clearer rights over how personal information is collected and used by AI systems. For businesses, updated law could reduce uncertainty about what is permitted. The real test will be implementation, including enforcement and the institutions tasked with overseeing it. Done well, reform could build trust in the digital tools increasingly shaping everyday life.
Africa’s emerging AI rules
Nigeria’s move comes as governments worldwide grapple with how to regulate artificial intelligence, balancing innovation against risks to privacy, fairness and security. Across Africa, only a handful of countries have begun crafting comprehensive AI rules, making Nigeria’s effort potentially influential on the continent. Policymakers everywhere are drawing lessons from established data-protection regimes while adapting them to local realities and capacities. For Nigeria, the challenge is to design rules robust enough to protect citizens yet flexible enough to support a young, fast-growing tech sector. Getting the balance right could help attract investment and build public trust in digital services. As AI tools spread into finance, health, education and government, the stakes of regulation are rising, and the frameworks set now are likely to shape the country’s digital future for years.
The planned overhaul signals that Nigeria intends to take AI governance seriously. Viorah TV will continue to track the reform of the Data Protection Act and related legislation.