TikTok leads regional dialogue on digital safety at Sub-Saharan Africa summit

Date: 2025-04-01
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TikTok has reinforced its commitment to African digital safety initiatives as host of the second annual Sub-Saharan Africa Safer Internet Summit, convening government ministers and technology leaders from across the continent. The high-level gathering addressed critical challenges in online content moderation, youth protection, and balanced digital governance frameworks. 

South Africa's Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies, Solly Malatsi, inaugurated the summit by emphasizing the necessity of multi-stakeholder cooperation. "Creating safer digital spaces requires sustained collaboration between platforms, policymakers and communities," stated Minister Malatsi, setting the tone for discussions attended by delegates from Nigeria, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya and other African nations. 

In a remark, the TikTok's Vice President for Public Policy, Helena Lersch outlined the platform's evolving safety measures, noting: "With billions engaging daily on TikTok, we're continuously enhancing protective systems to maintain creativity while ensuring community wellbeing." The company demonstrated its AI-powered content moderation systems and age-restriction protocols being adapted for African contexts. 

Fortune Mgwili-Sibanda, TikTok's Director of Public Policy for Sub-Saharan Africa, also highlighted the summit's focus on youth protection strategies. "This platform enables knowledge-sharing to safeguard Africa's next generation of digital citizens," he explained, referencing the company's digital literacy programs being scaled across the continent. 

The closed-door sessions produced actionable recommendations for harmonized content policies, improved reporting mechanisms for harmful content, and culturally-sensitive safety tools tailored to Africa's diverse online communities. TikTok committed to establishing regular policy dialogues with African regulators and expanding its local moderation teams to better understand regional sensitivities.  

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