The policy momentum radiating from Georgetown over the last few weeks is undeniably historic. Following President Irfaan Ali’s executive signal to modernize our legal architecture, the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs and Governance, led by Minister Gail Teixeira, officially launched national consultations at the World Trade Centre on Child Online Safety and Social Media Regulation.
With a strict three-week mandate hanging over stakeholders, and adjacent warnings from ECLAC regarding our chronic “innovation gap,” the state has arrived at a critical junction. The administration has openly admitted its current trajectory: it is actively reviewing ready-made digital safety and copyright templates from Australia, the United Kingdom, and the European Union.
The regressive logic of “not reinventing the wheel” may be seductive to an administration managing a high-velocity, energy-backed economy. Why spend precious time drafting indigenous frameworks when government can simply buy a world-class legislative blueprint from Brussels or London for a few million dollars?
The answer is as brutal as it is urgent: Because the Western digital wheel was built for an entirely different legal, structural, and economic terrain. Copying it will not protect Guyana; it will exacerbate our problems, complicate enforcement, and formalize our subjugation.
The Fatal Flaws of Western Imports
The legislative templates currently under review by the Attorney General’s chambers rely on fundamental, flawed assumptions:
1. That multi-billion-dollar tech conglomerates will voluntarily comply with digital boundaries or that automated, remote algorithmic filtering can police localized human behavior. In the context of Guyana and the Global South, this reliance creates a catastrophic execution gap.
Consider the immediate human crises our policymakers are rightfully attempting to solve—cyberbullying, targeted online harassment, viral defamation, and the distributed horror of child pornography. In a Western jurisdiction, if a platform violates a safety mandate, state regulators can enforce compliance because those platforms maintain massive physical corporate offices, local legal teams, and billions in domestic assets directly within the state’s reach.
Guyana enjoys no such structural leverage. Under standard European or Australian frameworks, when a Guyanese minor is subjected to a viral, devastating smear campaign or online exploitation, our local law enforcement officers at the Guyana Police Force Cybercrime Unit are left legally toothless. They would be forced to navigate the bureaucratic maze of international Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs) just to request basic metadata or account logs from a server in Silicon Valley. By the time a foreign platform chooses to respond—if it responds at all—the psychological and social damage to the child is irreversible.
2. That Western automated filters will operate equally across the world.
Western automated filters are entirely blind to the realities of Guyanese culture. An artificial intelligence content moderator operating out of California or London cannot decode Guyanese vernacular, local slang, or the specific community dynamics where school-yard harassment actually occurs. What appears, for example, as benign text to a European algorithm is often weaponized defamation on the ground in Georgetown or Berbice.
Entrenching the Digital Plantation
By importing these off-the-shelf frameworks, our legislative committees are blinding themselves to the deeper economic extraction taking place. This is a phenomenon I define as Inniss Data Nullius—the systemic vulnerability where the digital outputs, behavioral metrics, cognitive footprints, and cultural expressions of our citizens are treated by global tech giants as completely vacant, unowned legal territory.
(In the intellectual property context, this term describes how the digital outputs of citizens in the Global South are treated as legally ownerless—available for extraction by platforms with no obligation to compensate or consult.)
Here is how this compares in the context of Child Online Safety and Social Media Regulation for Guyana.
| Western Template Approach | Indigenous Governance Architecture |
| Passive age bans | Inniss Data Nullius codification |
| Voluntary corporate compliance | Mandatory local corporate presence |
| Reliance on remote AI filters | 12-hour enforceable takedown windows |
| Continuous asymmetric extraction | Absolute sovereign data ownership |
| Outcome: Legislative obsolescence | Outcome: Enforceable child protection |
When we adopt standard Western legal imports, we inadvertently legitimize this asymmetrical loop. These platforms scrape and harvest the digital data of Guyanese children and content creators to train their global proprietary artificial intelligence models and optimize their advertising engines. They exploit our national digital ecosystem without paying a single cent in local licensing or state-level taxation. This is the creation of a modern Digital Plantation.
The state may inject billions into the local creative sector and the Orange Economy, but if the underlying legal plumbing remains bound to inherited or borrowed frameworks, that economic wealth drains directly into international data repositories. We become passive consumers of external digital traditions, locked into an invisible economic dependency that mirrors the colonial structures we spent generations dismantling.
The Local Content Problem
There is a glaring, unacceptable irony in the state’s procurement strategy. While the government rightfully champions aggressive Local Content mandates for our physical extractive sectors—ensuring that Guyanese brains and Guyanese firms build our physical infrastructure—it has completely abandoned this principle in the digital domain.
The state is directing significant public funds to foreign law firms to conduct research on European and Australian models, completely bypassing highly specialized, top-tier domestic and regional research institutions. They are outsourcing the intellectual design of our sovereignty to external actors who have absolutely no diagnostic understanding of our domestic institutional friction, our inter-agency execution bottlenecks, or our unique material realities.
Guyana does not need more imported text. We do not need foreign law firms to rewrite words they do not understand for a region they do not inhabit.
What the state requires is comprehensive Digital Governance Architecture. We must move away from standard international compliance and establish an indigenous jurisprudence born out of the Global South. Our upcoming legislation must mandate an absolute, non-negotiable Local Corporate Presence Clause, forcing any platform operating in our space to maintain a legally accountable local agent subject to immediate domestic subpoenas and strict, 12-hour enforceable takedown windows.
The three-week consultative window must not be used to select which Western master to copy. It must be used to assert our own intellectual independence. The President and the Attorney General must halt the procurement of unworkable foreign laws and instead retain local and regional expertise to design an enforceable, sovereign framework.
Concretely, this means retaining local and regional legal experts, in partnership with Caribbean academic institutions, to lead the research and drafting process before the three-week consultation window closes.
If we do not design our own digital and intellectual property architecture, global platforms and foreign legislatures will design our future for us. Guyana needs Intellectual property and digital safety legislation that will work for the country.
Dr. Abiola Inniss, Ph.D., LL.M., is a Guyanese Intellectual Property and policy scholar and Executive Director of The Inniss Institute for Digital Policy and Intellectual Property. Recognized regionally as the Architect of Caribbean Intellectual Property, she is the author of multiple frameworks on digital sovereignty, data governance, and innovation policy for the Global South. Her work has informed intergovernmental bodies across CARICOM and Africa, and she continues to lead regional thinking on the intersection of law, technology, and post‑colonial development.
