Tag: instagram

  • Olamide promotes Dab on Instagram

    Olamide promotes Dab on Instagram

    Hip hop act Olamide is in the news again. This time, he is featured in a new song, Oya Dab, by DJ Enimoney which dropped last week. And as part of the promo for the song, Olamide has however gone on social media to give the new video, which comes with a new dance move some hype.

    Throughout the weekend, Olamide, on his Instagram page, he posted different pictures of fans striking the ‘Dab’ dance pose.

    The pose which sees people bend down and throw one hand sideways to the sky while the palm on the other hand closes the eyes has been going viral. The song is produced by B Banks.

    It will be recalled that Olamide started 2016 on a controversial note when on New Year Day, he made snide remarks concerning the Headies’ decision to award Reekado Banks of Supreme Mavins Dynasty the award of ‘Next Rated Artist’ instead of Lil Kesh who is signed on to his YBNL label. A response by Don Jazzy was followed by a flurry of inflamed tweets by Olamide aimed at the SMD boss.

    However, with the rift settled by the next day, Olamide was, few days after, host of SMD as he featured on Tiwa Savage’s new video, Standing Ovation, off Tiwa’s latest album, R.E.D.

  • I am active only on Instagram – Enyeama

    I am active only on Instagram – Enyeama

     

    Vincent Enyeama has denied owning any other social media account.

    He did this on Monday evening via his Instagram handle (vinny2908) after being notified of such phony accounts.

    He claimed to be recently aware of accounts created in his name and used for extortion and informed that he was not active on any other social media except Instagram.

    “It just got to my notice that people are using my name on Facebook and other social media sites to make promises or extort money from people. I am not active on any other social media network except here on Instagram”.

    He also advised his fans to be careful of whom they interact with on social media.

  • Emenike closes Twitter, Instagram  accounts

    Emenike closes Twitter, Instagram accounts

    Emmanuel Emenike  has reacted to the insults he received from Fenerbahce fans after his below par performance against Akhisar Belediyespor by deactivating his Twitter and Instagram accounts.

    During the Super Lig game on Monday, the Nigeria international surprisingly missed an open goal from two meters. And it is thought he was not remorseful after the game, with the attacker caught on camera holding and drinking a liter of carbonated soft drink.

    After the game held at the Sükrü Saracoglu Stadium on Monday, the Super Eagles forward was criticised by his teammates and coaching staff for missing an empty goal.

    Emmanuel Emenike has managed only four goals in the league so far this season.

  • What kids do online

    What kids do online

    Nigeria’s telecoms revolution has brought about growth in the number of subscribers. It has also led to flooding of the market with cheap internet-enabled mobile phones. Parents buy their kids mobile phones, iPads and other electronic devices, oblivious of what they do with them. LUCAS AJANAKU reports that some of these kids are either posting embarrassing messages and goofy self-portraits on Facebook or doing it on Instagram.

    Thirty-four year-old Esther Daniel, mother of three, is a busy woman. She works with a private firm on Victoria Island and she lives in Egbeda, a Lagos suburb. Her husband is an Abuja-based civil servant while their three kids attend private schools in Abule-Odu. The eldest is a 10-year-old boy, who is in Junior Secondary School (JSS1).

    With the increasing dangers of keeping housemaids at home, she felt the best way to stay in touch with her kids is to buy a mobile phone for the eldest so that she and her husband could monitor their movement to and from school. To complete the communication circle, mummy also buys airtime on the phone so that when the kids are in need of anything, they could call either her or their father.

    She bought one of the cheap internet-enabled mobile phones for N2,500 for the boy. For long, the family stayed in touch happily and effortlessly.

    One weekend when everybody was at home, Mrs Daniel picked her son’s mobile phone, opened the message inbox and was shocked by what she saw. As soon as she clicked on the web browser, what opened was his son’s Facebook page. “I was shocked to discover that my son already had about 1000 friends on Facebook. I took my time to read some of his chats and was dumbfounded. My worry is the time he has the opportunity to stay on the internet and engage in all these frivolous chats. I seized the phone and called his school teacher to complain that the school management was not doing enough in monitoring what the kids do. I was shocked to discover later that the teacher I called is also one of my son’s friends on Facebook,” she said.

    The experience of Mrs Daniel is one out of many in the country. It is one of the many other sides of the telecoms revolution.

    The number of popular social media sites available on kids’ mobile devices has exploded in recent years with the smartest applications (apps) now enabling kids to chat informally with select groups of friends with ease and without being monitored by parents, care-givers, coaches and college administrators, who are frequent Facebook posters also.

    According to an online tech news platform, Balancing Act, many of these new mobile apps don’t require a cellphone or a credit card. There are free and can be used on popular portable devices such as the iPod Touch and Kindle Fire, as long as there’s a wireless internet connection.

    A non-profit, non-partisan research organisation that provides free data and analysis on the social media, Pew Research Centre’s Internet and American Life Project, says more than three-fourths of American teenagers have a cellphone and use online social networking sites such as Facebook. But educators and kids say there is plenty of evidence to suggest that Facebook for teenagers has become a bit like a school-sanctioned programme – a necessary rite of passage with plenty of adult onlookers –while apps, such as Snapchat and Kik Messenger are the much cooler after-party.

    Educators say they have seen kids use their mobile devices to circulate online videos of school drug searches to male students sharing nude pictures of their girlfriends. Most parents, they say, have no idea about this.

    Head, Science Department, Jofem Comprehensive College, Egbeda, Lagos, George Akpan, said he used to consider himself fairly tech savvy because he is frequently on Facebook, but was shocked to learn that his kid brothers could message their friends with Samsung Galaxy. His uncle shuts their home’s Wi-Fi after 9 p.m, but laments his uncle’s attempt to keep tabs on the kids’ online activity is not yielding any dividends.

    Mobile apps ‘refer to the software applications that can be downloaded to a mobile device through an online store such as Apple’s iTunes. According to the Federal Trade Commission, there are some 800,000 apps available through Apple and 700,000 apps on Google Play.’

    According to Balancing Act, among the most popular mobile apps among kids is Instagram, free software that digitally enhances photos and posts them to user’s account online. The photos can be shared on other social media sites such as Facebook, which bought Instagram last year.

    Then there’s Snapchat, among the top 10 free iPhone apps available. Coined by the media as the “sexting” app, Snapchat lets users send a text, photo or video that self-destructs within 10 seconds of being opened.

    Kik Messenger also allows unlimited texting for free and offers anonymity to its users. Able to run on an iPod Touch or Kindle Fire, Kik allows vague user names – for example, a nickname or a string of random digits – that won’t reveal a person’s real name or phone number.

    But as with anything online, each of these apps comes with serious caveats.

    Snapchat, for example, acknowledges on its Web page that its messages aren’t guaranteed to disappear: Anyone receiving a text or photo can use their 10 seconds to capture a “screenshot,” or photo of their device’s screen, and save that image to their phone. Video also can be downloaded, although Snapchat says it alerts senders when their data is saved.

    Instagram is considered pretty tame as long as kids adjust their privacy settings to limit who can see their photos and don’t post nudity, which could subject them to child pornography laws. But many parents, such as Mrs Daniel, don’t know their kids are on Instagram until there’s trouble – usually when kids post photos at parties, and other kids who aren’t invited see them.

    A career guidance counsellor at Jofem Comprehensive College, Lagos, Mr Fab Olawole, said parents often would hand their kids a mobile device without understanding what they can do with it. He estimated that even without the latest social media app, the average secondary school student probably transmits some 150 texts a day.

    “Some of the kids are so tech savvy that they explore areas where their parents never could imagined. A lot of them have fallen victims to cyber bullies while others have learned one bad habit or the other online.

    “While it is good to allow the kids to have early access to technology as demonstrated by the availability of computers in the school, it is the duty of all care givers to monitor what their kids do at home. At school, the teachers do the best they can but you will agree with me that the bulk of the job is at home because that is where the kids have freedom-most of them have their rooms fully equipped, where they could do what they like when their parents are asleep,” he said.

    Balancing Act reports that there are general security concerns too. A recent report by a cyberthreat research company, called F-Secure, found that some of the new social networking sites have become ripe targets for spreading malware and propagating scams.

    It said in January, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the United States (US) arrested a 27-year-old man in Los Angeles who allegedly hacked into hundreds of social media and email accounts, including Facebook and Skype, and found naked photos and personal passwords that women had stored online. He used the naked photos to try to coerce women into disrobing for him via Skype and threatened to post their private photos to their Facebook accounts if they refused to comply, according to the indictment.

    Another important thing is that almost every mobile app available collects some kind of personal data, such as a person’s birth date or the location of their phones, and shares same information with third parties for marketing purposes. While a new regulation by the US Federal Trade Commission this year is aimed at keeping advertisers from tracking kids younger than 13, there is nothing near such regulation in Nigeria. Most social media apps require that a person promise to be at least 13 when they sign up, thereby exempting themselves from the tougher privacy restrictions.

    President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), Bayo Banjo said the internet has become a huge platform for criminals who take advantage of the anonymity it provide to perpetrate criminal activities. He said parents should warn their kids against providing information to strangers.

    He recalled that in years preceding the advent of the internet, parents always warned their kids against giving undue attention to strangers or people that are unknown to them. He urged parents to monitor what their kids do online.

    Some experts have also recommended the use of filters and blockers that would limit the sites kids are exposed to.

  • Prezzo gave me STD, says Chagga

    Prezzo gave me STD, says Chagga

    KENYAN rapper and one-time BBA contestant, Prezzo, has been dumped by his Tanzanian girlfriend, Chagga.

    They were both involved in a mild drama on the social media when, a few weeks ago, Chagga wrote on Instagram that the star rapper begged her to buy him Giuseppe sneakers on his birthday.

    Some days after the breakup, during which both parties literally washed their dirty linens in public, Chagga is now claiming Prezzo infected her with a sexually transmitted disease, while they were dating.

    The Tanzanian socialite posted hospital results that came out positive for a sexually transmitted disease, Pyelonephritis.

    Prezzo has only responded with a tweet insinuating that he broke up with Chagga and not otherwise. “’President’ is like a drug (highly addictive). He’s the best up until the drugs runs out. Withdrawal symptoms can be seen from miles,” he tweeted.

    Meanwhile, Chagga has gone on to delete all photos of herself and Prezzo from her Instagram page, just as Prezzo has also done same.

  • TV presenter, TRACY NWAPA launches new reality show

    TV presenter, TRACY NWAPA launches new reality show

    FASTING-RISING TV presenter, Tracy Nwapa, is ready to launch her reality TV show known as Reality Access.

    The show is a lifestyle/reality TV show that captures various African celebrities, public figures and interesting personalities in their realistic elements.

    It will highlight the lives of these celebrities and showcase their works in the most realistic and spontaneous way. Hosted by Tracy Nwapa and produced by Idea Robot Productions, the show will air on HIPTV on March 13.

    According to her, each episode is tied to a fun activity and constantly keeps everyone on his or her toes. “The goal at the end of each episode is for the viewers to witness another aspect of their favourite personalities they see on TV. It is quite like an extended ‘Instagram’ video reel. All the information regarding this can be found on www.realityaccess.tv, while you can follow the show @RealityAccess and its presenter on twitter and Instagram,” she said. She further explained that Reality Access will be giving out loads of prices weekly.

  • Another baby girl for Dakore

    Another baby girl for Dakore

    For beautiful actress, Dakore Egbuson-Akande, the New Year couldn’t have started on a happier note, as she was delivered of a baby girl on Monday morning in America.

    The good news was shared on the Instagram, with Dakore holding her new baby, while her first daughter stared at her younger sister, who was asleep.

    Dakore captioned the picture: “All I have to say is thank you, LORD!!! #mumoftwo #happiness #love #life #girlpower #family #Godspower #aquarius.”

  • Tonto Dikeh responds to NDLEA arrest threat

    Tonto Dikeh responds to NDLEA arrest threat

    …Denies posting marijuana photos on Instagram

    Nollywood actress, Tonto Dikeh has responded to a potential arrest threat by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) by declaring that she has not received any summon to that effect.

    The marijuana pictures posted on Instagram elicited a flurry of invectives from critics and fans alike of the controversial actress and according to the spokesperson of NDLEA, Mr. Mitchell Ofoyejus the agency will see to it that action is taken on the issue.

    “Our attention has been drawn to the post quite frankly and I can tell you that action will be taken on it. The law is clear and NDLEA has been very clear on the issue. No one is permitted to sell, use, cultivate or encourage the use of Indian hemp in Nigeria. The substance is one of the banned narcotics in the country.

    “NDLEA Act Section 14 (b) states that any person who conspires with, aids, abets, counsels, attempts to commit or is an accessory to any act or offence referred to in this act shall be guilty of an offence under this act and liable on conviction to be sentenced to imprisonment for a term not less than 15 years and not exceeding 25 years.”

    Meanwhile the actress has launched a damage control campaign by stating through her publicist that the picture posted on Instagram is a misconception.

    “As much as I would like to ignore the current issue on hemp, I think I owe well-meaning people some clarification. It is so easy the misconception that can come from a picture- the genius of technology. If you cannot find me holding a wrap of marijuana then you may want to slow down on your assumptions. We shouldn’t use our platforms to spread half-truths.

    “A fan wrote those words with herbs on my birthday on Instagram, and I replied: “Thank you #teampoko”. Now how does someone else’s action become my crime? If I said those words (‘Mi smoke gaja mi smoke weed while my hatez smoke ma gossip’) I will stand by them but I didn’t, and just because it is convenient for people to believe the lies still doesn’t make it the truth. The whole thing is falsified by people who just love to have fun at other’s expense.

    “Let’s put some thought to some of the things we write. Don’t do cut-and-paste. The original pictures are there to see; but no! That is too boring to be the truth. We want the truth to be nasty and spicy for our enjoyment, even if it is a pack of lies. Visit my Instagram page and see if the original picture is the same as the ones being circulated”, she said.