Who Owns Your Child’s Data?

Inside Nigeria’s Unregulated EdTech Jungle
Technology is rapidly changing how Nigerian children learn. From learning apps to digital tests, EdTech is everywhere: classrooms, homes, and even homework chats. But behind the shiny screens lies a question nobody seems to be asking:
Who really owns all the data these apps collect from your child?
Spoiler: It’s not you.
A Data Goldmine… Without Rules
Every time a child logs into an EdTech platform, a silent stream of data is recorded:
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Names, ages, and location
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Test scores and homework patterns
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Login times, browsing habits
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Even face scans and voice recordings in some cases
Now imagine this happening daily, in hundreds of schools across the country with no clear law protecting that data. Unlike the US or Europe, Nigeria has no strict rules covering children’s digital privacy in schools.
The Great Silence of EdTech Companies
Most EdTech providers do not clearly say:
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Where your child’s data is stored
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How long they keep it
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If it’s shared with advertisers or third parties
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Or how to delete it
Worse still, many parents don’t even give proper consent before the data collection starts.
What Could Go Wrong? A Lot.
Without regulation, your child’s data is vulnerable to:
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Hacking and cyberattacks
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Unauthorized sharing with marketers or data brokers
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Profiling that could affect future opportunities
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Zero accountability from EdTech companies
All of this, without you ever knowing.
So, What Needs to Change?
Nigeria can’t afford to stay silent. We need:
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Laws that protect children’s data—inspired by global standards like GDPR or COPPA
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Transparency from EdTech firms—clear privacy policies and parental controls
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Parental awareness—more digital literacy and access to information
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Collaborative action—between government, tech companies, educators, and families
Final Word
EdTech can revolutionize education, but not at the cost of our children’s privacy. If we don’t act now, we risk turning schools into data farms and students into digital products.
Let’s not wait for a scandal to take this seriously.
The time to protect our children online is now.





