There was a time when privacy meant closing the door, lowering your voice, or keeping your diary under lock and key. Today, privacy lives inside your phone.
It is in the M-PESA transaction you make before breakfast. The SIM card you register. The app you download. The online form you fill. The customer care call you make. The Wi-Fi you log into. Every day, knowingly or unknowingly, Kenyans leave behind small pieces of themselves in the digital world.
That is why Safaricom’s focus on customer awareness around data privacy is both timely and important.
Safaricom Group CEO Peter Ndegwa captured the scale of the responsibility clearly when he said: “We process 150 million transactions every day, so protecting customers’ information is extremely important. Trust is the currency we value as a business and ensuring data protection requires all of us to work together to create a safe and trusted digital ecosystem.”
That word, trust, is the heart of the matter.
For many Kenyans, Safaricom is not just a telco. It is the line to family, business, school fees, chama contributions, salaries, loans, bills, emergencies, customers, suppliers and opportunity. It sits quietly in the pocket, but it carries a lot of life.
This makes data privacy more than a legal obligation. It is a relationship issue.
Safaricom’s message to customers is simple: understand what personal data is collected, why it is collected, how it is used, where it is stored, and how it is protected. That awareness matters because people cannot protect what they do not understand.
In its public data privacy communication, Safaricom explains that the personal data collected depends on the service a customer uses. This may include registration details, contact information, transaction-related information, service usage data and other information required to provide services.
Safaricom also notes that network-related information, such as call data records, may include numbers called or messaged, logs of calls, messages or data sessions, and approximate location. Importantly, Safaricom clarifies that it does not record or store the content of calls or messages, except in specific customer service interactions.
That kind of explanation is useful because data privacy can sound like the language of lawyers and IT departments. Yet the risks are very ordinary. A shared M-PESA PIN. A weak password. A suspicious app. An overshared ID number. A careless click.
Safaricom says it protects customer information through measures such as data minimisation, encryption, regular audits, system monitoring and dedicated privacy and security teams.
But the bigger lesson is that data privacy is shared work. Companies must build secure systems and be transparent. Customers must stay alert.
In a digital economy, protecting data is not just about protecting information. It is about protecting people.
Editorial Review article by NewsTrendsKE












