Tag: facebook

  • Facebook to buy WhatsApp for $19bn

    Facebook to buy WhatsApp for $19bn

    Facebook has bought messaging app WhatsApp in a deal worth a total of $19bn (£11.4bn) in cash and shares, the BBC reports.

    It is the social networking giant’s biggest acquisition to date.

    WhatsApp has more than 450 million monthly users and is popular with people looking to avoid text messaging charges.

    In a statement announcing the deal, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg described WhatsApp’s services as “incredibly valuable.”

    WhatsApp allows users to send messages over internet connections, avoiding text messaging fees. The company claims it is currently registering one million new users a day.

    It makes money by charging users a subscription fee of $1 per year, although it offers a free model as well.

    The deal to buy it includes $4bn in cash and approximately $12bn-worth of Facebook shares, plus an additional $3bn in stock to WhatsApp’s founders and employees at a later date.

    On a conference call to discuss the deal, WhatsApp co-founder Jan Koum said he planned to operate the firm “independently and autonomously.”

    He will also become a member of Facebook’s board of directors.

    “We’re excited and honoured to partner with Mark and Facebook as we continue to bring our product to more people around the world,” Mr. Koum said in a statement.

     

  • Kongo.com plays host to Facebook team

    Kongo.com plays host to Facebook team

    For the team at Konga.com, the indigenous fast-rising online shopping mart, last Tuesday will go down in the annals of the company as a memorable day.

    Reason: they played host to a 12 member team of the social media giant, Facebook.com, who paid a courtesy visit to Konga.com headquarters in Lagos.

    Leading the delegation of social media gurus, Nichola Mendelsohn; Head of Facebook, Europe, Middle East and Africa, met and addressed the Konga leadership and Marketing team, where she highlighted the role and importance of Konga as a success story with a reputation that has gone beyond local shores but quickly gaining traction around Africa despite having only being in existence for less than 2 years.

    The team was really interested in how Konga has been able to stamp its footprint in Nigeria in such a short time with plenty of positive feedback coming from users on Facebook.

    Adding further, she also emphasised their admiration and satisfaction for the successful execution of Konga’s Black Friday/Cyber Friday-Fall Yakata and Konga’s Christmas Campaigns while expressing their desire to further strengthen Facebook’s relationship with the Konga brand with mutually beneficial partnerships that would help the brand and over 12 million active people using Facebook in Nigeria as a whole.

    COO of Konga.com, Alex Kamara on behalf of the Konga team thanked the Facebook team for taking out time to visit and talked about how Konga always goes where its users love to go. He also spoke about some of the initiatives that Konga has planned for its users in the coming year.

  • Hooked up by facebook – Tale of  marriages through social media

    Hooked up by facebook – Tale of marriages through social media

    Relationship experts urge caution

    THE advent of social media sites such as Facebook and some others have brought a new dimension to the world of romance, love and relationships in the past few years. New friendships and burgeoning relationships are being conducted on these sites with varying results.

    For the unlucky ones, it’s tales of sorrow, disappointment and anguish. Stories abound of how some ladies fall victims of fraud, rape and other forms of violence through dates they met via the internet. In some tragic cases, death occurs, like that of the late Cynthia Osokogu, a 24-year-old post-graduate student who was murdered by friends she reportedly met on Facebook.

    In the midst of all these sordid, depressing tales, however, are heart-warming stories of couples who met on Facebook and began relationships that blossomed into love and marriage.

    From Facebook reunion to the altar

    Joseph Jibueze, a journalist, first met his wife of a few months nearly 10 years ago. She was a young, shy teenager in secondary school, while he was an undergraduate.

    “We knew ourselves when I was in school in Port-Harcourt, Rivers State. That was around 2003. We were in the same Christian congregation of the Jehovah’s Witnesses in PH. Though I found her attractive, we were like family friends and there was nothing between us. Besides, she was very young then, still in secondary school,” he disclosed.

    After his graduation, he stated that he lost contact with her until they were reunited via Facebook. Said he: “When I left Port-Harcourt after graduation, I did not see her again for several years. But early this year, I was going through the Facebook page of my brother-in-law when I saw an attractive face on his wall. The face looked familiar but I was not sure who she was.” It turned out to be his old friend and church member in Port-Harcourt, the young school girl, Esther that he used to admire. She was now grown up, had graduated and was even working in PH.

    “I confirmed she was the same girl I used to know and something in me told me she was the one I had been waiting for,” Joseph added. He promptly sent her a request on Facebook but he did not hear from her for some days. “She did not immediately accept and I was a bit scared that she could be involved with someone else. Days passed before she accepted and we started talking. We spoke on phone too. We discovered we were really attracted to each other. She was not in a serious relationship then; so I moved in quickly,” he said.

    In early October last year, the lovebirds got married in a well attended ceremony at the Kingdom Hall of the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Port-Harcourt.

     

    The reluctant matchmaker

    Another couple who Facebook played a big role in their love story is James and Loretta. They got married about three years ago after meeting on Facebook and becoming friends. As James, 32, a marketing sales representative told The Nation: “I first saw my wife on my friend’s wall. We were chatting one day when I saw the picture of this lady. I became interested in her but when I told my friend about my interest, he discouraged me. He said she was already engaged and I should not bother about her,” he said. Later, he found out it was not true, it was just his friend’s way of protecting the girl, who was his cousin. “You see, my friend used to consider me a ‘player’ back then, he thought I was only after her for ‘fun and games’. But I was able to convince him about my sincerity towards the girl and he grudgingly gave me her contact.”

    Another obstacle cropped up after he called Loretta. As he stated: “When I contacted Loretta and told her I liked her, she was not too keen on going out with me. I think she just split up with her boyfriend then and she wanted time to recover. She was not interested in going into another relationship so soon after the break-up with her ex. But I didn’t give up. I kept calling her and I think I pestered her so much that she finally accepted me!”

    They courted for a year, then in 2010, they tied the knot. “My friend who gave me Loretta’s number did not believe I would marry her right up to the day of our wedding. He still believed I was not serious. He was my best man at the wedding and he gave a toast, telling the guests the story of how I met my wife on Facebook. We now have a daughter who is a year old.”

     

    Student romance

    Ronke Aremu (nee Ojo) first got connected to her husband via Facebook. She narrated her story to The Nation: “One of my flatemates, Tunde, posted a comment on Facebook (I can’t really remember vividly what the comment is about now ), but it was about him saying something about being depressed. Knowing he is a very lively person, I just replied his comment, ‘You of all people, why are you down?’.

    “My husband, Lekan who is his friend on Facebook, also commented on the post. My husband later told me that he was in the cyber cafe with one of his friends when he saw my comment on Tunde’s post and he was fascinated by my name-Ronke Ojo. He told his friend, ‘omo yi de fine o’ (‘This girl is beautiful’). He said throughout that day, my name was just ringing in his head.

    “He called Tunde and asked him about me. Tunde told him that I was his neighbour and he said he was interested in me and the guy said, ‘No, the girl is an SU!’ He sent a friend’s request which I did accept. He was sending me messages on Facebook, asking for my phone number. Tunde later came to talk to me on his behalf. He started calling me and later came down to my school, Ekiti State University in February, 2011 when I was about writing my final exams. We actually started talking in October. I told him that I was not interested and he left, saying he would come back after my exams. We were friends, we started talking on phone. We started dating officially in July 2011 and got married in November, 2013. I was convinced by his consistency.”

     

    From America with love

    The classy wedding of US-based engineer, Ikenna Nwaneri and Onome Edegware, on November 16, 2013, at Our Lady of Apostle’s Catholic Church, Kaduna, was the culmination of a romance that began on Facebook. It all started in January 2012 when they became Facebook friends. Through constant contact on the social media, love blossomed between the two. But there was an obstacle: distance. It was a long-distance relationship with the groom working in the US, while Onome was in London studying for a Masters degree.

    With time, they finally met and they felt an instant connection. “The connection was instant. We were friends and soul mates at the same time. It all just felt right,” Onome enthused.

    Ikenna proposed to her on a trip to Paris in 2012. As she disclosed: “He proposed to me in a most romantic way. It was Boxing Day in 2012 and our last night in Paris. We had dinner on the River Seine. I thought it was the moment but nothing happened. We left with two fortune cookies. We went to the Eiffel Tower and it was there I reached for my fortune cookie and broke it. The note inside read: “When you realise you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible. Onome baby, will you marry me?” With that, Ikenna went on his knees, attracting the attention of tourists nearby who began taking pictures of the happy couple.

    On their relationship, Ikenna had this to say: “Even with the rigours of a long distance relationship, we kept strong. That we were domiciled in different time zones did not deter us from our commitment. We were always in touch through the various social media.”

     

    Caution is the key

    To marriage experts, however, caution should be the key in such relationships connected by social media, especially Facebook. As Julie Ngozi Okeke of the Moms Club International said: “Facebook marriages must be done with great caution. As a matter of fact, I do not outrightly support it; there are issues involved in it that call for great caution. I know that there have been one of two case like that where one heard that a Facebook couple has emerged and you may even say that there has been one or so that has lasted one or two years.

    “But you see, the truth is that marriage goes beyond one or two years of living together or of being a couple. It is more than that. What happens after two years? Also it is not as if one of such marriages may not stand the test of time, there is a ‘but’ clause to it. Most of them do not work out in the long run. Most Facebook people are not real. Girls or the young men should therefore be cautious. Unfortunately too, in these climes, when things come over here, new meanings and new interpretations are always attached to usage. So the way we use Facebook here is also important and must be considered. Just as there are real people on Facebook, there are fake people too.”

    Also speaking on the issue, Dr. Leonard Okonkwo, stated: “Most Facebook marriages will not work because the people involved would not have got to know themselves. Most often, everybody who uses the social media of which Facebook is one, ensure that they come out there at their best. They do not show their weaknesses or shortcomings, they come showing their best. Thus, when you go into marriages based on what you have seen on Facebook, sooner or later, you may find out that it is not really so. The person you were dealing with was only showing you their best side.”

    Another relationship expert and youth counsellor, F. Diepreye, also cautions on relationships developed via social media. As he stated: “Facebook, just like other social media, is an avenue for communication with friends, colleagues as well as strangers, people you don’t know very well. Even those you know physically can sometimes act ‘funny’ and be unreliable and untrustworthy, much less the ones you just met via Facebook. So, people need to be careful when using these sites, especially when it comes to serious relationships and even marriage. Friendships can develop through Facebook but be wise.

    “Do not rush into marriage until after a period of courtship so both parties can get to know each other well. Marriage is a serious, life long commitment, not something you jump into just because you saw a pretty girl on Facebook. Most of the pictures have been photoshopped anyway, so the person might look different in real life from his photograph. The bottom line is, young people and the adults as well should exercise caution on these sites. They should not get married based on what they see on Facebook but the reality on the ground, the real world and not the Internet world which most times is a fake, unreal world where people pretend a lot and are not true to themselves.”

    Okeke supports this view, stating: “If you must contract marriage on Facebook at all, make sure that you know such people as real people. Even then, people you met and knew years ago and you suddenly meet again on Facebook may have changed in character and other ways. So a lot of caution is advised for people who hope to get married on Facebook. The use of social media should be done with caution.”

    Said Okonkwo on this: “The danger in Facebook marriages is also that Facebook is open to deception. It is actually a platform where people get duped. So it is not a platform to exhibit you in totality. Moreso, when you can only read but cannot hear on Facebook, you cannot get to know the person that you want to marry in totality. What I am saying is that love that leads to marriage should not be based on Facebook connection. But Facebook could be used as a starting point. When you meet each other, you could then ensure that you date properly, get to meet and know. Afterwards, you can let other things follow. I however, do not see how marriage contracted only via Facebook without an initial meeting, can work. If it works out, then it will be one or two cases, which so happened by chance. But generally, a larger percentage will crash or lead to disaster.”

    Diepreye on his part advises people generally on the use of social media, especially when it comes to friendship. “Sometimes I hear people boasting that they have such and such numbers of ‘friends’ on Facebook and I wonder, what do you need 2,000 friends for, especially when you don’t even know a majority of them and cannot vouch for them? Of what importance are they to you? I suggest you keep those you know physically and know their character. Don’t keep so many Facebook ‘friends’ just to prove that you are popular. Do they give award to those with many friends on these sites? No! So, people should be careful in acquiring too many strangers as ‘friends’ on Facebook to avoid being duped.”

  • Facebook, Zuckerberg plan to sell $3.9b of shares

    Facebook, Zuckerberg plan to sell $3.9b of shares

    Facebook Inc. (FB) Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg is selling shares to help pay taxes, joining the company and board member Marc Andreessen in an offering worth about $3.9 billion.

    About 27 million shares will be offered by Facebook, with an additional 41.35 million shares by Zuckerberg and 1.6 million from Andreessen, the Menlo Park, California-based company said in a statement.

    The follow-on sale, the first that Facebook has filed for since its May 2012 IPO, could raise about $3.9 billion based on the company’s closing price today. The move comes a day before Facebook joins the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, an event that triggers demand from index funds and other institutions to own a company’s stock. S&P had announced that as of the close of trading on Dec. 20, it plans to include Facebook’s Class A common stock in the S&P 500 Index, the company said.

    “It’s never a positive sign when insiders are dumping massive quantities of stock,” said Todd Lowenstein, a portfolio manager with Highmark Capital, which oversees about $19 billion in assets. Yet “the company is now being added to the S&P 500 Index so there will be large demand for the shares from index buying and index hugging money managers. So it seems this will be absorbed without much disruption.”

    Using Proceeds

    Facebook said it will use the proceeds for working capital and other corporate purposes, while Zuckerberg will use the majority of his proceeds to pay taxes he will incur in connection with his exercise of an option to purchase 60 million shares.

    “We do not currently have any specific uses of the net proceeds planned,” the company said in a filing. “We may use a portion of the proceeds to us for acquisitions of complementary businesses, technologies, or other assets.”

    Shares of Facebook have more than doubled this year.

    Zuckerberg’s share sale, plus a gift of 18 million shares to charity, accounts for about 11 percent of his Facebook holdings. Along with a share sale for tax purposes and a charity contribution last year, the CEO has sold or gifted about 20 percent of his Facebook stake. Andreessen’s sale in the follow-on offering forms 35 percent of his 4.6 million Facebook shares, according to the filing.

    Vanessa Chan, a spokeswoman for Facebook, declined to comment beyond the statement. Margit Wennmachers, a spokeswoman for Andreessen’s venture-capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, also declined to comment. Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, is an investor in Andreessen Horowitz.

    Facebook’s Comeback

    Facebook’s joining of the S&P 500 cements a comeback for the company after its stock plunged in the wake of its IPO. The world’s biggest social-networking company has since introduced numerous mobile advertising products, as its more than 1 billion members shift to using the service on smartphones and tablets.

    Last week, Facebook said it is testing video advertisements that automatically play in users’ news feeds, in a bid to catch up with other websites offering online commercials. The first promotions are starting to run this week, the company said Dec. 17.

    While advertisers can already upload videos to their Facebook page and broadcast them to a user’s news feed, the new service will let marketers buy their way directly into a person’s feed, according to two people familiar with the plans.

    Facebook and the underwriters of its IPO must face a class-action lawsuit by investors claiming the company misled them about its financial condition, U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet in Manhattan ruled in an opinion dated Dec. 11.

    Additional share sales in the U.S. this year have raised about $177 billion, about the same as in 2012, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

    JPMorgan Chase & Co. is managing the transaction announced today, along with Bank of America Corp., Morgan Stanley and Barclays Plc, according to the statement.

     

    Culled from Reuters

  • Facebook patriots

    Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel- Samuel Johnson, April 1775

    Nigeria as a country is full of many patriots, good ones at that matter. Yes, they are many and in legions. But unfortunately, many are mere Facebook patriots, thanks to Mark Zuckeberg and his co-travellers. What will these patriots have done without their invention? Check out the Facebook walls of many Nigerians and you will get what I mean. We are perhaps the most ardent users of this invention, using it to vent our spleens on whoever we deem fit. Or praise-sing whoever catches our fancy, whether they deserve it or not. If you read the Facebook walls of many Nigerians and set stock by what they write and post there, this country would have been an Eldorado.

    Many pontificate and talk about the ideal country and situation. However, their pontifications and ideals end right there on Facebook. They vociferously condemn what they see as poor leadership and lack of accountability, yet in their offices and attitude to work they are lazy and unproductive. They blame the leadership of the country for every wrong and yet exhibit bad traits in their own little corner of the world. They never honour their promises no matter how little, yet blame others for the same infractions. They are right, but the other person who exhibited the same trait is hounded and condemned on their Facebook walls.

    Give such a Facebook patriot N5000 to share among five people, he takes the lion share. He doesn’t see this as a trait of stealing or cheating, yet he’ll condemn a government official who awards a contract and inflates the cost. But what is the difference between the two? If a man is untruthful with sharing N5000 among five people how can such be just and truthful in the award of billions of naira contracts? Yet such a thief would come on Facebook and cast the biggest stone at a public official for the same offence he has committed over the simple act of sharing money among five people.

    A Facebook patriot is held in a traffic snarl and he pulls out and drives furiously facing oncoming traffic. Such a traffic offender will later pounce on his keyboard and rail against leaders who blare their sirens and drive others off the highway when in traffic. If he could drive against traffic as an ordinary citizen, would he not do the same if he is in public office? Is his offence (driving against traffic) less grievous than that of the public official? No. It is the same blatant abuse.

    Who do you blame for this? Is this not one of the little breaches we perpetrate that lead to bigger abuses and make the country what it is today? Yet these Facebook patriots are major culprits and they don’t see this as part of the problems plaguing the country?

    If you are driving in your car and you finish drinking your sachet or bottled water and you throw the bottle or sachet out of your window on to the streets, do you have a moral right to blame, abuse or complain that Lagos is dirty or that Governor Fashola is not working? How is it Fashola’s fault that you couldn’t leave your trash in your car and dispose when you get home or the office? We all come on Facebook and cry over bad leadership when we are ourselves part of the problem. Why don’t we strive to show good leadership in our little corners and leave the bigger pictures to take care of themselves?

    I agree that leadership has a lot to do with it but have we ourselves shown the needed “leadership” in our little spheres? Will a man who couldn’t truthfully and justly share N5000 among five people be able to adequately share bigger resources without cornering more than half of it for himself? No. Greed has no degree; a man who shows his greed over a small portion would show the same greed over a large portion.

    To make our country great, we must be ready to walk the talk and behave and hold ourselves with the same scale we put our public officials on Facebook.

  • Cisco, Facebook collaborate

    Cisco, Facebook collaborate

    Cisco said it has collaborated with Facebook to help businesses increase brand recognition and proactively target promotions and advertisements based on customer preferences and demographics using Wi-Fi.

    According to a statement, the Cisco Connected Mobile Experience (CMX) with Facebook Wi-Fi is currently being piloted by some of the world’s most popular retailers, hotels and other public gathering spots. This solution, coined CMX for Facebook Wi-Fi, helps improve the consumer experience, provides a quick and simple way for consumers to access Wi-Fi by checking in on Facebook, and gives businesses more opportunities to connect with their customers. CMX for Facebook Wi-Fi also provides businesses with more likes and check-ins for their Facebook Page, increasing the demographic data on their customers, so they can better serve them.

    Also unveiled by the firm was the expansion of the Unified Access portfolio with the introduction of the Catalyst 3650 access switch designed to accelerate the convergence of wired and wireless networks and the Aironet 3700 802.11ac wireless access point for managing next-generation mobile devices in high density environments. The CMX for Facebook Wi-Fi solution is built on this Unified Access architecture.

  • N255m cars: Facebook users want Oduah sacked

    N255m cars: Facebook users want Oduah sacked

    Facebook users have called for  Aviation Minister, Stella Oduah’s removal over the alleged purchase of two armored cars worth N255 million naira.

    The Nation Newspaper had subsequently sought the pulse of the masses on the issue on its Facebook Page.

    Of over 2, 000 submissions, below are some of the randomly selected comments by Nigerians:

    Victor Maverick Amos In more decent climes this question would be illegal. The right one should be- how many years should this woman spend behind bars?

    Nura Muhammad Nasan So sad, so worried concerning leadership in Nigeria. Its indicate that both the Lower and Upper House of the National Assembly lack some democratic elements
    that make them to fail woefully. Its obvious that the current adminstration has no direction and make corruption its priority. Just of a recent, the presidency defending fraud of about $1.6billion(N255million) by Aviation Minister… This is a shame. 225million can drill five hundred and ten (510) boreholes at #500, 000 per borehole, and this can be distributed to one borehole per Local Gov’t Area in the Country, 510 LG will benefit from it, one thousand (1 000) citizens will benefit from each bolehole daily, a total of 510 000 will benefit from… Therefore, Government should terminate her appointment.

    Amadi Augustine She bought two amoured cars for and over what? Is she going to war? The next thing now is some people are after her life. The level of wastage in this country has never been witnessed by any country in sub-Saharan Africa. Except that we have no shame, otherwise she would have resigned by now. This is sheer greed common with Nigerian political leaders no matter the political party. Compare Stella Oduah with Dora Akunyili, it is a far cry. Akunyili exhibited tact, altruism and above her life when she was shot by fake drug manufacturers. Oduah should hide her head in shame.

    Gloria Ernest-Samuel Yes! She ought to have resigned. It is insulting that someone like her could still wait to be sacked. She is shameless. I used to admire her. I thought she was as pretty on the inside as she is on the outside. If I were in her position, I will apologize to Nigerians and resign. That is what integrity is all about, but she lacks that. She’s just one of those roguish politicians.*sighs* I pity her family.

    Oluwatoyin Olagbaju It’s all about having moral courage and an undiluted patriotic zeal. The idea is to embark on a wholistic revamping of The Populous Giant Of Africa, NIGERIA; Giving the plethora of air mishaps and near mishaps that we’ve had in this country, which are hardly ever due to pilot incompetence or contrary weather, rather, we always hear reports of aircrafts having mechanical or parts problems. If the allegation(s) levelled against Ms. Odua is legitimate, then I don’t see any reason why we need to have disgruntled Nigerians, conscripted or otherwise in red tee shirts and placards, demonstrating against her continuance as The Minister for Aviation…A highly sensitive parastatal, I must add; She, Ms Odua should naturally and in honorable conscience tender her resignation, in the best interest of the Nation’s Posterity and in fact, constitute a team that should not only proffer solution(s) to our current predicament in that sector but also give suggestions as persons/seasoned professionals who may best serve as Nigeria’s Aviation Minister… The Aviation sector is too intricate for political appointments.

    Adebayo Idowu While other Nations have Leaders Nigeria is Blessed with Looters of treasury, thieves, embezzlers, liers & haters of the truth. She is one of those who claim to be leaders but re looter let her go the way he likes goes. U can be sure she will get National honor

    Oyetunji Oyegboola Babatunde  mr president should sack her and after dat he must prosecute her nd jail her 4 dis corruption dat she committed………… ASUU is on strike nd those stupid elements called politicians are buying exotic cars without fulfilling d agreement btw ’em nd ASUU.

    Akor Austin If every minister decides now that their lives are not safe and goes for cars like dis, what will happen to Nigeria? Only one person, 2 cars worth 1.6, its not fair,see hw the masses are sufering and just one person alone is spending this amnt of money on cars in the name of protecting her life. It is true, it is nothing compare to what others have stolen, but it has to stop, the harmmer need to drop on some one so others can take dressing from there.we need to change. Let her GO!!!

    Dave Probity yes!, we don’t want a corrupt leader like her, how can somebody use only N255million to buy only two cars? her car is even cost more than the Britain PM. she should go as nemesis has caught up with her.

    Richii Anayo Nwobasi Her resignation won’t stop corruption in Nigeria n according to report its a trend in the country wt all those in Power~crumbling d financial state of d country more alarming when over ten million Nigerians survive below a dollar day• I sincerely think We should stand together to FIGHT corruption from d top to the street rather than debating over her sack/resignation because whosoever is taking over from her will do worst••Pls where is Bank Ole today? N Cecilia Ibru? The list might go on••My take here~Pls let’s fight Corruption to save our yet unborn generation•

    Dompyal Lombin It is very funny that public officials don’t care about Nigeria’s image. We have come to terms with their corupt tendencies all we ask in return is decorum and a little “think before you act”. Even if the cars were not bought in her name (which i doubt) she should atleast hav had the common sense to reject them for the time bein to focus on a more important issue which is safety of our Airways! She should resign for God’s sake! Nigeria is not a Banana republic

    Uche Chris This accusation is baseless and stupid, some people are just accusing this innocent woman for nothing, because she is under GEJ team and she is working. Those that vows to make the leadership of GEJ ungovernable.

    Baba Shehu Rilwanu No! Bcos she is not d only one in d gov’t. All d higher ranking officers of d country are doing dsame. If d minister should resign the management of d ministry should also resign cos nothing can happen without their concent.

    Magnus Tekpejereme Hwosafe BIG NOOOO. The car was not bought in her name, it’s an official car; and until we get a final investigation report that the cost of the cars were inflated; she should remain in her noble office and continue the transformation works on the aviation industry. No sentiments.

    Onyedika Ezeudu She wil nt resign cos d car was purchased by official duty. D pple that bought that car sopose to be pro

    Augustine Ogbekene Corruption has no language or tribe. It is a disease that afflicts everybody,especially the poor or marginalised. Tax payers’ money is looted and development stalled. It is a scourge that must be fought with all vehemence. Stella odua marched on banana peel and slipped: Due process was not followed and the cost of the cars were outrageously inflated. Management of NCAA and the minister shud go! That is my verdict.

    Omowunmi Olojo She should b SACKED,if she is asked 2 resign, it still d same has helping 2 protect her image.she done tarnish her image by herself.I BEG NA SACK BE HER REWARD”

    Onos Ziregbe The earlier we start dealing squarely with corrupt practices, no matter how minute, the quicker the repositioning of our economy and general well being. Every single corrupt act should be seriously discouraged. SHE SHOULD GO

    James Kayode Infact is like we nigerians we don’t know where we are going how would a single person will used nigeria money to purchase a car of #255m we should all know that if chance permit her she can steal d whole budget of nation bcos she a thief to d core (olle barawo oyin oshi).

    Olabisi Bizzaino Adekanye The agency that purchased the cars should be held liable for any apportioned punishment. The minister should as well be suspended for accepting these gifts. This is a nation where our self-obsessed leaders claim there is insufficient fund when it comes to projects that will be of benefit to d general public, but have the fund to slake their desire. Our Judiciary is nothing to write home about otherwise i would have counselled these culprits are kept safe and sound in Kirikiri for time indefinite.

    Mohammed Abdulkareem She should not only go but also punished along with her GOD father

    Jibrin Idris She will not hence she is not the only corrupt office holder in the country others should resign too no comment

    Ibrahim Balogun she doesnt deserve to resign. let her chop her own too

    Sule Monday what is she doing in that office now,by now stella should be in efcc net or are we waiting untill she use the whole aviation money to buy armored bulletproof jet for her personal use again at taxpayer expense.

    Read more comments HERE

  • Facebook unveils new rules on shared materials

    Facebook unveils new rules on shared materials

    Facebook has removed a video clip showing a woman’s decapitation and issued new rules about what can be shared on its site.

    The U-turn comes two days after the BBC revealed the firm had dropped a ban on clips showing extreme violence.

    That move was criticised by the British prime minister and the company’s own safety advisers.

    Facebook now said it will still allow some graphic content but will take a more comprehensive look at its context.

    It outlined its revised policy in a press release.

    “First, when we review content that is reported to us, we will take a more holistic look at the context surrounding a violent image or video, and will remove content that celebrates violence,” it said.

    “Second, we will consider whether the person posting the content is sharing it responsibly, such as accompanying the video or image with a warning and sharing it with an age-appropriate audience.

    “Based on these enhanced standards, we have re-examined recent reports of graphic content and have concluded that this content improperly and irresponsibly glorifies violence. For this reason, we have removed it.”

    The announcement follows a series of flip-flops by the company.

    On May 1, when questioned about death clips being shared on the site, the firm told the BBC that its users had the right to depict the “world in which we live.”

     

     

  • Facebook bug shuts out users for hours

    Facebook bug shuts out users for hours

    Update 3: Everything seems to have come back to normal. www.facebook.com/thenationng page now works perfectly.

    Update 2: The problem still persists as some users claim they cannot log into their account let alone comment or update their status.

    Iain Mackenzie is European communications director for Facebook, he confirmed the issue on twitter : “We are aware that some people are having problems posting to Facebook and we’re looking into it.”

    According to Michael Allen, Director of APM, Compuware, the outage would potentially affect “billions of people.”

    “If you look at the Outage Analyser service, at least 3,587 other domains were impacted; although the actual number is likely to be far greater. This is because many other businesses and websites are connected to Facebook. For example, Facebook is used to enable people to log in to many other sites and applications. Any organisation that is seeing errors or slowdowns with their own site or application this afternoon, should check to see if they are relying on Facebook services before they start fire fighting as this might be the cause.

     

    Update 1: For close to two hours, Monday afternoon, Facebook users were having difficulties in updating their status, post pictures and the like.

    Attempts by users to update on the social networking site yielded this message: “There was a problem updating your status. Please try again in a few minutes.”

    The peculiar bug was partially fixed after a couple of hours as some are able to operate their accounts accurately —  many still face difficulties.

    The development raised dust among users most of whom initially thought the issue was not a common problem.

     

     

  • Facebook blocks a privacy setting

    Facebook blocks a privacy setting

    Popular social network, Facebook is trashing  a privacy feature that enables users regulate who can find them on the social network.
    Facebook Inc. has said that it is removing a setting that controls users’ visibility when their names are typed  in the website’s search bar.
    The management of Facebook says only a single-digit percentage of the nearly 1.2 billion people on its network were using the setting.
    The change comes on the heels of building out its search feature, which people often use to find people they know — or want to know — on the site.
    Facebook which is based in Menlo Park, California, however says users can protect their privacy by limiting the audience for each thing they post about themselves.