CyberSafe Foundation and Google.org have launched Resilio Africa, a cybersecurity platform to support 200 critical community institutions (CCIs),… The post CybersecurityCyberSafe Foundation and Google.org have launched Resilio Africa, a cybersecurity platform to support 200 critical community institutions (CCIs),… The post Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity: Resilio Africa launched to support 200 institutions across Africa

2026/02/11 18:48
4 min read

CyberSafe Foundation and Google.org have launched Resilio Africa, a cybersecurity platform to support 200 critical community institutions (CCIs), including clinics, schools, local government offices and vital non-profits across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and South Africa.

The ambitious three-year programme began with a blunt assessment of Africa’s rapid digital transformation, which leaves most essential public services exposed to attack. Many operate on ageing systems, while most have no security budget, making them easy targets for modern cybercrime.

The numbers are striking; Resilio Africa intends to protect the records of about 2 million people and secure 15 million public records across the four pilot countries. In year one, the programme will prioritise Nigeria and Kenya before scaling to Ghana and South Africa.

At the launch event in Lagos, Confidence Staveley, Executive Director of CyberSafe Foundation, set the tone by highlighting the “aggressive cyber activity” now targeting Sub-Saharan Africa.

She noted that with over 42 million web attacks recorded in the first half of 2025 alone, critical community institutions are facing a crisis of capacity. “These are not abstract numbers,” she warned, pointing to the 60% increase in password-stealing malware and the billions of threat events in East Africa driven by phishing and fraud.

Staveley cautioned that without addressing structural gaps like outdated security policies and a lack of incident response planning, these essential institutions remain vulnerable to sustained attacks.

CyberSafe and Google.org launch Resilio Africa: a digital shield for 200 critical institutions across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and South AfricaConfidence Staveley, Executive Director of CyberSafe Foundation

In a keynote, Anna Collard, SVP of Content Strategy and Evangelist for KnowBe4 Africa, noted that cybercrime in Africa is not merely a financial problem but a threat to social stability.

Resilio Africa is built around that idea. Success Tawo, Programme Lead at CyberSafe Foundation, described the mission as creating a “digitally resilient Africa where CCIs have the tools, the skills, and the network to defend themselves.”

She explained that the initiative delivers technical tools, expert hours and capacity building. It also provides incident response plans tailored to each organisation.

What participating CCIs stand to gain from Resilio Africa

Participating CCIs will receive advanced cybersecurity tools and real-time threat intelligence. The project offers over 10,000 pro bono consulting hours.

It plans tiered training for more than 4,500 staff, from executives to frontline workers. Institutions will also get customised incident response playbooks and tabletop exercises, including phishing simulations and security health checks.

CyberSafe and Google.org launch Resilio Africa: a digital shield for 200 critical institutions across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and South Africa

The programme offers a rare combination of tools, training and hands-on support. If the pilot succeeds, it could become a model for protecting vulnerable institutions beyond the four launch countries.

Eligibility is straightforward, and the application is now open for eligible CCIs willing to commit time and participate in assessments.

The programme targets registered non-profits and public sector bodies that provide essential services. Schools, hospitals, media houses, helplines and local government offices are all within scope. Purely commercial businesses and financial institutions are excluded.

Tawo emphasised collaboration. By joining, institutions enter a network of peers. They will share insights, resources and lessons learnt. “If you are safe and your neighbour is not, are we really safe?” she asked.

Also read: The digital Battle of Adwa: Kanessa Muluneh’s quest for Africa’s gaming sovereignty

Google.org’s support gives the project scale and credibility. Haviva Kohl, Google.org EMEA Programme Manager, framed the work as a force multiplier. For technology to serve society, it must be safe. Grants to grassroots cybersecurity initiatives can change the calculus for small organisations across the continent.

CyberSafe and Google.org launch Resilio Africa: a digital shield for 200 critical institutions across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and South Africa

Resilio Africa is deliberately practical, focusing on measurable risk reduction. Security health checks will look for compromised credentials and infected devices. Phishing simulations will teach staff to spot malicious links. Incident playbooks will guide response and recovery. Real-time threat feeds will support cross-border collaboration.

This initiative arrives at a critical moment. Ransomware and targeted attacks are rising globally. In many African countries, the consequences are amplified by limited resources and fragile infrastructure. Resilio Africa seeks to close that gap.

The post Cybersecurity: Resilio Africa launched to support 200 institutions across Africa first appeared on Technext.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Pi Network Accelerates Real World Adoption as Picoin Transitions from Digital Asset to Everyday Payment

Pi Network Accelerates Real World Adoption as Picoin Transitions from Digital Asset to Everyday Payment

   The Pi Network ecosystem is once again demonstrating significant progress. While the community initially focused on mining ac
Share
Hokanews2026/02/12 20:27
Curve Finance Pitches Yield Basis, a $60M Plan to Turn CRV Tokens Into Income Assets

Curve Finance Pitches Yield Basis, a $60M Plan to Turn CRV Tokens Into Income Assets

The post Curve Finance Pitches Yield Basis, a $60M Plan to Turn CRV Tokens Into Income Assets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Curve Finance founder Michael Egorov unveiled a proposal on the Curve DAO governance forum that would give the decentralized exchange’s token holders a more direct way to earn income. The protocol, called Yield Basis, aims to distribute sustainable returns to CRV holders who stake tokens to participate in governance votes, receiving veCRV tokens in exchange. The plan moves beyond the occasional airdrops that have defined the platform’s token economy to date. Under the proposal, $60 million of Curve’s crvUSD stablecoin will be minted before Yield Basis starts up. Funds from selling the tokens will support three bitcoin-focused pools; WBTC, cbBTC and tBTC, each capped at $10 million. Yield Basis will return between 35% and 65% of its value to veCRV holders, while reserving 25% of Yield Basis tokens for the Curve ecosystem. Voting on the proposal runs from Sept. 17 to Sept. 24. The protocol is designed to attract institutional and professional traders by offering transparent, sustainable bitcoin yields while avoiding the impermanent loss issues common in automated market makers. Diagram showing how compounding leverage can remove risk of impermanent loss (CRV) Impermanent loss occurs when the value of assets locked in a liquidity pool changes compared with holding the assets directly, leaving liquidity providers with fewer gains (or greater losses) once they withdraw. The new protocol comes against a backdrop of financial turbulence for Egorov himself. The Curve founder has suffered several high-profile liquidations in 2024 tied to leveraged CRV purchases. In June, more than $140 million worth of CRV positions were liquidated after Egorov borrowed heavily against the token to support its price. That episode left Curve with $10 million in bad debt. Most recently, in December, Egorov was liquidated for 918,830 CRV (about $882,000) after the token dropped 12% in a single day. He later said on…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 18:00
Vitalik Buterin Defends Ethereum Staking Exit Times Amid Industry Criticism

Vitalik Buterin Defends Ethereum Staking Exit Times Amid Industry Criticism

The Ethereum founder likened leaving staking to “a soldier deciding to quit the army” in response to criticism over long exit times.
Share
Coinstats2025/09/18 21:35