Growth in technology has resulted in the large-scale collection and processing of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) by organizations that run digital services such as websites, which led to the emergence of new legislation to regulate PII collection and processing by organizations. Subsequently, several African countries have recently started enacting new data protection regulations due to recent technological innovations. However, there is little information about the security and privacy practices of top websites serving content to EAC citizens. We, therefore, analyze the website operator's patterns in terms of third-party tracking, security of data transmission, cookie information, and privacy policies for 169 top EAC website operators using WebXray, OpenSSL, and Alexa top websites API. Our results show that only 75% of the analyzed websites have a privacy policy in place. Out of this, only 16% of the third-party tracking companies that track users on a particular website are disclosed in the site's privacy policy statements which means that users don't have a way of knowing which third parties collect data about them when they visit a website. Such privacy policies take time to read and are difficult to understand; on average, it takes a college graduate to comprehend the policy and a user spends 12 minutes to read the policy. Additionally, most thirdparty tracking on EAC websites are related to advertisement and belong to companies outside the EAC. This means that EAC lawmakers need to enact suitable laws to ensure that people's privacy is protected as the rate of technology adoption continues to increase.
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