Category: e-Business

  • Lagos, stakeholders urge action on cyber safety

    Stakeholders at a conference on cyber safety has called for a decisive intervention of governments at all levels to put in place measures which will protect, and rescue internet users, especially the most vulnerable-children and teenagers from on-line predators.

    In a statement the Director of Press and Public Relations, Lagos State Ministry of Science an Technology, Tunde Awobiyi, stated that stakeholders, who met at a conference put together by the Ministry and FB Innitiatives in Ikeja, included public and private school children, polytechnic and university students, educationists, policy makers and parents in the state. Concerns were raised about cyber safety, especially cases of predators taking advantage of the innocence of the children and teenage population on juvenile pornography, bullying, human trafficking and exploitation through extremism and child abuse.

    The Chief Executive Officer of FB Innitiatives, Mrs Funke Babatola, said the stakeholders have resolved to collaborate with the government to reverse the inadequate provision of legislation specific to children on-line protection, adding: “It is our duty to ensure that children are protected in the enjoyment of their basic rights and liberties.’’

  • MTN set to take fibre to homes

    MTN said it will take fibre to homes in a move to redefine service delivery to its customers.

    To achieve this, the firm disclosed that it has concluded arrangements to deliver broadband Internet via its high-speed fibre network to Victoria Garden City, Ajah, Lagos.

    According to the Chief Enterprise Solutions Officer, MTN, Babatunde Osho, the roll-out will ensure that residents enjoy speeds as high as 10 megbytes per second (Mbps).

    He said: “That is more than four times the current speeds. This is the way to go because broadband has become a necessity for business and in our personal lives. To meet this growing need, MTN Business has been in the business of delivering broadband internet service to estates, enabling residents access to internet-ready homes. These estates include Dolphin Estate, Crown Estate, Mayfair Garden and Victoria Garden City.”

    Osho said the proliferation of internet-ready devices and interest in social media is driving more and more content to the web which increases the time spent on the web. “And the better the broadband experience, the more we want to go online. To take this service up a notch and deliver even greater value to its residential customer base, MTN Business is in talks with VGC Estate management to explore the delivery of broadband Internet via its high-speed fibre network,” he added.

  • Convergence threatens telecoms regulatory frameworks, says NCC

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said the emergence of convergence in the information communications technology (ICT) industry has given rise to regulatory challenges as firms and facilities merge.

    Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the NCC, Dr Eugene Juwah, disclosed this in Lagos while speaking on the Future of telecommunications services and disruptive Influence of convergence as guest lecturer at a forum organised by the Nigerian Acadecmy of Engineering.

    The forum was christened Academy Technology Dinner held at the Lagos Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Ikeja.

    Quoting Hellerstein & Associates, he said: “Convergence is the ability of one or different network s to carry different services. Convergence can also be defined as the bringing together of industries in the communications area, which were previously viewed as separate and distinct in both the commercial and the technological sense.”

    According to Juwah, the provision of internet access and television to mobiles and triple or quad play services offered by internet service providers (ISPs) is an example of convergence, adding that the biggest internet providers in the country are the four global system for mobile (GSM) communication service providers who have deployed infrastructure which are services ‘agnostic.’

    He said: “These infrastructure are internet protocol (IP) based. Hence voice, data and video services are being carried on the same network infrastructures. What were once distinct networks carrying distinct services, each with its own protocol, are now uniformly carried over IP networks.”He lamented that the development has thrown up challenges “because traditional regulatory frameworks were designed for an era when clear functional diffrences existed between services and infrastructure and were not designed for new environment of converged networks and services where functional diffrences no longer exist.”

    He cited areas, such as interconnection between networks, vexed issue of quality of service (QoS) as well as competition and pricing as some of the new challenges thrown up by convergence.

    According to him, with convergence leading to the evolution of networks from circuit switched based to IP packet switched based system, QoS framework for both systems is also different, adding that for the former, ensuring quality serviec has been a function of the regulator.

    “However, for converged services, new QoS standards are required since each of the services have different QoS requirements. Telecommunications services have a more stringent standards compared to traditional data sevices like email services. This will thus require a modification of existing QoS frameworks to both enable the growth of these new converged services and still maintain an optimal level of QoS delivery,” he said.

  • SIM registration blues

    SIM registration blues

    The registration of subscriber identification module (SIM) cards has been on for over two years.The exercise ends on Sunday, but many subscribers are yet to be registered. Even those who registered long ago are getting what they describe as “disheartening messages” from their service providers. Will the exercise achieve the desired result?  Lucas Ajanaku and Deji Fakorede ask.

    In 2008, the Boko Haram insurgency had not become frightening, but there were reports that some unscrupulous elements were using their mobile phones to send short service messages (SMS) and making threat calls.

    Inundated with these reports, the security agencies approached the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for help because the calls could not be traced.

    NCC moved swiftly, convening a consultative forum involving telecoms operators, consumer groups, security agencies, telecoms associations, dealers, the Nigerian Identity Management Commission (NIMC), National Population Commission (NPC), National Census Commission, the media and other interest groups.

    The forum agreed that phone users be registered. A committee was set up to further look at the details of the implementation of the registration and submit its recommendations to the NCC. The report was reviewed and the NCC gave its blessings to the exercise.

    On March 28, 2011, amid pomp and celebration, the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Execuitve Officer, NCC, Dr. Eugene Juwah, launched the SIM card registration in Abuja. The exercise, according to the NCC, ends on Sunday. It warned that unregistered SIMs would be deactivated by the end of the month, adding that new subscribers would continue to join the network but their cards must be registered before their activation.

    Subscribers are expressing concern over conflicting reports from their service providers. “Officials of some of the operators actually came down to my offfice and did the registration of subscribers on their network by themselves. I am amazed that few days to the end of the exercise, I am getting reports that my SIM card registration failed. I was advised to go to the nearest customer care centre to do the registration,” a journalist lamented.

    According to him, with officials of the telcos coming with all the paraphenalia of SIM card registration to his office, he had gone to bed, concluding that nothing could shake the infallibility of the exercise. “I am so shocked with the sudden twist in the tale almost at the 11th hour. I cannot leave my job and start looking around for the telco’s customer care centre which is neither close to my house nor office. And in the office, I have enormous responsibilities around my neck that would prevent me from driving to Ikeja, Berger, Mushin or the Island for the exercise,” he added.

    His plight is similar to that of thousands of others, especially those whose service providers found it extremely difficult to come out with a code which would give them an opportunity to know early the status of their SIM card regsitration. Moreover, the number of agents carrying out the exercise has paled into insignificance as they are hardly seen. “The agents are no longer as ubiquitous as they used to be when the exercise began over two years ago,” Richard Adeyeye, a Lagos-based businessman said, adding that the agents now operate in clusters.

    A SIM registration agent, who identified himself simply as Yinka, said money is collected from those registering their SIM cards because they are poorly paid by the people that hired them. His colleague, Ahmed, also confirmed that money changes hands when SIM cards are registered. According to him, they have formed an association to protect their interest.

    According to the agents, the money they charge people is used to pay for the space where they carry out the exercise. “All manner of people come here to disturb us. So, we use part of the money we make to settle the area boys and keep the rest for our fare,” one of them explained.

    NCC has dissociated itself from the money-for-SIM-registration racket. Its Director, Public Affairs, Tony Ojobo, said the agents were only doing their principals a great disservice by extorting money from subscribers. He urged subscribers not to pander to the whims and caprices of those trying to fleece them.

    Some experts in the industry have questioned the sanctity of the exercise, especially the data collated, wondering if they could serve as yardsticks for planning for the citizenry.

    A source at the NIMC deplored the exercise. According to him, the original design for the exercise was drafted by the NIMC. He claimed that when exercise began, the NCC started doing what it liked despite collecting N6.2 billion in…..

    “Based on what we did and most of the people who did it are (still around), we worked on the SIM register project; it was designed by the NIMC. We followed the standard that we felt if they adopt and implement, the data will meet our own standard and our own standard are benchmarked on the basis of international standard for such identity data base.

    “The moment we stopped being part of that project, rather than (settle for) 10 finger prints, they settled for something less and rather than the number of demographic data base we recommended, they settled for something less. Obviously, it is no longer a perfect exercise. Secondly, the background when you are doing the face shot capture, some of us have been to the high commission for visa, you know they tell you the type of background and the size of the passport photograph. There is a reason for that,” the source said.

    According to the source, there are locations where the kiosk attendants just ask the person willing to register SIM to stand well regardless of what the background is and just do the face capture.

    The source said said that practice fails to meet international requirement. “That is just an ordinary passport photograph. If you want to convert it into something that can be used to conduct face recognition, it is useless. They just asked me to stand and I did and they took my shot in their office. The place was not well lit and I shook my head that this is not what we recommended. There were certain parameters for all these,” the source added.

    Investigation shows that the face capture has since stopped. According to one of the agents, who spoke on condition of anonymity, it had to stop because the data capturing machine is not resilient enough to withstand the elements, especially the sun. The designers failed to factor the tropical sun of Africa into the machine, thus, it malfunctions at the slightest exposure to the sun.

    Corporate Services Executive, MTN, Akinwale Goodluck, admits that the exercise may not have produced an error-proof national data base. He said the operators had succeeded in handing down a data base, for the first time, to the government for security and national planning.

    Realising the importance of a dependable national database for the country, former President Olusegun Obasanjo mooted the national identity card idea in 1978. Obasanjo, then a military ruler, felt that with a credible database, economic planning will be made easy but about 36 years after, the country is still searching for a reliable identity for her citizens.

    The scheme was re-introduced in 2001 and several years later, the project failed to deliver cards to millions of Nigerians, who did all they could, including weathering the elements to register.

    The first attempt at implementing the project landed some politicians in police net 23 years ago. In 2002, another set of politicians was tried for alleged corrupt enrichment under the scheme.

    Following failed attempts, the National Identity Management Commission Act 2007, came into being towards the end of the Obasanjo administration. The NIMC management said it is prepared to hand over a dependable, fool-proof national database to the country.

    The Act provides for the establishment of NIMC, National Identity Database, assignment and use of General Multipurpose Cards (GMC), the National Identity Number (NIN) and harmonisation and integration of identity database. It repealed the law creating the Department for National Civic Registration (DNCR), a conduit through which government officials lined their pockets.

    The need for a national identity for Nigerians cannot be over-emphasised as most countries, including Pakistan have computerised identity card system with bar coding to make details of the holder available with all the intelligence, police and civil departments. The residential details of holder can easily be ascertained if these computerised cards are issued.

    The absence of this facility prompted the Bankers’ Committee’s decision last year to approach the Pensions’ Board for its harmonised customer identification management. This is because the Pension Board’s biometric scheme appeares full-proof. The Independent National Election Commission (INEC) is also seeking to use information at its database to issue permanent voter’s card.

  • Wanted! A law against cybercrime

    Wanted! A law against cybercrime

    Before the telecoms revolution, it was unthinkable to transact business with mobile phones from home some 10 years ago. Today, this is the practice, but it is at a price. e-business brought with it cybercrime, reports LUCAS AJANAKU .

    Cybercrimes are committted through the internet and the telephone. The advent of the internet and mobile phone gave birth to such crimes. Hitherto, it was almost impossible for the crimes to thrive. Cybercrimes have become a threat to most economies and many countries have laws to fight the menace. But the same cannot be said of Nigeria, which is lagging behind in laws to tackle the hydraheaded problem.

    It is against this backdrop that the Director, National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), Prof Cleopas Angaye, is pushing for such a law.

    On why the agency is championing the bill, Angaye said it was because Nigeria is in the same league with “super powers” on a negative pedestal. Cybercrimes have given the county a bad image and are posing a threat to e-commerce.

    “Nigeria is rated as one of the worst cybercime nations in the world. If you go to the internet (and click) cybercrime Nigeria, you will see that Nigeria is either one of the four (leading cybercrime countries of the world). It becomes of utmost concern when you count the United States and, maybe China and the United Kingdom, and Nigeria is there. We shouldn’t be there. Nigeria is not as advanced as these other countries. We want to be advanced in other areas, but certainly not in crime. So, we are concerned. We want our cyberspace to be free,” he told The Nation.

    Angaye said the Cybercrime Bill was borne out of necessity. According to him, there are two strands to the bill: cybercrime and cybersecurity.

    “There are the cybercrime and the cybersecurity issues. The cybersecurity part of the bill spells out penalties for those who contravene the bill. Security is about how we prepare ourselves and ensure that we secure our cyberspace against crime,” he said.

    He wondered if e-commerce, especially online retailing, was possible in the country.

    “The question that comes to mind is: “Is it realistic for a country like Nigeria where crime rate is high?”

    But in the last few years, cynics have been proved wrong. At the last count, no fewer than a dozen online retailing outlets have registered their presence in the country. But the issue is how to sustain the growth in the face of obvious challenges.

    Though there is no data to that effect, but the number of sites doing online retailing is a sign that it is gaining traction in the country. There are www.konga.com, www.gloo.ng, www.jumia.com.ng, www.kaymu.com.ng www.mybidmonster.com.ng, www.shopkolo.com, www.ozyet.com, www.buyright.biz and others.

    The former Chief Executive Officer, sunglasses.com.ng, Jaime Moreno, said the future of e-commerce in Nigeria is bright considering the population of the country and the number of internet users. “In the UK, e-commerce accounts for around 10 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP ) implying over $200 billion. And by 2016, it is expected to contribute more than construction, healthcare or education.

    “Now, obviously Nigeria is at infancy stage compared to UK in terms of e-commerce, but this shows the potential the country has and where it could be heading soon.

    “And if some people think UK is a far example, UK has 52 million internet users. Nigeria has 48 million, and most likely will overpass UK by the end of 2013,” he said.

    He added that lack of education about e-commerce and lack of trust between the customers and service providers remain challenges too. “In Nigeria, there is a large amount of internet users, but most do not yet know they can actually buy products online,” he added.

    On its impact on the labour market, he said, Nigeria has a very large young population (over 50 per cent below 20). The wave of e-commerce will bring many new start-ups and along with them job creation for that young population. Entrepreneurs, self-employed and freelancers will have the key to become the engine of growth and innovation for Nigeria.”

    Given that online retailing holds huge prospect for the economy in terms of opportunities, how could it be developed to boost the nation’s GDP?

    Moreno said the government has a major role to play. “With the potential that Nigeria has in terms of demographics and internet dynamics, the government could power Nigeria to become the African hub for e-commerce. Allowing intensive benefits to technology startups in the country will definitely attract foreign investment and will help Nigerian and international entrepreneurs to grow and create successful companies,” he said. Other thing government needs to fix are:

    Insist on quality telecoms

    service

    Many Nigerians access the Internet via their mobile phones. This implies that the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) should step-up its regulatory role so that seamless internet services could be guaranteed.

    Improved products’ delivery times

    In a country where the major highways have graduated to highways to the graves and where the rail and other alternative means of transportation remain a luxury, delivery time could be a challenge. The government could fix the raods and open up alternative means of transportation. Moneyweb reported that according to Jana, 38 per cent of South Africans report that the biggest obstacle to online shopping is delivery times. This is in large part a reflection on the parlous state of South Africa’s road and postal infrastructure, and beyond the control of online retailers.

    Tackling online insecurity

    Nigerians are still anxious about the security of their online information, especially without an enabling law to punish people who breach the cyberspace. The Vice-chairman WiniGroup Incorporation, Tim Akano, said IT security has always been taken with levity in the country, arguing that this will make breach an easy task by the large pool of unemployed smart graduates.

    “IT security is already a major concern globally. IT security threat will become more serious in 2013 and beyond. In Nigeria, where IT security is usually handled with levity, with more young people acquiring IT skills and with little opportunity to earn a decent income due to poor infrastructure that will make them transit to technopreneure, these youths will turn to vulnerable banks, universities, government agencies and other corporate organisations to earn huge income by hacking into their database and sell it for handsome fees in the online booming black market,” Akano who is also the managing director of New Horizons Nigeria, warned.

    He, however, advised organisations to embrace encryption, adding that organisations that will go unscathed are those that have what he described as the sven-layer-IT security sweater.

    “The way out of this pending hacking- earthquake is for organisation to embrace encryption. Organisation that will go unhurt, un-embarrassed and stand protected this year and beyond will need what I call: “7-Layer IT-Security Sweater’’ to cover its origination’s body. Fortunately, this 7-Layer IT-Security Sweater’’ already exists in Nigeria,” he said.

  • SIM registration: How agents extort subscribers

    The registration of the subscriber identification module (SIM) card is being sabotaged by agents hired by the network operators for the exercise.

    The registration agents, they said, extort subscribers; are hostile and refuse to take the customers photographs. The exercise is expected to end this month.

    Contrary to the Nigerian Communications Commssion (NCC) directive that SIM registration should attract zero cost to subscribers, the agents, who operate in clusters in some part of the country extort N100 for each SIM card registerd.

    “If you are buying a new SIM, you pay N100 for the new SIM and N100 for its activation. That is the practice here. If you cannot pay, please go and look for a place where you will register the SIM,” a female agent told a subscriber.

    Some agents, in their quest to make more money, turned themselves to itinerant mobile registration agents, moving around the nook and cranny of the state to get subscribers registered.

    One agent, who introduced himself as Elvis from Cameroon, said he moved round to make more money since he is paid based on the number of subscribers registered. He was spotted at Ayetoro, on the outskirts of the city. Like, his stationary colleagues, he also charges N100 per SIM regsitered.

    Again, some of these agents are barely literate such that at the slightest provocation, they resort to use of uncouth words on people who wish to register their SIM cards with them. They insult people, especially those who dared to ask them if they could spell their names correctly.

    Contrary to the specification of the NCC, face shot capture of subscribers is rarely done. When it is ever done, it is done haphazardly with all manners of objects as background. “My face photo capture was done with the brand name of the competitor as bakcground,” one subscriber said.

    An expert said this practice does not meet international requirement. ”That is just an ordinary passport photograph. If you want to convert it into something that can be used to conduct face recognition, it is useless. They just asked me to stand and I did and they took my shot in their office. The place was not well lit and I shook my head that this is not what we recommended. There were certain parameters for all these,” he said.

    The NCC said any operator, whose agent is asking for money before SIM registration, is doing its principal a diservice. Director, Public Affairs, Tony Ojobo, insisted that SIM card registration “is free and no subscriber should be made to pay anything.”

    Responding to media enquiries, Manager, Public Affairs Relations, Etisalat, Chineze Amanfo, said the telco was working closely with the regulator to ensure the success of

    the exercise., insisting that it is at no cost at all. “Etisalat carries out SIM registrations at points of customer engagements and we have worked hand in hand to support NCC at ensuring strict adherence to the subscriber registration guidelines. Our agents across all channels are duly trained on the guidelines of subscriber registrations and do not demand money for this exercise.

    “SIM registration services are at no cost to our subscribers and our supervisors in charge of SIM Registration regularly carry out checks at the points of registration to ensure all agents are following laid down guidelines. We withdraw our device and terminate our contract with any agent that goes against these rules,” she said.

  • OEMs lack e-waste management strategies

    Most of the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) that flood the maket with mobile phones and consumer electronics products do not have a sustainable management of the wastes from their use, The Nation has learnt.

    These products fall into disuse either as a result of obsolete technology or irreparable damage and are unleashed on the environment with the attendant threat to health, safety and the environment (HSE).

    Most of the OEMs do not have any strategy in place to take back household electronic products like the carthode ray tube (CRT) television sets which technologies like plasma, liquid crystal display (LCD), light emitting-diode (LED) and organic light-emitting display (OLED) have displaced.

    Similarly, there is no plan to take back disused mobile phones, chargers, batteries and other accessories experts say cause health hazards.

    Director, Consumer Electronics, B2B& IT, Samsung West Electronics Africa, Sunil Kumar, said the firm has tried to instutionalise the culture of exchanging old products for new, lamenting that the mentality of consumers in the country does not seem to buy into the idea.

    “Nigeria is till evolving as a country in terms of e-waste mangement but sepcifically, in Samsung, what we are doing is that when we launch a new product, we offer a form of exchange policies for the older product some of which still exist in the market within Nigeria and outside Nigeria. But most of the time, what we do is that we dismantle those products and try and knock them down into bits, destroy them in a manner that it does do any harm to the environment. That is eesentially what we do,” he said.

    Asked where the collection points were, he said: “As I said, that (take back point) is still not organised. Our intention is to do that. People still do not believe in having that exchange, we have done so many campaigns urging customers to bring their old airconditioners, promising that they get a price off that will enable them to take a new one. But somehow mentally, people are not ready for it here.”

    According to him, in other markets, the practice has become instutionalised, adding that in one or two years, the people may have changed their culture in this respect. “If you look at many other markets around the world, these things are very common. In India, fifteen years ago and people use to come and bring their old products, take some benefits on that and buy a new one. But Nigeria is still evolving and I guess, in one or two years, you will see actual change in that angle,” he said.

    Finnish mobile phone major, Nokia, about five years ago, launched its take-back initiative, encouraging its customers to take their disused mobile phones, chargers and other accessories to designated collection points in the country where they could recycled. It is not known what others are doing in this respect.

  • ‘Nigerians ignorant of warranty terms’

    Many consumers of electronic products in Nigeria do not know what warranty terms entail. This ignorance has led some of them to go into litigation, thereby losing their money and wasting their time, the Managing Director of Slot Systems, Nnamdi Ezeigbo, has said.

    Speaking at a forum organised by the firm and the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) in Ikeja, Lagos, the Managing Director of Slot Systems, Nnamdi Ezeigbo, lamented that lack of proper awareness about the terms of warranty has led many customers to seek legal redress which they lose.

    According to him, the warranty terms given by the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) are the same that are extended to the customers, adding that the firm cannot give what it does not have.

    He listed the damages not covered by warranty on mobile phones to include those arising from water/moisture/sweat, accidental fall and other such damages that are not “factory faults.

  • NCC, Phase 3 partner over underserved areas

    NCC, Phase 3 partner over underserved areas

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has struck a partnership deal with Phase3 Telecom under the Universal Service Provisioning Fund (USPF) B-Train project to extend fibre infrastructure to unserved and underserved areas of the country.

    Business Solution Manager of the firm, Mr.Otuya Okecha, disclosed this to The Nation in Lagos, adding that the project will bring telecoms services to the rural areas of the country.

    According to him, this will help speed up the realisation of Federal Government’s initiatives targeted at addressing the sleuth of OTC infrastructure to the rural areas.Otuya further said that this will make an impact in the country’s broadband development from the point of infrastructure setting the platform for broadband penetration and coverage in especially the underserved areas.

    He also said that the government should make the sector attractive by giving enough funding and grant for broadband investor to get to the underserved areas.

  • Why low service quality persists, by MTN

    Why low service quality persists, by MTN

    Telecom giant MTN has explained why the quality of service (Qos) is still low. It blamed the problem on the bureaucracy surrounding the rolling out of new base transmission station (BTS) and vandalism of optic fibre cables.

    MTN Corporate Services Executive Akinwale Goodluck said in Lagos that the issue of service quality is essentially that of “capacity problem” occasioned by the dearth of infrastructure. He said even when the operators were willing to roll out, there was always the frustration of getting the necessary approvals from various government agencies and communities who demand money from operators. Added to this is the constant vandalisation of optic fibre cables for commercial reasons. The cables, he said, are also damaged by construction workers. Goodluck noted that there is massive road construction works going across the country leading to inadvertent damage to the cables.

    He said: “People vandalise the cables in the night, sometimes, as early as 2 am. The fibre is not much of use because it is not copper and this is the worry for us. People actually set out to damage the network so that during repairs, the vandals make all sorts of spurious demands.”

    He disclosed that, in May, the telco integrated 250 2G BTS to the network to improve customers’ experience, adding that persistent fibre cuts rendered capacities meaningless.

    “We are working with the government, security agencies to guarantee this vulnerable infrastructure. Members of the public must also regard telecommunications infrastructure as theirs and not that of MTN because it allows them to communicate with their loved ones easily,” he said.

    He urged the public to be vigilant.