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Digital Security Self-Assessment Tool for Defenders

Human rights defenders, journalists, activists, land and environmental defenders, and wider the civil society organizations face a growing wave of digital threats from surveillance, hacking, phishing, account takeovers, and data theft. These attacks are designed to silence, expose, and intimidate those doing vital work.

Yet most defenders and organizations have never assessed their digital security posture or know where to begin.

This free Digital Security Self-Assessment Tool we developed is built for anyone on the frontlines whether you are an individual activist, a journalist protecting sources, a land defender in the field, or a civil society organization managing sensitive beneficiary data.

In under 30 minutes, work through 70 indicators across 10 security domains including secure communications, device security, data protection, account security, incident response, and more. You will instantly receive a personalized risk score and a prioritized action plan showing exactly what to fix and in what order.

Free. No account needed. Your responses never leave your browser.

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The Digital Shift in Illicit Finance: A Critique of AML/CTF’s Obsolete Focus on Traditional Banking

By Jordan Tumwesigye

The global financial landscape has undergone radical changes over the last decade. On one hand, this landscape has been digitized, which has promoted greater financial inclusion and efficiency. On the other hand, the financial system has birthed a sophisticated “shadow” ecosystem. Despite this transformation, the pillars of Anti- Money Laundering (AML) and Counter-Terrorist Financing (CTF) remain largely rooted in a dated banking model. This reliance on a legacy framework has created a dangerous disconnect whereby regulators are still perfecting the art of monitoring bank transactions and wire transfers while illicit actors have migrated to decentralized, borderless, and automated digital rails.


The Migration of Shadow Capital
For decades, the “gold standard” of AML was the Know Your Customer (KYC) protocol at commercial banks. It was assumed that if you could control the gates of the traditional banking system, you could theoretically starve criminal enterprises of their oxygen. However, 2025 data from The Financial Times suggests a radical pivot with an estimated $158 billion in illicit cryptocurrency flows. This represents a significant increase from previous years, driven not just by individual hackers, but by state-aligned
actors and sophisticated underground banking networks.


Traditional banking relies on centralized intermediaries who act as “gatekeepers.” In the digital shift, these gatekeepers are being bypassed through peer-to-peer protocols that allow for lending, trading, and asset management without a central authority to conduct KYC. Moreover, digital assets like the ruble-pegged A7A5 or USD-pegged tokens that offer the liquidity of cash in an instant can be difficult to track. Lastly, techniques that confuse the trail of funds through jumping across different blockchains or using “tumblers” to blend illicit funds with legitimate ones can be difficult for these gatekeepers
to track.


Why Traditional AML/CFT is Failing
Traditional AML systems often rely on batch screening of transactions, which happens days after the transaction has been conducted. In a digital world of instant payments and “flash loans,” a criminal can move funds through ten different jurisdictions and three different asset classes in the time it takes a bank’s compliance software to flag a single suspicious wire. By the time a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) is filed, the “money” has already been laundered and converted back into untraceable assets.
Secondly, AML regulations are inherently confined to defined geographical limits. Digital finance, however, is inherently agnostic to borders. A “Chinese-linked” syndicate can use Australian digital infrastructure to move Russian-sanctioned funds into a Caribbean

DeFi protocol. Traditional banking AML struggles with “cross-border complexity,” but for a digital-native launderer, there are no border restrictions. Legacy systems focus on physical identity: passports, utility bills, and face-to-face verification. In the digital shift, identity is increasingly algorithmic. A wallet address is not a person; it is a cryptographic key. While the blockchain is transparent, the link between the “key” and the “human” is where the system breaks down. Current AML frameworks are ill-equipped to handle unhosted crypto wallets, which allow individuals to act as their own banks.


Sanctions Evasion in 2025: A Brief Case Study on the Growing Influence of Digital Currency
The obsolescence of traditional banking focus was best illustrated in 2025 by the rise of state-sponsored sanctions evasion. Nations under heavy international sanctions no longer rely on back-channel bank transfers. Instead, they have integrated crypto-rails into their national economic strategies.
According to a January 2026 Report by TRM Labs, the A7 wallet cluster associated with Russian sanctions evasion handled nearly $39 billion in 2025 alone. These flows didn’t pass through the SWIFT system or Western correspondent banks. They moved through stablecoins and “underground” digital exchanges that operate entirely outside the reach of traditional banking supervisors.


Recommendations

Failure to adapt will not just lead to more financial crime, which will, in turn, render the global financial oversight system a relic of a pre-digital age.

  1. For one, it is important to acknowledge that humans cannot effectively monitor the volume of digital transactions. Compliance must therefore shift towards real-time analytics that use Artificial Intelligence to identify patterns of “chain-hopping” or “mule” behavior as they happen.
  2. The Financial Action Taskforce (FATF)’s “Travel Rule,” which emanates from Recommendation 16 should be enforced. The rule requires virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to share sender and receiver information, which must be globally enforced. As of late 2025, fewer than half of jurisdictions were actively enforcing it, creating “regulatory havens” for illicit capital.

Conclusion
This digital shift is not a future threat; it is the current reality. By remaining hyper-focused on the pipes of traditional banking, regulators are effectively guarding the front door while the back wall has been replaced with a high-speed digital tunnel.
To remain relevant, AML/CTF frameworks must evolve from a “checklist” mentality centered on bank accounts to a data-driven strategy centered on on-chain intelligence. The goal is no longer just to “Know Your Customer,” but to “Know Your Network.”

Computer security, privacy, data protection concept with account verification system with login and password, padlock, key and email icon, 3d render illustration isolated on white background

The 2015 Trap: Why Your Passwords are Failing You (and How to Fix Them Before It’s Too Late)

Think back to 2015. You likely had a different phone, a different hairstyle, and maybe even a different job. But if you’re like 60% of people today, you are likely still using the exact same password strategy you used a decade ago.

At Defenders Protection Initiative, we’ve seen how the digital landscape in Uganda has shifted. From the implementation of the Data Protection and Privacy Act to the rise in sophisticated phishing targeting Human Rights Defenders, the stakes have never been higher.

The uncomfortable truth? While we’ve upgraded our gadgets, our “digital front doors” – our passwords – are still using 2015 locks in a 2026 world of high-tech “digital crowbars.

Why “Complexity” is a Myth

For years, we were told to use things like P@$$w0rd123!. We thought we were being clever. We weren’t.

Modern hackers aren’t guessing your password; they use Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) that can test billions of combinations per second. To a computer, “P@$$w0rd” is just as easy to crack as “password.” The real danger today isn’t just a lack of symbols; it’s reused habits. If you use the same password for your work email as you do for your Netflix or Jumia account, you aren’t just at risk—you are an open door.

The New Rules of the Game

For Civil Society Organizations and HRDs in Uganda, a compromised account isn’t just an inconvenience; it puts sensitive data, sources, and safety at risk. Here is how to evolve:

1. Length is King (The Passphrase Shift): Forget “passwords.” Start using Passphrases. A string of four or five random words like Boda-Mango-Sky-Table-Blue is nearly impossible for a computer to crack but incredibly easy for you to remember.

2. Stop Being Your Own Vault: You shouldn’t know your passwords. Use a Password Manager. It generates unique, unbreakable codes for every site and stores them behind one master key.

3. The “Second Lock” (MFA): Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) is your best friend. Even if a hacker steals your password, they can’t get in without the code sent to your phone or app. Think of it as a deadbolt on your digital door.

Taking Action: Beyond the Screen

At DPI, we believe that digital security complements physical security. Protecting your data is protecting your mission.

  • Audit Your Team: When was the last time your organization updated its digital hygiene policy?
  • Get Trained: DPI offers Digital Security Clinics specifically designed for Ugandan CSOs to navigate these threats.

Don’t let 2015 habits jeopardize your 2026 impact. The hackers have upgraded, it’s time you did too.

Need a hand securing your organization?

Check out our [Mini Digital Security Handbook] or contact us for a consultation. Let’s keep the defense strong

DPI ToolKit

Digital Security Toolkit for Rights Defenders

Defenders Protection Initiative (DPI) has developed this Digital Security Toolkit to support human rights defenders and civil society organisations in strengthening their digital safety and resilience.

As defenders increasingly rely on digital tools to communicate, document abuses, and organise communities, they also face growing risks such as phishing attacks, account compromise, surveillance, and online harassment. This toolkit provides practical guidance to help organisations and individuals better understand these risks and adopt safer digital practices.

It includes simple recommendations, tools, and steps that defenders can use to secure their devices, protect sensitive information, and respond to digital security incidents.

This resource is intended for human rights defenders, civil society organisations, journalists, and community activists working in challenging environments.