Tag: Data

  • Digitisation’s data breaches to cost $2.1tr

    Digitisation’s data breaches to cost $2.1tr

    The rapid digitisation of consumers’ lives and enterprise records will increase the cost of data breaches to $2.1trillion globally, increasing by almost four times the estimated cost of such breaches this year.

    According to a new research by leading market analyst, Juniper Research, majority of these breaches will come from existing information technology (IT) and network infrastructure.

    While new threats targeting mobile devices and the internet of things (IoT) are being reported at an increasing rate, the number of infected devices is minimal in comparison to more traditional computing devices, the report noted.

    With The Future of Cybercrime & Security: Financial & Corporate Threats and Mitigation as its title, the report lamented the increasing professionalism of cybercrime with the emergence of cybercrime products (that is the sale of malware creation of software) over the past year as well as the decline in casual activist hacks. Hacktivism has become more successful and less prolific -in future. On the whole however, Juniper expects fewer attacks but more successful ones.

    “Currently, we aren’t seeing much dangerous mobile or IoT malware because it is not profitable. The kind of threats we will see on these devices will be either ransomware with consumers’ devices locked down until they pay the hackers to use their devices or as part of botnets, where processing power is harnessed as part of a more lucrative hack. With the absence of a direct payment from IoT hacks, there is little motive for criminals to develop the required tools,” James Moar who authored the report noted.

    The report also found that nearly 60 per cent of anticipated data breaches globally will occur in North America, noting that this proportion would decrease over time as other countries become both richer and more digitised. Juniper added that the average cost of data breaches in 2020 would exceed $120million as more business infrastructure gets connected.

    The report noted that leading over-the-top (OTT) players such as Apple, Google and Amazon were in pole position to capitalise on this transition with each now offering cloud-based solutions both for personal storage and premium content access.

    It argued that if consumers are tied into multiple products from an OTT, the consumers become increasingly reluctant to churn away from one element of the bradn as he/she loses access to the content across their devices.

     

  • MainOne urges outsourcing of data management

    MainOne urges outsourcing of data management

    MainOne’s new subsidiary, MDX-I, has urged major firms in the country to leverage on outsourced Data Centre services to drive down costs and optimise operational efficiency.

    Convinced about the cost-efficiency of outsourced data, MDX-I and its parent company, MainOne a breakfast seminar in Lagos targeted at senior level IT managers to discuss strategies for companies that require improved data centre capacity. This session revealed valuable global insights from leading IT research company, the International Data Corporation (IDC), and global Cloud specialist, EMC2 Corporation, in addition to specialists from MainOne.

    MainOne’s Head of Marketing, Jumoke Akande, said the recent macro-economic issues in the country and fluctuating global oil prices necessitated the need for companies to use the session to explore how they can utilise Cloud and other Data Centre hosted-business applications to enhanced productivity at reasonable costs.

    With leading data experts from IDC and EMC2 Corporation as speakers, the session shed light on global trends in Data Centers, planning issues to consider, and the case for businesses to co-locate in commercial data centers which offer extraordinary levels of performance, as against building in-house data center facilities from ground up.

    Ms. Akande stressed that high level of attendance at the seminar with “Making the business case for data centre Migration” as its theme revealed the enlightened perspectives that IT managers in Nigeria are adopting to withstand economic pressures and reduce costs.

  • MainOne unveils N7b data centre

    MainOne unveils N7b data centre

    Provider of innovative telecom services and network solutions for businesses in West Africa, MainOne, has unveiled its  Tier III Lekki Data Centre to address the growing demand for colocation, cloud and disaster recovery services in the sub-region. It cost the firm N7 billion.

    In a statement, the firm said the facility designed to international TIA 942 standards, will be managed under a new subsidiary branded as MDX-i.

    Speaking during the inauguration of  the infrastructure, Chairman of MainOne, Fola Adeola reiterated the company’s commitment to nurture the growth and impact of the Internet ecosystem through the provision of high-quality infrastructure to power businesses and governments across West Africa.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Ms Funke Opeke said: “We are delighted to launch West Africa’s largest and best-connected data centre.  “This reaffirms our capabilities in meeting the needs of business for reliable connectivity and data centre services in a dynamic and fast paced global economy.”

    The Minister of Communications Technology, Dr. (Mrs.) Omobola Johnson, who performed the commissioning of the facility, said the launch of MDX-I data centre facility is a notable accomplishment that complements initiatives required to further drive the realisation of the National  Broadband Plan of the Federal Government.

    She said:  “Availability of world class Data centres in Nigeria is critical infrastructure required for the implementation of our Broadband initiatives. The accomplishment by MainOne is indeed significant as it provides an outsourcing and cost effective model to further drive ICT adoption.”

    MDX-i’s Tier III Lekki Data Center is the first of many planned data centers by the company in Nigeria.  It is a N7 Billion investment and has capacity for 600 racks.  The data center provides corporate customers with world class co-location, cloud and managed services and the first set of customers will enjoy services starting from next week.

     

  • UBA partners Vodacom on data

    UBA partners Vodacom on data

    United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc and Vodacom are partnering on data and broadband communications. The business relationship, the bank said in a statement, is handled locally through Vodacom Business Nigeria.

    The firm, a wholly owned subsidiary of Vodacom, enables UBA to seamlessly interconnect business offices and ATMs and to generally deploy financial services across the Group.

    As a result of the scope and scale of the partnership, it explained, UBA has become a Vodafone Global Enterprise Customer, becoming the first financial institution of Nigerian origin to join the elite list of companies such as General Electric (GE), Apple and Microsoft.

    During the ceremony to formally present the certificate of recognition as a Vodafone Global Enterprise Customer to UBA, the Managing Director, Vodacom Business Nigeria, Guy Clarke, commended UBA for the leading role it is playing on the continents’ financial landscape.

    The Group Managing Director/CEO of UBA Plc, Mr. Phillips Oduoza said the UBA will leverage on this milestone recognition and its associated benefits, to significantly improve the efficiency of its operations and processes as well as optimize costs.

  • Streamlining data to revive adult education

    Streamlining data to revive adult education

    The drive to revive the Non-Formal Education (NFE) sub sector got a major boost recently with the development of effective data gathering instrument to streamline statistics on adult and youth education in Nigeria.

    The new instrument, apart from its reliability, is considered to be efficient and cost effective such that international agencies can adopt it.

    According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Regional Director, Prof. Hassana Alidou, harmonized data on adult and youth literacy will address numerous challenges facing the NFE, especially lack of accurate data and inadequate funding of mass literacy programmes.

    Prior to this development, statistics on adult and youth education in the nation appeared undependable. Despite being the mandate of the Nigerian National Commission for Mass Literacy, Adult and Non-Formal Education (NMEC) to provide data on the non formal education, various agencies including Nigeria Bureau of Statistics (NBS), had worked at cross purposes. Data generated by National Population Commission (NPC) often vary from that of the NBS.

    For instance, the NBS 2010 Literacy Survey reports revealed that 58.9 per cent of the nation’s population is literate but the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) 2010 Global study of Out-of-School Children placed the population of literate persons in Nigeria at 62 per cent with 10.5 million children out of school. UNESCO reports also showed that the nation has an estimated 40 million illiterate young people and adults with 10 million Out-of School children.

    Based on the latest Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) made public last week, less than 10 per cent of women and 14 per cent of men in the country have gone beyond secondary school, while nearly half of women (47 per cent) surveyed and one quarter of men are illiterates.

    At a meeting in Lokoja where various stakeholders from the NPC, NBS, UNESCO, Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Millennium Development Goals (OSSAP-MDG.s), NMEC Zonal Coordinators and state Agencies Directors for mass education gathered to solve the problem recently, they emphasised a great need to establish the Non-formal Management Information System (NFEMIS).

    They adopted two data collection instruments: NMEC 01 (State Level Instrument for Data Collection) and NMEC 02 (Data Collection Instrument for Learning Centre), streamlined into the Federal Ministry of Education NEMIS (FME-NEMIS) and targeted to revive adult and youth literacy.

    Also at the meeting, the various participants underscored the importance of the new instrument.

    The Gombe State Executive Director for Adult Non-Formal Education, Alhaji Zakari Kudi, said use of accurate and uniform data by the NFE stakeholders would contribute largely to meeting needs of the special group.

    On her part, the National Coordinator on Revitalizing Adult and Youth Literacy project (RAYL), Mrs. Alice Atteh-Abang said the project would ultimately contribute to national development goals of job creation and economic growth.

    “The Main objective of the project is to strengthen the national capacity for designing, delivering, evaluating and monitoring quality literacy programmes by focusing on strategic areas of action such as, policy review and analysis, advocacy and communication, addressing the persistent gaps in capacity, innovations and good practices, and effective partnerships in support of literacy,” she said.

    A Consultant, Dr. Aminu Bichi, said that the status report from the workshop would make available information and analysis on adult and NFE to relevant stakeholders, who will interpret and implement educational policies at the three tiers of government.

    He added that it would contribute to dialogue among stakeholders on likely challenges and emerging strategic priorities for adult education.

  • Ensuring security of information at data management centres

    Ensuring security of information at data management centres

    Technological innovations are designed to provide solutions to various challenges facing mankind. A  data centre is one such innovation. It is becoming the vogue with so many of them springing up in the country despite fears about security of data. While some of these data centres have their servers in the country, others have theirs offshore. LUCAS AJANAKU reports that managers of data centres must take extra steps to ensure security of clients’ data.

    Today’s information technology (IT) business leaders, need to have command and control insight on all operations that support the data centres housing their critical business infrastructure. They need to monitor, coordinate and optimise multiple interconnected systems to ensure that their data center operations are running at optimal levels to prevent any failures from any adverse externality.

    The solution to this is the deployment of sophisticated data centre management systems that address the myriad of issues associated with data centre operations. These Data Center InformationManagement systems, monitor power, cooling, computing resources, security and environmental variables to enable personnel to efficiently maintain the high performance required of all subsystems in the data center to work together seamlessly. These systems have come to the market at a time when the rapid growth of large commercial data centers have made it imperative to adopt more efficient management techniques.

    According to research conducted by Gartner in 2010, Data Center Infrastructure Management, integrates facets of system management with building and energy management, while ensuring that a bridge is built between IT asset and physical infrastructure monitoring. These tools reduce operating costs, improve IT efficiency and enable sophisticated infrastructure analytics, extending the life of data centers by years.

    The traditional approach to data center management and facility monitoring in earlier data center implementations, required manual intervention and collaboration between various technical teams. These collaborative activities were highly inefficient, leading to poor utilisation of resources and eventually inefficient data centre operations.

    First generation data center infrastructure monitoring systems were developed to monitor equipment availability and provide a complete view of data center infrastructure. These systems had the ability to measure and display real time equipment performance measurements using graphical display interfaces. However, they lacked the ability to monitor multiple interdependent systems in parallel, or even go as far as reporting on total system performance using aggregated input from all these sub systems.

    Modern data center infrastructure management solutions have evolved to automate a variety of tasks critical to data centre operations. At a high level, the software manages and displays all physical assets in a single graphical interface, while providing the capability to automate commissioning tasks, capacity planning and other time consuming manual tasks.

    This level of software intelligence, enables data centers operate at levels of efficiency previously thought to be impossible to achieve.

    Commenting on Intelligent Infrastructure Management for Data Centers, RiT Technologies, President and CEO, Motti Hania,  said these systems are described as best practice platforms that reduce operational costs significantly by enhancing ongoing operations, security and scalability. They enhance operations by continuous monitoring of a “self-aware” network, power and environmental apparatuses, which together determine network and operational status in real time.

    Chief Executive Officer, MainOne Cable Company, Ms. Funke Opeke, said in line with this global trend and with the increasing demand for content across Africa, the MainOne data centre has deployed an intelligent infrastructure management system that proactively monitors the facility environment and the equipment in it.

    She said: “Our intelligent infrastructure management system ensures a highly optimised data centre environment that guarantees best performance of all collocated equipment.”

    Chief Executive Officer, Venema Advies Nigeria Limited, Dick Venema said turning to the use of data centre could reduce operating cost for big corporations and SMEs by more than 30 per cent.

    He said: “What we see in Nigeria is that everybody is still using the break-fix model which means something is broken, they are going to fix it. And the solution we always see that is offered when it’s broken is that they buy new equipment. They install it and it works again. This is not how it works, most times, the equipment is not broken, it’s just bad maintained, no technical knowledge of IT consultants and bad advice from the IT company.”

     

    Top issues in data centre management

    According to the Chief Marketing Officer, FieldView Solutions, Sev Onyshkevych in the past, managing a data centre was pretty straightforward.  But due to the inexorable trend of processing more and more data, the management of these facilities grew in complexity. Complicating the situation, operational decisions at the data centre now include such factors as power, cooling, rack space and CPU availability. This is in addition to other information gleaned from IT systems, and related to the facility infrastructure components such as UPS devices, PDUs, chillers, HVACs, generators, branch circuits and others. He wrote via Data Centre Knowledge, an online platform.

    FieldView Solutions, a Data Centre Infrastructure Management (DCIM) solutions provider, identified the following as top issues in efficient data centre management

     

    Energy Efficiency

    Data centres are increasingly under attack for their energy consumption and costly operations.  According to a 2011 New York Times-sponsored study by Jonathan G. Koomey, a consulting professor in the civil and environmental engineering department at Stanford University, titled “Growth in Data Centre Power Use 2005 to 2010,” United States’ data center power consumption increased by 36 per cent over that period. Electricity used in global data centers in 2010 likely accounted for between 1.1 per cent and 1.5 per cent of total electricity use, respectively. For the United States, that number was between 1.7 and 2.2 per cent.

    Cutting energy usage will help organisations save significant money, while changing the public perception of data centers being “energy hogs” with a “greener” impression.  To reduce energy consumption, it must first be accurately measured.  The measurement must start with a baseline view of what energy every part of the data center is actually consuming.  And to be accurate, this view must include all areas such as IT equipment, power distribution infrastructure, and ventilation/cooling infrastructure. This is an often time-consuming and manual data extraction process to which nobody looks forward.

     

    Monitoring

    No doubt, day-to-day system failures have underscored the need for proactive response to potential data centre uptime threats.

    Proper monitoring also helps enable an effective call-to-action. In the event of a pending issue, alarms can be sent via e-mail, phone or pager, allowing proactive steps to be taken to correct problems before they become critical. In addition, continuous logging of all alarms and alerts empowers data center operators with a chronological, forensic, review of events to strengthen the infrastructure and improve disaster recovery plans.

     

    Capacity Planning

    It’s no secret that many data centre managers lack the systems visibility to determine if their facilities are truly running at peak capacity.  Traditionally, operators have left plenty of room for error so uptime isn’t interrupted—a strategy known as “capacity safety gap,” or “over-provisioning.”  This strategy wastes hundreds of thousands of dollars of unused space – not to mention wasting power and cooling.  In a day and age of chief financial officers (CFOs) deferring capital expenditure budgets, many data centre managers’ expectations of having additional data center construction have been unfulfilled, leaving about 30 per cent of data centre managers worried about running out of capacity.

     

    Performance Management

    One of the greatest challenges facing data centre operators is ensuring that power and cooling is operating at its highest energy efficiency.  One of the best methods to maintain this accuracy is via accessing a real-time data source that provides up-to-the-minute metrics such as Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) and Data Center Infrastructure Efficiency (DCiE).

     

    Real-Time Reporting

    Without a real-time reporting system, operators may find it a challenge to make informed decisions.  Manual readings taken weeks ago on a static report are no longer valid for today’s complex data centre operations – where workloads, power consumption and temperatures vary widely throughout the day, and from day to day.

    Up-to-the minute information also allows for the optimisation of power loads and overall capacity trending.  Additionally, a dashboard view that spans across various monitoring and control systems is a necessity for accurately tracking energy efficiency across single rooms, complete floors, an entire data center  or multiple data centers—domestically and globally.

    Onyshkevych said the continued proliferation of applications, data and platforms such as mobile devices will ensure that data centres continue to grow.  This, in turn, will strain the data centre’s processing power and drain enormous additional amounts of energy from the grid.  As data centres evolve, so too should the tools that manage them.  The antiquated methods of storing vital operational data within individual software “silos” impedes the efforts of data centre facility managers and IT managers to optimise their operations properly and avoid potential downtime.

  • MainOne’s $40m data centre gets Tier 111 certification

    MainOne’s $40m data centre gets Tier 111 certification

    West Africa’s leading provider of network solutions for businesses, MainOne, has received Tier III Certification of Design Documents for its new Lekki Data Centre, from the Uptime Institute, a United States (U.S) based consortium of companies that engage in education, publications, consulting, certifications, conferences and seminars for the enterprise data centre industry and for data centre professionals.

    The 600 rack, $40 million facility is the largest in the West African sub-region and it is built to help meet the rapidly growing demand for co-location, managed hosting and cloud services within the region.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Ms. Funke Opeke said the state of the art facility providing highly-available and highly-redundant world class infrastructure is a carrier neutral. She said the facility, spread over 3,500 square meters, further consolidates the company’s investment in critical infrastructure to grow West Africa’s digital economy.

    She noted that the Data Center will provide a credible platform for businesses to transact online within the region without having to invest scarce capital and human resources to build out their own infrastructure, thus enhancing business efficiency and profitability.

    She said: “With the increased recognition of Nigeria as one of the leading emerging economies, it is important that we have available the infrastructure required to establish, enhance and sustain effective business performance in today’s global digital economy. Outsourcing of Data Centre and Connectivity services to a reputable provider like MainOne ensures businesses can adopt more cost effective models of consuming technology to allow increased focus of valuable company resources to drive business development and growth”.

  • Subscribers bogged down by poor data services

    Subscribers bogged down by poor data services

    More than a decade after the telecoms’ revolution, the quality of data services provided by the operators has remained a nightmare to subscribers. Data consumers say the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) should do more to protect them from exploitation, reports LUCAS AJANAKU.

    From the way he behaved at the event, it was clear he had long waited for an opportunity to express his displeasure on the quality of services (QoS) he got from his service providers. So, when the regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), provided telecoms consumers an opportunity to interact with its officials at the last Lagos International Trade Fair, organised by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), at the Cricket Oval, Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, Mr. Taju  Onitiju used the opportunity to decry the poor quality of services and the depletion of his ‘credit’ through continous delivery of text  messages, which he had  sent. According to him, at the last count, sent messages were more than 500.

    As a manifestation of his frustration, he ‘ignorantly’ accused the NCC, which had sanctioned the operators, of complicity in the cleverly orchestrated fraud being perpetrated by the telecoms operators against their customers in the country.

    Director, Public Affairs, NCC, Mr. Tony Ojobo and Deputy Director, Consumer Affairs Bureau (CAB), NCC, Dr Atoyebi, took time to assure the audience, including Mr. Onitiju, that the regulator takes the issue of consumer protection seriously because it is one of its core mandates.

    Data users also suffer QoS challenge. While there is key performance indicators (KPIs) set down by the NCC with the consent of the telcos for voice calls, it is not clear if there is any such parameter in the data segment of the industry.

    The CAB, however, said it has been inundated with an avalanche of bitter complaints by data subscribers through its the Telecoms Consumer Parliament (TCP), Consumer Outreach Programmes (COPs) and Consumer Town Hall Meetings (CTMs). Thus, it was not a coincidence that the last TCP convened in Lagos by the NCC had Data Service Delivery: The Way Forward as its focus.

    Director, CAB, NCC, Mrs Maryam Bayi, defined data service as the distribution of internet service on demand to the user regardless of geographic or organisational separation, adding that it is also the ability of network operators to provide data services to consumers on demand.

     

    Benefits

    The importance of data services to global technological revolution and contribution to national economic and social development cannot be overemphasised. Data services, through broadband would facilitate services such as e-government, e-commerce, e-agriculture, telemedicine, e-education and a host of other benefits. A frequently cited World Bank study found that low-income and middle-income countries experienced “about a 1.38 per cent point increase in GDP (gross domestic product) for each 10 per cent  increase in (broadband) penetration” between 2000 and 2006.

    The World Bank further found that the development impact of broadband on emerging economies is greater than for high-income countries, which “enjoyed a 1.21 percentage point increase in per capita GDP growth” per 10 per cent increase in broadband penetration.

    Mrs Bayi said data services are able to eliminate redundancy and streamline costs. This is because critical data is housed in one location, enabling data to be accessed and/or updated by multiple users while ensuring a single point of reference for updates.

     

    Data service challenges

    Although data services have many advantages, it have some potential drawbacks. These include server downtime from data service provider, data loss in the event of a disaster, and inadequate security of the data, both in its stored location and in transmission among users.

    She said the CAB has, through its Complaint Management Database, identified four major complaints by the subscribers.

     

    Consumers’ headaches

    She said: “Sourcing from our Complaint Management Database, we have compiled the most prevalent consumer complaints on Data Service Delivery. These include inability to browse; abnormal depletion of data; unsuccessful data renewal; and unauthorised service renewal.”

    Inability to browse happens when internet service browsing is not active and a user is unable to connect to the internet. “Subscribers complained most often that they have Enhanced Data for Global Evolution (EDGE) on their phone, but they cannot connect to the browser and yet their data bundle expires at the end of the month because there is no allowance for data roll over,” Mrs. Bayi said.

    Abnormal depletion of data is another  nightmare of the subscribers. This occurs when there is minimal or no internet activity while the resulting data usage does not correspond with actual usage.

    Another issue is unsuccessful data renewal, which happens when the data bundle purchased had expired. Consumers so often purchase data, transaction confirmed as monies have been debited, but data renewal fails and there is no active data bundle.

    The issue of unauthorised service renewal is another sore point of the subscribers. For mobile subscription, it happens when consumers’ voice credit gets depleted on expiration of data bundle plan without consumers’ authorisation, thus resulting in drop in air time balance.

    Speed is another challenge. Some of the operators promise the speed they lack the technology to provide just as they lie about the technology deployed to roll out services to the consumers. The Executive Vice Chairman/CEO, NCC, Dr. Eugene Juwah lamented that the service quality being provided by the operators have become worrisome, lamenting that some of the operators providing services on 2G claimed they are doing 3G and even long-term evolution (LTE) or 4G.

     

    Operators react

    Reacting to the complaints, representatives of the telcos and internet service providers (ISPs) said  most of the complaints arose from the consumers’ ignorance about the working of their mobile phones while others are as a result of the operating environment challenged by a myriad of circumstances.

    Customers Service Executive at MTN, Akinwale Goodluck, blamed the quality of mobile sets used for some of the data hiccups, adding that grey markets continue to flourish because of the issue of affordability. According to him, the amount of data consumed is also important, stressing that the firm has embarked on education and enlightenment for the subscribers. He said the auto-renew of data service for customers was in their interest because if it was not done, data charges immediately go into their voice account, adding that MTN compensates the customer any time it discovered it has indeed, erred.

    An official of Airtel, Ibe Nwandu, said data connectivity is solely dependent on network availability and coverage. Since it is not easy to give what one does not have, coverage continues to be a challenge. To him, the customer is king, so the telco has threshold of notifying customers on their data services. He said the telco has provided options for customers to opt in and out, adding that the organisation would continue to work hard to improve customers’ experience.

    Head, Network Operations, Globacom, Mr. Aremu Olajide, said the firm has invested massively in equipment swap nationwide. According to him, more 3G cites are being built while fibre optic cables are also being laid to complement microwave.

    Olajide did not rule out occasional service disruptions, which may occur when there is fibre cut and transitioning to microwave that may take a little time to achieve. He said there is need for customers to know what they use their mobile phones to do, adding that the telco refunds after genuine complaints are established. He added that text messages are usually sent to customers in respect of auto-renewal.

    Like his counterpart in Airtel, Etisalat’s Director, Customer Care, Plato Syrimis, said coverage remains a challenge. Though the last operator to join the fray, he said, the telco is not giving excuses, but working hard to build more 3G cites. He also said the firm is taking the issue of consumer education seriously as it would help them to save their credits from being depleted unnecessarily.

    Director at Spectranet, Chief Ezekeil Fatoye, said the firm operates on the 2.3 gigahertz (GHz) spectrum  and began offering services on WiMax, migrating to LTE, which limited its coverage, as customers of WiMax could not migrate to LTE. He said customers affected by the technology upgrade were compensated, adding that the network has since been optimised and back, and running.

    Gbolahan Thomas of Smile Communications, said his firm was not guilty of any of the ‘charges’ arguing that the organisation has empowered the customers to do a lot of things on their own. He said the Smile Block is a technology that the firm has put in place to block sites such as YouTube that are heavy data depleting. He said there is also 24/7 customer care support lines, adding that its data renewals are effected through its army of agents present in every nook and crannies of the country.

    Lynda Amaechi of Visafone and Chukwuka Igoro of Cobranet said customer education is central to the issues around data usage and depletion. Lynda said customers could opt out of any of the telco’s services at will, adding that self service on IVR has also been strengthened to help customers.

  • CBN extends data security compliance deadline

    CBN extends data security compliance deadline

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has extended banks’, switches’ and processors’ compliance with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) standard till November 30.

    The PCI DSS is a proprietary information security standard for organisations that handle cardholder information for the major debit, credit, prepaid, e-purse, Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) and Point of Sale (PoS) cards.  The standard was created to increase controls around cardholder data to reduce credit card fraud via its exposure.

    A circular to banks, switches and processors, endorsed by CBN Director, Banking Payment System, ‘Dipo Fatokun, said the need to extend the deadline followed requests by many banks seeking more time to enable them to complete the certification process.

    He said to determine the readiness of various operators, the CBN engaged the services of three Qualified Security Assessors (QSA) to conduct pre-certification assessment of the banks.

    The result, he said, showed that while many banks had complied with the certification, many are still at different stages of compliance.

    He said with this extension, banks, processors and switches are expected to comply before the end of the deadline.

    The validation of PCI DSS compliance is performed yearly, either by an external QSA that creates a Report on Compliance (RoC) for organisations handling large volumes of transactions, or by Self-Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ) for companies handling smaller volumes.

    The CBN had earlier released card issuance and use guidelines for the financial services sector. Fatokun said the power to issue the guideline was derived from Section 47 (3) of the CBN Act 2007.

    He said industry stakeholders who process, transmit, and or store cardholder information should ensure that that their terminals, applications and processing infrastructure comply with the minimum requirements for the sector.

    The CBN director said all terminals, applications and processing infrastructure should also comply with the standards specified by the various card schemes.

    Fatokun said only banks licensed by the CBN with clearing capacity shall issue payment cards to consumers and corporations in the country.

    He added that banks without clearing capacity can issue in conjunction with those with clearing capacity.  Also, all banks should seek approval from the CBN for each card brand they wish to issue.

     

     

  • Banks, switches get deadline for data security standards

    Banks, switches get deadline for data security standards

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has extended banks, switches and processors’ compliance with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) standard till November 30.

    The PCI DSS is a proprietary information security standard for organisations that handle cardholder information for the major debit, credit, prepaid, e-purse, Automated Teller Machines, and Point of Sale (PoS) cards.  The standard was created to increase controls around cardholder data to reduce credit card fraud via its exposure.

    A circular to banks, switches and processors, signed by CBN Director, Banking Payment System, ‘Dipo Fatokun, said the need to extend the deadline followed requests by many banks seeking more time to enable them to complete the certification process.

    He said to determine the readiness of various operators, the CBN engaged the services of three Qualified Security Assessors to conduct pre-certification assessment of the banks.

    The result, he said, showed that while many banks had complied with the certification, many are still at different stages of compliance.

    He said with this extension, banks, processors and switches are expected to comply before the end of the deadline.

    The validation of PCI DSS compliance is performed yearly, either by an external Qualified Security Assessor (QSA) that creates a Report on Compliance (ROC) for organisations handling large volumes of transactions, or by Self-Assessment Questionnaire (SAQ) for companies handling smaller volumes.

    The CBN had earlier released card issuance and use guidelines for the financial services sector. Fatokun said power to issue the guideline was derived from Section 47 (3) of the CBN Act 2007. He said industry stakeholders who process, transmit, and or store cardholder information should ensure that that their terminals, applications and processing infrastructure comply with the minimum requirements for the sector.

    The CBN director said that all terminals, applications and processing infrastructure, should also comply with the standards specified by the various card schemes.

    Fatokun said only banks licenced by the CBN with clearing capacity shall issue payment cards to consumers and corporations in the country. He said banks without clearing capacity can issue in conjunction with those with clearing capacity.

    Also, all banks should seek approval from the CBN for each card brand they wish to issue.