Category: e-Business

  • Danbatta for eWorld Forum

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) Executive Vice Chairman , Prof Umar Danbatta, will provide insight and policy direction on a number of topical issues, trending technologies and innovations, at the 10th edition of the eWorld Forum and Awards. Already, the Commission has identified with the forum. This comes on the heel of a similar one from the Association of Licensed Telecom Companies of Nigeria (ALTON).

    Leading IT expert, Mr Chris Uwaje, and new President of Nigerian Internet Registration Association (NIRA), Muhammed Rudman, are also billed to participate in the panel discussions that will follow the lead papers. They will join Danbatta and ALTON’s Gbenga Adebayo.

    Also to provide rich content and different perspectives to the discussions are Aremu Olajide an engineer, former Technical Head of Glo Mobile, and now CEO of ExpertTeam and Gbenga Sesan of Paradigm Initiatives. More speakers are expected to join the  team of lead speakers and panelists at the event.

    The theme of this year’s forum is: “Nigeria’s Roadmap to Broadband Everywhere”. The Forum and Awards will come up on June 5, 2019 at the Oriental Hotel, Lekki, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The forum is coming at a time when the Global Broadband Commission is calling on nations and agencies to make investment in digital infrastructure a top priority in order to achieve the goal of connecting the remaining half of the global population.

    Publisher of eWorldNews and Ajomedia CEO Aaron Ukodie, organisers of the event,   said discussions at the forum are to focus around the trending talks on broadband, the 5G evolution and the various arguments and viewpoints that attend to the new technology platform.

    Perspectives on smart cities and hotspots everywhere vision would feature while more light would be shed on the state of the Infracos and the NCC last mile vision.

  • Tech innovators jostle for AFF’s $10,000

    Tech start-up with the best initiative will be awarded a cash prize of $10,000 at the biggest innovation conference in Africa hosted by Africa Fintech Foundry (AFF).

    The AFF event, which is tagged: Disrupt 2019; Digital Gold Rush, will hold on May 16, 2019, at the Landmark Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos. Some expected guest speakers are Australian futurist and Moven CEO, Brett King, and Access Bank Plc’s CEO, Herbert Wigwe, who will speak on: The Future of Intelligent Bank, as well as facilitate the launch of Tamada, a conversational and transactional chatbot, which assists with funds transfer, bills payment, book loans, and investments.

    Access Bank Plc Executive Director, Operations and IT, Ade Bajomo, who spoke ahead of the conference, said the forum will feature innovators and experts in Artificial Intelligence (AI), Big Data, Robotics, Blockchain technology, and many other Fintech sectors, all of whom will engage one another, exchange ideas and information.

    Also, start-ups who have growth potential will be identified for acquisition and partnership from prospective investors. The event will also provide a platform for strategic partnerships and collaborations among Access Bank Plc and investors, experts, regulators, innovators and technology companies to create a new era of technological disruption in the banking industry.

    Twenty start-ups attended the Startup Challenge, which held on May 3, where five were shortlisted to pitch at the conference in a bid to win the $10,000. The shortlisted startups are Gricd, SmartTeller, Trep Labs, Kaoshi and Seso.

    According to Bajomo, AFF, through its partner network offers funding of $30,000 in pre-programme investment and post-accelerator programme investment after Demo Day to promising startup cohorts.

    Bajomo said AFF is the bridge  between startups and their capital needs, as well as offer guidance that leads to their growth.

  • LCCI: take advantage of fourth industrial revolution

    THE  Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has urged both private and public sector players to take advantage of the fourth industrial revolution.

    Its Vice President and Chairman, Trade Promotion Board, Mr Gabriel Idahosa, who spoke ahead of 2019  ICTEL Expo slated for between July 16 and 17 at Landmark Event Centre, Lagos, said already, information communication technology (ICT) contributes between 10 and 11 per cent to the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP), stressing that much more needed to be done to increase the conribution.

    Idahosa said although the highest sectoral contribution of ICT to GDP in Africa is about 14 per cent, he urged stakeholders to ensure that full advantage of the fourth industrial revolution is taken since the nation and indeed, the continent lost out in previous industrial revolutions.

    The fourth industrial revolution has digital economy as its fulcrum and is being powered by innovations such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) Internet of Things, (IoT) and Internet of Everything (IoE), robotics, big data, augmented reality etc.

    Also, LCCI President, Babatunde Runwase, said the theme of the conference: “Fourth Industrial Revolution: The Nigerian Story”, was specifically chosen to awaken stakeholders in the economy on the need to brace for the digital race that new trends will unleash on the industry.

    He said the forum will provide inspiration for smalll and medium enterprises (SMEs) to showcase their businesses and tell their stories while it will provide an opportunity for experts to set agenda for policy makers.

    He said: “The theme is quite apt. It is not because it is contemporary and topical, but because Africa and indeed, Nigeria seemed to be slow in coming to terms with the far reaching implications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Secondly, it is gratifying that it will provide great opportunity to influence national discourse on the culture of enterprise from an ICT positive perspective. That is the significance of telling the Nigerian story.

    “This Expo will provide the required inspiration, which many SMEs need in their quest for improved performance. Perhaps, more importantly, the Expo will provide aspriring enterpreneurs, tech start-ups and thousands of unemployed and under-employed youths yet another opportunity for an enriching learning experience, capacity building, mentoring, connecting with investors and employers of labour and listening to life changing accounts from different stakeholders.”

  • Report: 82% of women suffer bias

    NO fewer than 82 per cent of women in technology are subjected to one form of gender-based discrimination or the other, a new report compiled by Tek Experts has shown.

    The report showed that women, mostly in the professional industry, are treated with bias at their place of work and have to cope with less dignifying treatment.

    The report, titled: “Achieving Gender Balance: Views from Across the IT Industry” highlighted pay gap, lack of career growth opportunities, recruitment bias, general lack of inclusion and displacements among others, as some of the ways women suffer discrimination in the tech ecosystem.

    The report was completed by over 2,000 women globally, and was conducted in five countries where the information technology firms operate. The countries include Bulgaria, Nigeria, Costa Rica, United States (U.S.) and Vietnam.

    Over 300 Nigerian women were selected across the country for the survey. While 82 per cent of the respondents agreed to being discriminated against during their recruitment process for an IT organisation 31 per cent of women did not get same training opportunities as men and 76 per cent of women felt that policies promoting gender diversity in the tech space should be strongly implemented by the industry regulator to ensure compliance by private companies.

    Tek Experts Chief Executive Officer, Naama Saar, who spoke on the report, said: “At Tek Experts we are deeply passionate about inclusion and diversity in the workplace and we’ve worked tirelessly to ensure we are a reflection of what we preach.

    “We have implemented recruitment policies to achieve gender balance so we not only talk the talk; we also walk the walk. Our leadership team is almost entirely composed of women, who have proven through their amazing track record in the industry that they deserve a seat at the table.

    “Also, the IT industry’s customer base is diverse, so I think this is something that should be reflected within companies themselves. Women definitely have a place and a value in this industry and there is a lot of added value to be gained by having women on your team. Tek Experts is certainly proof of that.”

    Also speaking on the need to achieve gender balance in the workplace and in particular, the IT industry, Tek Experts Nigeria Country Manager, Ashim Egunjobi said: “There is an absolute need to encourage women to take on more IT roles. Diversity is very important in every sector more so the IT sector because we develop lifestyle products, software and services that are essential for everyday living. Having both male and female perspectives helps to holistically understand what the end user needs and presents more than one way to solve a problem.

    “This white paper not only identifies the issues we have with diversity and inclusion in the IT industry, but it also recommends practicable solutions to ensure major IT companies, including ourselves and our clients, sufficiently tackle this issue of diversity and ultimately engender better futures for women in IT everywhere.”

  • Infinix unveils Hot S4

    Infinix Mobility Limited has launched the Hot S4 with 32MP A.I selfie camera.

    The phone also comes with a 6.2′ H.D+ waterdrop display screen, a triple rear camera for better portrait images, a fast octa-core processor, a 4000mAh battery power and an upgraded XOS 5.0 software for a seamless operation experience.

    Tagged 2019 Infinix Spring Media launch held at Intercontinental Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos,the Managing Director, Infinix Mobility, Benjamin Jiang, said the device has a remarkable selfie camera and in this era of digitalisation serves as the perfect tool to help the user actualise their aspirations

    “The amazing possibilities are endless with the Hot S4 and its features from the 32MP A.I selfie camera, 6.2 H.D+ waterdrop display, 4000mAh battery, triple rear camera can empower and propel its user to great heights notwithstanding their area of expertise”

    The S4 has infused an algorithm that can detect up to 1024 data points on the face, significantly increasing its facial detection accuracy. The face unlock function in combination with the fingerprint lock technology, together provide solid security for all the data stored in the device.

    He said the S series branched out of the Hot series to focus on selfie optimisation. It said the S4 is all about creating the ultimate superior selfie for a purpose. When a selfie is taken on the S4, it is expressed elegantly and is capable of elevating the user from a rising star to being part of the golden generation.

    Better selfies are captured with the 32MP A.I selfie camera with its 1.6um ultra pixels and an F2.0 aperture. The camera has a higher capacity for light intake and absorption, producing surreal selfies that can only be fantasised about.

    The advanced 5P optical lens gives the best contrast and resolution ratios for optimal image refinement. The triple rear camera (13MP+8MP+2MP) is an added bonus, permitting the capturing of far wider angles than what is normally possible with an ordinary dual camera. The triple cameras are responsible for depth, distance and field of view respectively, with the S4 allowing for up to 120°capture.

    Empowerment is not possible without reliable power and the S4 has incorporated a smart power management system that helps optimise power utilisation by automatically inducing inactive status for apps not in use and halting their background data uptake.

  • Telemedicine regulation promises access to health

    The boost in the information communication technology (ICT) industry globally is redefining how life is lived. With a click of a button, fetters such as distance and ignorance are broken, thereby opening a new vista opportunities. Telemedicine is one such. LUAcas Ajanaku writes that Nigeria should borrow a leaf from the regulation of telemedicine in South Africa that promises access to health.

    IT is widely expected that telemedicine services will gain more traction and prominence in the South African health care environment in the coming months and years.

    The adoption of new technologies, such as the rollout of 5G mobile networks across the country, will only serve to encourage the use and further development of telemedicine services.

    According to Mandi Krebs, Senior Associate, at Hogan Lovells, South Africa, both established and start-up businesses are competing for pole position in developing innovative and disruptive new technologies, software, platforms and solutions to capture the health care market in South Africa and around the world. However, buy-in from health care practitioners, patients, health care funders and regulators is required.

    It has been widely reported that rural underserviced communities, the elderly and patients requiring treatment for chronic conditions have greatly benefited from telemedicine solutions. Especially, as telemedicine allows for improved access to health care services, lower costs and positive outcomes.

    It is against this backdrop that the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA), the statutory body tasked with the regulation of the health professions, developed, approved and published the General Ethical Guidelines for Good Practice in Telemedicine (Guidelines) in August 2014.

    Krebs said the stated objective of the South African Telemedicine System, as per the Guidelines, is to deliver health care services at a distance to South African communities in underserved areas and alleviate the human resource crisis currently experienced, as well as to improve links and communication between developed health care facilities and underdeveloped rural areas.

    The Guidelines recognise that telemedicine may be provided through email, teleconferencing, videoconferencing or similar forms of technology, which enable health care practitioners to replicate the interaction of traditional face-to-face consultations with patients. Technologies that enable real-time monitoring of vital signs, the taking of x-rays and the administering of hearing tests, to name a few, are being developed and used by healthcare practitioners to assist with the treatment of patients from a distance.

    Associate Designate, at Hogan Lovells, South Africa), Abrianne Marais, explained that three parties will generally be involved in the provision of telemedicine services, i.e. a requesting patient, a consulting health care practitioner and a servicing health care practitioner. The roles of these parties are addressed below.

    It must be noted that consulting health care practitioners and servicing health care practitioners are held to the same standards of medical practice as health care practitioners that conduct face-to-face consultations. Treatments, including the issuing of prescriptions, based solely on online questionnaires will not constitute an acceptable standard of care, and are not permitted in terms of the Guidelines.

    He said consulting health care practitioners will conduct face-to-face interviews or examinations with requesting patients and will refer patient information to a remote location for further advice or intervention. Ultimately, the consulting health care practitioners will remain responsible for the treatment of requesting patients, the decisions and other recommendations given to requesting patients, as well as for keeping detailed records of the requesting patients’ conditions and the information transmitted and received from servicing health care practitioners.

    The servicing health care practitioners will advise consulting health care practitioners or intervene in the treatment of requesting patients from a remote location, and the servicing health care practitioners’ obligations include the keeping of detailed records of the advice provided, as well as the information received, and ensuring that the advice or treatment suggestions given were understood by the relevant consulting health care practitioner or requesting patient.

    Informed consent is imperative in order to engage in telemedicine, and the Guidelines require that the requesting patient be informed regarding the purpose of the telemedicine services, the cost of the services and the implications thereof.

    It must also be noted that compliance with legislation such as the Consumer Protection Act, the Protection of Personal Information Act, the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act, the Health Professions Act, and the Medicines and Related Substances Act will become relevant when the solutions and the devices to be used in the provision of telemedicine services are selected and developed.

    As telemedicine services develop, mature and become more widely adopted in South Africa, regulators such as the HPCSA and the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority, national government, and the legislature will have to ensure that laws, regulations, policies and guidelines addressing, inter alia, telemedicine services, health care practitioners, medical devices, reimbursement practices and data protection rules, are developed and refined in such a manner that innovative and new solutions are encouraged, and at the same time ensuring patient safety and positive outcomes.

  • MainOne extends submarine cable to Cote D’ivoire

    Following the issuance of a submarine cable landing licence to MainOne by the government of Cote D’Ivoire, the company said it is on schedule to land the cable and launch services in Abidjan by October, this year. It said it has made significant progress in the project implementation process.  All critical surveys have been completed, and work is ongoing at the Cable Landing Station and Data Centre in Abidjan.

    MainOne’s Regional Executive, Kazeem Oladepo, spoke during the company’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Abidjan, where members of the Board of Directors of the Group visited the VITIB location to observe the on-going construction of the data centre and the cable landing station.

    The data centre and landing station will provide the necessary infrastructure to support the growth of the broadband ecosystem in Cote D’Ivoire and the Francophone region, improve Internet access in the region, reduce bandwidth prices and make digital services more accessible.

    “By investing in this infrastructure, we hope to bring meaningful and much-needed technology solutions to businesses and enable them in their quest for improved productivity and efficiency through dedicated and reliable connectivity services. We are prepared to collaborate with operators to expand capacity in Cote D’Ivoire and neighbouring countries to enhance regional integration and global access,” he continued.

    The strategic location of the datacentre in the Grand-Bassam technology free trade zone, VITIB, will further strengthen the digital ecosystem in the zone, and attract more businesses and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to the region.

    MainOne is committed to deepening broadband access across West Africa via fibre infrastructure and data centres. With service delivery in 10 countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Cote D’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Togo, Cameroun, Benin, Niger, Senegal and Chad, MainOne operates up to 10Tbps  international submarine cable system which guarantees highly reliable connectivity to support the growing demand for Internet access and bandwidth-intensive applications such as eCommerce, Content providers, OTT players and electronic banking and payment services.

  • Google’s free WiFi pits stakeholders against NCC

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is under intense pressure to stop the free WiFi services Google Nigeria is providing in selected cities, including Lagos, Kaduna, Port Harcourt, Ibadan and Abuja.

    Unveiling the Google Stations, its Country Director, Juliet Ehimuan-Chiazor, said the initiative would address affordability and access to data as well as broadband penetration.

    But speaking during a panel discussion at Vanguard e-Economy Forum on Telecoms in Lagos, stakeholders urged the NCC to apply the necessary sections of the Nigeria Communications Act 2003 and stop the freeby, which has taken a toll on the business of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) in the country.

    The National Coordinator, Wireless Application Service Provider’ Association of Nigeria (WASPAN), Chijoke Eze, lamented that the partnership with 21st Century Technologies Limited, which is providing free internet services in strategic locations such as Shoprite and the University of Lagos that boasts of 40,000 people, is shutting down a whole  ISP out of business.  He urged the NCC to reverse the partnership because it is hurting investment.

    Also, the Executive Director, Business Development at Broadbased Communication Limited, Chidi Ibisi, lamented that private investors go to the banks to raise cash at crushing double-digit interest rate to set up ISP business, pay for licence to NCC, pay other taxes and charges, only for one firm to come and offer the same service freely.

    Ibisi said the NCC should put national interest at the forefront of its regulatory functions. According to him, net neutrality is possible in the United States (U.S.) because there is ubiquitous fibre, adding that in the country, a lot of cash will have to be sunk to provide same.

    The NCC said the Commision was not contacted on the Google matter, adding however that there was no need to engage in blame game.

    Its Executive Vice Chairman, NCC, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta, stressed the need for consultation.

    Represented by Head, Technical Standards and Network Integrity at the Commission, Engr. Bako Wakil, he said the NCC however intervened, adding that nothing has been heard.

    The NCC has formally reported Google to the Federal Government for evading its regulatory oversight.

    A letter from NCC to the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) under the Office of the Vice President,  indicated that Google may be illegally providing its ‘free’ Wi-Fi in the country under obscure conditions that put it beyond regulatory purview.

    The letter, signed on behalf of NCC’s Executive Vice Chairman by the Executive Commissioner (Stakeholder Management), Mr. Sunday Dare, reported PEBEC that “Google is operating in Nigeria without being licensed by the Commission with the implications that it does not pay applicable fees, levies and taxes that are paid by other players in the telecommunications sector.

    “There are several other irregularities in the structure under which Google presently provides its free public Wi-Fi for which the Commission requested it to provide information that will clarify certain issues that have cropped up in the course of trying to streamline its usage of Short Message Service (SMS) for user authentication.

    “Google has till date failed to provide the requested information, which has stalled efforts to resolve the issues,” the letter read.

  • ‘Africa’s challenges surmountable’

    THE numerous challenges facing Nigeria and other African countries are surmountable by Africans with the right knowledge, Managing Partner, Verraki Partners, Niyi Yusuf, has said.

    He spoke during the unveiling of the firm’s new corporate identity in Lagos.

    During an interactive session with reporters at the event, Yusuf explained that Verraki is a new business and technology solutions firm. He said the firm would be working with enterprises and governments to ignite opportunities, unleash their potential, pivot and turnaround their performance to create a better future across the continent.

    Yusuf, a former Country Managing Director for Accenture, promised to partner enterprises and governments to accelerate the development and transformation of Africa.

    He said the new entity was focused on implementing technology and business solutions designed inherently for Africa and specifically fit for purpose, while also curating business ventures to unlock new sources of growth across the continent.

    Led by foremost corporate professionals, Verraki said it will apply its global expertise and local insights to partner with enterprises and governments to accelerate the development and transformation of Africa by providing business solutions uniquely tailored for Africa.

    With the launch, Verraki is asserting its capability not only to provide tailored business solutions across technology, advisory and ventures, cutting across the social sector, services and real sector, but also its focus on working with its clients to provide solutions to Africa’s seemingly intractable challenges.

    “Professional services firms in Africa are currently at an inflexion point. Digital technologies, revolutionary ideas and new business models are creating disruptions and new factors such as agility, flexibility, risk tolerance, cost-leadership, value for money and entrepreneurship are key requirements for success. Verraki’s birth at an auspicious time like this is driven by our understanding of clients’ needs and our desire to harvest the opportunities the disruption brings and participate fully, via a rebalance and reconfiguration to address the specific needs of the market.

    “We are now able to expand our services to cover more sectors of the economy, to service different types of clients (small and big, local and multinational) and invest in the market while taking measured risks and developing relevant home-grown solutions that will be needs-based and affordable, offering significant value for money, he said.

  • ATCON seeks clarification on 95.7m ‘invalid’ SIM data

    The Association of Telecoms Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) has advised the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) clarify discrepancies in the data submitted to it by telcos in the ongoing Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) card registration across the country.

    It also faulted the conversion of what would have been know-your-customer (KYC) data of between 92 and 95 per cent pre-paid telecoms subscribers to a crime-fighting tool when the Nigeria Identity Management Commission (NIMC)  has the mandate to mine such data.

    Its President, Olushola Teniola, who spoke on the sideline of the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the association in Lagos, said the word data ‘scrubbing’ was unknown to telecoms while data management is not telecoms but information technology (IT).

    According to Teniola, there was no uniform SIM card registration criteria at the beginning. He added that the operators did what they felt was necessary. “If you can recall in 2012, I was in Abuja, we used to queue; I queued, so whatever methodology they used, whether it was thumbprint or you have to bring an ID, or whether, it was different because from one operator to the other, they have different processes, not too far different, but I never questioned whether it was the same process that was done by operator A or operator B. The sense that I got at that time was that the NCC was going to consolidate the information from all the operators. If you can recall, it took up to three attempts to get the exercise right. So, the period they seem they have enough information, to allow the exercise to be deemed okay, no one shouted. It was until the recent incidences of kidnapping and the security angle that they now use the information that have been collated over the period to seek to pinpoint the phone that’s in use that the kidnappers were using for criminal activities and what was registered on the data base,” he said.

    He expressed shock over the number of SIM data that was said to be invalid by the regulator. “I am shocked why the regulatory body can now make that statement; in fact, they said they didn’t say 95million and people deduced from the figures given but the NCC and if they are 50 per cent wrong, how did they know that it is not valid? What are they using to say it is not valid? Then they said they are scrubbing. I have never heard this term in telecoms and I am getting concerned when we are talking about data base management. Data management is not telecoms, it is IT and that is why I am really concerned about our level of telecoms knowledge in the industry; we cannot belittle the work of experts  in ATCON. The exercise was done because we, ATCON, presented SIM card registration to NCC because other countries were doing it because of identity fraud, and people impersonating others.

    “The administration wants to use it to address Boko Haram and insecurity, but I have just told you if I have multiple subscriptions, what about the other ways of enforcing the security issue by knowing where (the criminal is) which technology exists. So, I am a bit concerned that we are now basing that insecurity on a data base that wasn’t built for security. It was not built for security. It was NIMC that was built for security and why are we not using that as a reference point which one agency has access to?

    “So, our answer is that the NCC has to corroborate its findings with NIMC to get veracity and only focus on those areas that have anomalies and not subject consumers to re-registering again because there was no uniform process right from the beginning and as I know today, there isn’t any formal process.”