Policy Blind Spots in Cyber-Enabled Investment | GASA Africa

GASA

Date of Event: 18 June 2026
Event: GASA Africa Chapter Meet-Up

As financial markets, fintech platforms, digital lending, mobile money, venture capital, and cross-border investments become increasingly technology-driven, cyber risk is becoming a core investment risk. The GASA Africa Chapter meet-up, Policy Blind Spots in Cyber-Enabled Investment, explored how regulatory and policy frameworks can struggle to keep pace with fast-moving digital investment ecosystems, leaving consumers, investors, institutions, and economies exposed to scams, data misuse, and cyber-enabled fraud.

Hosted by the Global Anti-Scam Alliance Africa Chapter, the discussion brought together experts from consumer protection, cybersecurity, finance, technology, and scam research. The session examined how policy gaps can emerge when financial services, telecoms, technology platforms, third-party providers, and cross-border payment channels operate across overlapping regulatory environments.

Speakers:
  • Patricia Eromosele, Director – Africa Chapter, Global Anti-Scam Alliance (Moderator)
  • Florence Abebe – Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission, Nigeria
  • Geraldine Mugumya, Risk Analyst, Information Security – National Information Technology Authority Uganda
  • Fiyinfolu Okedare, Director, Consulting Services – Forvis Mazars in Nigeria
  • Oluwole Olakanmi, Security Scam Researcher – DAC Lens

Speakers highlighted the need to treat cybersecurity as a central part of investor protection, rather than a narrow IT or compliance issue. As digital investment ecosystems expand through fintech platforms, mobile money, digital lending, cloud infrastructure, AI-enabled services, and cross-border payment systems, cyber incidents can directly affect operational continuity, consumer confidence, legal liability, and market trust.

The discussion also addressed the challenge of balancing innovation with consumer protection. Florence Abebe shared insights from Nigeria’s experience with digital money lending, where regulatory action was needed to address harmful practices around data access, unfair recovery methods, and consumer privacy. Speakers emphasised that regulation should support innovation while ensuring that consumers are protected from abuse, misleading practices, and weak data safeguards.

Geraldine Mugumya noted that investment ecosystems across Africa are evolving beyond traditional banking and capital markets, but regulatory frameworks often remain divided by sector. This can create gaps when banks, telecoms, third-party aggregators, fintechs, and digital platforms all play a role in the same transaction chain. The panel stressed the importance of flexible, multi-stakeholder policy frameworks that can adapt as technology changes.

Fiyinfolu Okedare discussed cybersecurity risk as a growing blind spot in investment due diligence. While investors often focus on market, credit, liquidity, and operational risk, they may pay less attention to ransomware exposure, third-party risk, credential compromise, business email compromise, phishing, deepfake-enabled deception, and the resilience of the platforms they invest in or rely on. He emphasised that investors, platforms, regulators, financial institutions, and governments all share responsibility for reducing exposure.

Oluwole Olakanmi focused on the need for resilient investment ecosystems built around continuous monitoring, intelligence sharing, incident response, stronger identity controls, and practical scam awareness. The discussion also highlighted the importance of reporting culture, especially when victims feel ashamed to report financial loss. Without better reporting and intelligence sharing, regulators, platforms, financial institutions, and law enforcement may struggle to identify patterns early enough to prevent wider harm.

A key theme throughout the session was trust. Cyber-enabled investment scams exploit confidence in platforms, brands, professional networks, payment channels, documents, and official-looking communications. Once trust is lost, it can be difficult to restore. Speakers called for stronger collaboration between policymakers, regulators, innovators, financial institutions, telecom operators, technology platforms, and consumer protection agencies to close policy blind spots without stifling responsible innovation.

The meet-up reinforced GASA’s wider message that it takes a network to beat a network. As scam tactics become more sophisticated and cross-border, stronger coordination, targeted awareness, data sharing, and adaptive regulation will be essential to protect consumers and build safer digital investment environments across Africa and beyond.

Watch the full discussion below to learn how Africa’s anti-scam community is working to strengthen safeguards around cyber-enabled investment.

Jun 18, 2026
4 minute read
Category
Video Topic - Fraud Policy Region - Africa Event - GASA Meet-Ups Industry - Policy Makers
Written by
James Greening
James Greening
Digital Content Manager
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