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Monday, February 15, 2016

Nigeria may regulate use of WhatsApp, BBM, Facebook, Skype in country

Photo: www.skyscrapercity.com

The Nigerian Communications Commission is considering a framework for the regulation of over-the-top services in the Nigerian telecoms market.
Over-the-top services, otherwise known as OTT, are services carried over the networks, delivering value to customers, but without any carrier service provider being involved in planning, selling, provisioning, or servicing them.
OTT services are offered through Internet communication.
In Nigeria, the most common OTT services are WhatsApp messenger, BlackBerry Messenger, Facebook, and Skype which are classified under social media applications.
In other words, telecom operators such as MTN, Etisalat, Glo, and Airtel lack direct control or influence over WhatsApp messenger, BBM, Facebook or Skype.
Internet telephony and live streaming are also part of OTT services.
The growth of OTT services is encouraged by the access to 3G and 4G networks which offer mobile broadband and high speed IP data.
A report, ‘An Overview of Provision of Over The Top [OTT] Services’ published recently by the Policy, Competition & Economic Analysis Department of the Nigerian Communications Commission, says OTT services were becoming a threat to the traditional telephone network operators.
This development, the report said, is a global issue.
The threat, according to the NCC report, comes from the fact that Internet telephony is not only cheap, and free in some cases, but it also offers many features previously unavailable with telephones, therefore making it more attractive to consumers.
And unlike the traditional telephone network operator, the operators of Internet telephony don’t pay tolls for their services.
Besides, the report said since telecom operators such as MTN, Etisalat, Glo and Airtel do not have control over WhatsApp, BBM, Facebook and the rest of the social media applications, they (the telecom operators) cannot do not generate revenues from services offered through these applications.
The report said, “Many traditional telecom service providers are of the opinion that traditional telephony and SMS revenues are under threat from newer, IP based alternatives like WhatsApp, Skype, Viber etc.
“Similarly, third party web content and social networking companies such as Google and Facebook are increasingly generating huge revenues and driving high levels of data traffic which ride on the broadband networks of traditional telecom operators’.
“To further worsen this issue, the traditional operators still have to make significant investments in upgrading their networks to handle the increasing volume of data generated by the same providers of OTT services.
“Most traditional telephone network service providers therefore argue that unless there is a revenue flow to them from such services, they do not have an incentive to continue to maintain or upgrade the networks,” the report said.
The NCC also believed there is need for some kind of regulation because OTT services portend security risks to the country.
“Because VoIP relies on your Internet connection, it may be vulnerable to many of the same problems that face computers,” the report said.
“Attackers may be able to perform activities such as intercepting communications, eavesdropping, taking control of phones, making fraudulent calls from an account, conducting effective phishing attacks by manipulating one’s caller ID, and causing service to crash.”

Kanye West Explains Why He’s Begging Mark Zuckerberg to Help With $53 Million Debt


Kanye West Explains Why He's Begging Mark Zuckerberg to Help With $53 Million Debt
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Kanye West explained why he begged Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg for financial help on Monday, Feb. 15: 'People wanted me to tweet again well here's some tweets!!!'


There he goes again. Kanye West jumped back on Twitter on Monday, February 15, to explain his rant from late Sunday, when he begged Facebook CEO and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg to help bail him out of $53 million in debt.

West first revealed his massive financial woes on Valentine’s Day, February 14, several days after he took the Internet by storm with the joint release of Yeezy Season 3 and his latest studio album, The Life of Pablo.
“Mark Zuckerberg I know it’s your bday but can you please call me by 2mrw…“ West wrote. “You love hip hop, you love my art… I am your favorite artist but you watch me barely breathe and still play my album in your house… World, please tweet, FaceTime, Facebook, instagram, whatever you gotta do to get Mark to support me…”

His cries for help continued in several follow-up tweets. “Mark, I am publicly asking you for help…one of the coolest things you could ever do is to help me in my time of need,” West added. “I will always respect you for that and the world will love you. I know I can make the world a better place… I have done the impossible… I retook the throne of rap… I beat the fashion game…”
New dad Zuckerberg has yet to respond to West’s pleas for help.

US election 2016: George W Bush to campaign for brother Jeb

Jeb Bush in New HampshireImage copyrightReuters
Image captionPublic appearances by the Bush brothers have been rare
Former President George W Bush is to hit the campaign trail to boost younger brother Jeb's faltering presidential nomination bid.
The 43rd US president will appear at a rally in South Carolina on Monday, ahead of Saturday's primary election.
Mr Bush's legacy has come under fierce attack from Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in a televised debate.
His brother, the former Florida governor, has spent a lot of campaign cash but failed to make an impact.
He is struggling to catch up with Mr Trump and Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who won the New Hampshire and Iowa contests respectively.
Mr Bush's famous family has largely kept out of his presidential nomination battle and he insisted last year that he was running as his own man.
But last week his mother Barbara Bush, wife of former President George HW Bush, spoke out in his support.
And on Saturday, Jeb Bush defended his brother's presidency, saying he had built a "security apparatus to keep us safe".
Mr Trump, a billionaire businessman, tore into George W Bush's record, accusing him of lying about the reasons for the Iraq War, which he said destabilised the Middle East.

More on the Republican race

Republican debateImage copyrightGetty Images
Image captionBush, Cruz and Trump had several bitter exchanges
Ebb with Jeb The Bush campaign launched with cash and hope abundant, so what happened?
Trading blows The winners and losers in the last, rancorous Republican debate
Angry Americans The driving forces behind the rise of outside candidates like Trump
Trump 'joke' Satirist PJ O'Rourke casts his eye over the White House candidates

"I want to tell you - they lied," said Mr Trump. "They said there were weapons of mass destruction, there were none. And they knew there were none."
He also scoffed at Mr Bush's defence of his brother.
"The World Trade Center came down during your brother's reign, remember that."
George W Bush praised his brother's abilities last week in a radio advert, and Jeb Bush will hope his personal appearance will bring dividends on polling day.
Although George W Bush remains a divisive figure nationally, he and his father both won primary elections in South Carolina.
South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, who quit the presidential race and is now backing Jeb Bush, said: "The Bush name is golden in my state."
While Republican voters in South Carolina make their choice for president, the Democratic Party is holding its own contest in Nevada on Saturday. Republicans in Nevada and Democrats in South Carolina get to express their views in separate contests the following week.
Mr Cruz, Mr Trump and Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have all won one state each.

Key dates to come

US2016 banner
20 February - South Carolina primary (Republican); Nevada caucus (Democrat)
23 February - Nevada caucus (R)
27 February - South Carolina primary (D)
1 March - 'Super Tuesday' - 15 states or territories decide
18-21 July - Republican convention, nominee picked
25-28 July - Democratic convention, nominee picked
8 November - US presidential elections

Donald Tusk: 'Real' risk of break-up over EU referendum talks

Donald Tusk and David CameronImage copyrightGetty Images
Negotiations over the UK's EU reform demands are at a "critical moment" and the risk of break-up "is real", EU Council president Donald Tusk has said.
Mr Tusk, who is overseeing the negotiation, urged European leaders to handle the situation "with care".
UK PM David Cameron is seeking a deal at this week's crunch EU summit before holding the UK's referendum.
Earlier he bowed to pressure to hold a cabinet meeting straight after the summit if a deal is agreed.
The prime minister is due to meet French President Francois Hollande in Paris later.

Read more:

Mr Tusk is on a tour of European countries ahead of the two-day summit of EU leaders, which begins on Thursday.
Speaking after holding talks with the Romanian and French presidents, he said negotiations on Britain's future inside the 28-member bloc were "difficult but… hugely important".
Reflecting on the talks, he said: "This is a critical moment. It is high time we started listening to each other's arguments more than to our own.
"It is natural in negotiations that positions harden, as we get closer to crunch time.
"But the risk of break-up is real because this process is indeed very fragile. Handle with care. What is broken cannot be mended."
BBC assistant political editor Norman Smith said Mr Tusk was trying to "concentrate minds" ahead of the EU summit as leaders of the different member states stake out their positions.
The French government is said to be concerned about UK calls for protection for non-eurozone countries, but No 10 said the French had shown "willingness" to find a solution.
As part of his diplomatic push, Mr Cameron - who met German Chancellor Angela Merkel for talks on Friday - will discuss the renegotiation with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker on Tuesday, as well as senior MEPs.
If a deal is agreed on the PM's reforms, which also include curbs on migrants' welfare entitlement, he will hold a cabinet meeting on Friday evening, sources have told the BBC.
Downing Street has said ministers cannot speak out until the cabinet has met to agree a government position, and it was claimed this would give the Remain campaign an unfair head start if a meeting was delayed until the following week.

Syria crisis: Strikes on hospitals and schools kill 'up to 50'

Media captionMedecins Sans Frontieres charity suggests attacks on hospitals were 'deliberate'
Up to 50 people have been killed in missile attacks on schools and hospitals in northern Syria, according to the United Nations.
"Such attacks are a blatant violation of international laws," the UN said.
Among the sites hit was a Medecins Sans Frontieres hospital, where seven people were reportedly killed. France said such acts constituted war crimes.
Activists have accused Russia of carrying out the strikes but there has been no independent confirmation.
Russia has been backing the Syrian government in its offensive against rebels but says it only targets what it calls "terrorists".

'Deliberate' attack on MSF hospital

Two medical facilities in Maarat al-Numan, which is in Idlib province, are reported to have been hit.
MSF said one of its facilities had been struck by four missiles in the space of minutes, leading them to believe it "wasn't an accidental attack, that it was deliberate".
It said seven people died with another eight still missing.
Mego Terzian, president of MSF France, told Reuters "either the [Syrian] government or Russia" was "clearly" responsible.
But the Syrian ambassador to Moscow Riad Haddad, said the US was to blame, a claim the Pentagon dismissed as "patently false".
"We have no reason to strike in Idlib, as Isil [Islamic State] is not active there," spokesman Capt Jeff Davis said.

What does the law say about bombing hospitals?

  • International humanitarian law bans any attack on patients and medical personnel or indeed any attack on medical facilities, which are zones that must be respected under the rules of war
  • Even if combatants take refuge in them, they should not be attacked
  • Under rules established by the International Criminal Court, any such incident would probably result in too high a number of civilian casualties - what is called the rule of proportionality

A second hospital in Maarat al-Numan was also hit, killing three people, said opposition group the Local Co-ordination Committees.
The strikes follow a pattern of systematic attacks on healthcare facilities in Syria, says the BBC's Mark Lowen in neighbouring Turkey.

Medics under attack

Almost five years of conflict in Syria have devastated the health system

  • 240 facilities hit up to late 2015
  • 70 in Jun-Aug 2015 alone
  • 697 medical personnel killed
  • 40% of Syrians lack basic care
Reuters
A bulldozer in the wreckage of an MSF hospital in Maarat al-Numan, SyriaImage copyrightAFP
Image captionMSF called the Maarat al-Numan raid "deliberate"

Hospitals and schools struck in Azaz

In Azaz, near the Turkish border, at least 12 people were killed in an attack on two hospitals and two schools, reports said.
One of those hit was a children's hospital. A worker for Syria Charity, which runs the facility, blamed Russia.
"The Russians have been targeting this area because it's what we call a liberated area, by moderate opposition - that's why we are 99% sure this was Russian airstrikes," said Anfal Sevik.
Unicef said six children were killed in the strikes on schools.
"Let us remember that these victims are children," a statement said. "Children."
Azaz has been the focus of intense fighting, with Turkey on Monday threatening Kurdish rebels with the "harshest reaction" if they tried to take the town.
Despite the bombardment Kurdish-led forces have captured the town of Tal Rifaat from Islamist rebels, the monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
A map showing contested areas in northern Syria and Turkey

Doubts over 'cessation'

A statement from UN spokesman spokesman Farhan Haq said the attacks "cast a shadow" on commitments made by international powers last week.
At a conference, world leaders pledged to work towards a cessation of hostilitiesin Syria within a week.
But Russia argues that the "cessation" does not apply to its air strikes, which have tilted the balance of the war in favour of the Syrian government.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said any ceasefire did not mean "each party will stop using weapons".
In televised comments he questioned whether conditions for the halt in fighting could be met in a week, Reuters reported.
Damaged clinic in Azaz, 15 FebImage copyrightAFP
Image captionA child is evacuated from the damaged hospital in Azaz

'War crime' says France

France said it condemned the bombing of the MSF clinic in the strongest terms, with Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault saying such acts "constitute war crimes".
The US has also condemned the strikes, saying they cast doubt "on Russia's willingness and/or ability to help bring to a stop the continued brutality of the Assad regime against its own people".
EU foreign policy chief said the attack on the MSF facility was "completely unacceptable" but did not say who was responsible.
The UN envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, is in the capital Damascus as part of his effort to restart peace talks.
Almost five years of civil war in Syria have led to the deaths of more than 250,000 people. More than 11 million people have been displaced.
Media captionThe horrifying statistics that define Syria