As of July 1, users of internet messaging services including Facebook, WhatsApp, Twitter and Viber must pay 200 shilling, or about $0.05 per day
Browsing: Government
Applications are currently open for the 2018 edition of the Enspire Incubation Program. Enspire is…
The idea of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is relatively a new one in today’s world.…
Registrations are currently on for the “CLICK-ON KADUNA” digital jobs workshop sponsored by the Kaduna…
ZTE Corp. is estimating losses of at least $3.1 billion from a U.S. technology ban…
The Kenya Film and Classification Board (KFCB) empowered by a new law has announced that…
As parts of its mandate to develop and regulate Information Technology in Nigeria, The National…
Plans are on the way for the Lagos State Government to transform the Sabo Industrial…
Following this announcement by Trump, the shares of MTN, which plans to list on the Nigerian Stock Exchange, went down 2.6 percent after earlier falling over 3 percent.
Iran has followed in Russia’s footsteps by banning Telegram, the app almost half of the…
The Ugandan Government has announced a social media tax set to take effect from July…
President Muhamadu Buhari is known to be media shy. Since he became the President in…
The Federal Government of Nigeria has disclosed plans to set up a technology and innovation…
The Federal Government has commenced the Startup Nigeria programme to build entrepreneurial spirit in youths,…
Government has partnered the private sector in activating the cyber security policy, which is meant to protect the country from cyber attacks and crimes.
The move is designed to enhance performance, improve service-delivery and to bring more order, discipline and rationality to the sector as a whole.
While the tightening of Econet’s systems will go a long way to eradicate the issue of identity theft, there is need to adopt and fast track the Computer Crime and Cyber Security Bill.
The Zimbabwean population is vulnerable to cyber threats and that the government should speed up the implementation of Computer Crime and Cyber Security Bill.
As Zuckerberg was being grilled, Facebook’s stock price jumped by nearly 4.5 percent. Investors appeared pleased.
The Facebook–Cambridge Analytica data scandal involves the collection of personally identifiable information of up to 87 million Facebook users that Cambridge Analytica began collecting in 2014.