Every other day, women online are under public scrutiny. Whether you鈥檙e an influencer or social media civilian, being a woman in Nigeria鈥檚 online space means taking extra care to be yourself. Meaning there鈥檚 a high chance you鈥檙e shrinking yourself to avoid trouble and banger boys.
Our last X space featured women who feel strongly about how unsafe Nigeria鈥檚 online space is for women. The speakers in the space included actress,, a model, stylist and content creator and, digital literacy and education officer at.
In this article, we give you reasons why our online space isn鈥檛 safe for women and 4 ways to make it better.

What is So Unsafe About The World Wide Web for Nigerian women?
Before getting into how Nigeria鈥檚 online space is unsafe for women, it’s important to understand what we mean. Our speakers note that the online space is eager to punish women for being true to themselves and simply existing online. It is the trivialisation of women鈥檚 passions and the disproportionate backlash women receive for expressing their opinions and building personas online.
Nigeria鈥檚 online space is unsafe for women because of misogyny. Women do not feel safe enough to make themselves visible online and source opportunities. With every post and interaction, there is the fear and likelihood that someone is waiting for the opportunity to harass, bully, or amplify posts that do just that.
鈥淪afety is being able to exist without fear. It鈥檚 the ability to express opinions and build online without disproportionate backlash. For women, it is visibility and opportunity. Existing online without the fear of being harassed and bullied, without being picked on simply because it’s easy to pick on women.鈥 鈥 Osas Okonyon
鈥淪afety for women online is true freedom. Being safe enough to express their passions.. It should not be seen as silly or trivialised. It is the ability of women to interact online without fear.鈥 – Ugonna Ihe
Why are People Committed to Limiting Online Safety?
Our speakers agree that there are a number of things fuelling the continuous harassment and bullying of women online. One of them is the algorithm and the added effect of remuneration for multiple impressions and engagement. For some reason, the tweets and posts that are most insulting and dehumanising often trend. And this results in financial compensation. Engagement is the new currency, and people are doing what they can to secure it.
There is also the social capital people get from tending and adequately 鈥渄ragging鈥 women online. Misogyny is rewarded on both financial and social ends. Men are awarded 鈥渟treet cred鈥 for being and saying inhumane things to women. And men continue to relish the feelings they get from being mean to women.
鈥淭he online space today feels like secondary school, where boys used to get high over being mean to girls. Misogyny is rewarded. People don鈥檛 care about the things they accuse women of doing; what they care about is the high they get from punishing women. The core of it is misogyny. Men have always bonded over their humiliation and harassment of women.鈥- Osas Okonyon
鈥淥ne of the things we鈥檝e seen between last year and this year is that attention is the new oil. We are seeing people who have never seen $500 or $1000 before. People now believe that benefiting from women鈥檚 harms is worth the money. If they can get impressions on their posts punishing a woman, they鈥檙e good.鈥- Ugonna Ihe
What Have We Tried Doing About It?
It鈥檚 not like women haven鈥檛 tried to shift this online narrative. The problem is the continued dismissal of conversations that try to . Whenever a woman tries to speak against an injustice that鈥檚 been done, everyone suddenly has an issue with her tone or delivery. Sometimes, the issue is even with the person attempting to speak, not necessarily what鈥檚 being said.
鈥淚f we are really critiquing something, why are people more concerned with how the thing was said rather than the real issue? Being treated as sub-human and harassed is not enjoyable. Why do I have to make my responses and defences palatable? The most rational response to injustice is anger. Why are women punished for expressing that anger?鈥- Osas Okonyon
These situations have real-life consequences for women. It鈥檚 difficult to quantify what they are, but our speakers note that the worst-case scenario is death by suicide. Most times, it鈥檚 difficult for women to redeem themselves, especially when the torchbearers of said harassment are men.
鈥淧eople reduce it to dragging, but it’s not; it’s called bullying. The second is complete erasure. This bullying chases and erases women from these platforms. Another thing is reputational damage. The internet never forgets.鈥- Ugonna Ihe
鈥淔alse accusations are worse for women because people believe men more than they do women.鈥- Omoloto Opeifa
So, what can we do to make our online space safe for women?
1. Personalise Your Account and Feed
It鈥檚 important to curate our feed to include only posts and interactions that recognise women’s full autonomy. This might mean going private and controlling who follows you, blocking known troublemakers before they get to you or being cautious of the kinds of platforms and people you share your information with. This also includes media. It might be a bit jarring to take extra care just because you’re a woman. But until things get better, this is one way to protect yourself.
鈥淣ever get tired of blocking. By God’s grace, I will block you. Your account belongs to you. It is not a democracy. Leaving social media platforms will only allow the bully to continue being a nuisance to other people.鈥- Omoloto Opeifa
2. Be Your Sister’s Keeper
We鈥檝e already established how men always have each other鈥檚 backs and support each other irrespective of the action in question. Defending a woman should be easier. Even if you鈥檙e too introverted to react to the post, report it before it gets to people who would do worse things with it. Don鈥檛 think twice about interacting. If you want, you can even go the extra mile and report the account.
鈥淢aintain solidarity with women online. Men will always show solidarity and support each other, irrespective of how depraved something they鈥檝e done is. Women should do the same, and we have more reason to. If you are not reactive, you can simply report the post.鈥- Osas Okonyon
3. Advocacy
While reporting tweets and posts sounds like a fantastic idea, there is only so much we can achieve if the guidelines and regulations of social media platforms aren鈥檛 solid. The guidelines are limited and don鈥檛 take into account the cultural nuances of their active countries. It鈥檚 important for us to advocate for stronger guidelines and regulations that ensure active protection and safe spaces for women. We need to push for higher standards that will be upheld despite the need for engagement.
鈥淲e can’t use AI to track the validity of abuse because it lacks cultural nuances. AI may not recognise some slurs.鈥- Ugonna Ihe
4. Share this Article with Your Male Friends
Men need to do better. It鈥檚 that simple. Having a friend who lives and breathes for the harassment and bullying of women online, especially when you say nothing about it, makes you complicit in the action. It鈥檚 okay to call your friend out on their bad behaviour. We shouldn鈥檛 be telling people how to behave or treat women better, but unfortunately, we have to. There is real damage in the things we do and say to people online.
鈥淐all it out. Translate the herd culture to something positive. Call it out. Things don鈥檛 need to get that bad before we do something about it. There is also no need to amplify it. Stop bullying men who call out these behaviours. Understand the stakes involved.鈥- Ugonna Ihe.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be teaching men what to do at this age.鈥- Omoloto Opeifa
The conversation was insightful and entertaining. If you鈥檙e too shy to share the article with your male friends, send them the space recording . Better still, give it a listen yourself.聽
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