NYT is quoting an F.B.I Source indicating that the group did not hack any of the agency’s systems but gained access to an email which was sent to more than 36 US, UK, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands and Swedish security agents indicating when the conference call would be made. The email was sent on Jan. 13 and one of the foreign police official is suspected to have forwarded the notification to a private account. The forward to private account was then intercepted by Anonymous.
Anonymous later took responsibility for hacking the web site of a law firm that had represented a US Marines soldier, Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich, who was accused of leading a group of Marines responsible for Haditha killings in 2005. The group promised to make public what was in the mails and faxes obtained during the hack.
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Kenya ICT Board has sent out an invite and update on various events happening this month. One of the most notable event is where Professor Randal Bryant, Dean, Carnegie Mellon University School of Computer Science, is expected to be the key note speaker. The event is named Chipuka loosely translated to mean “emerge”.
Prof. Bryant has been among the Computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University who have been working with the Kenya ICT Board to create a certification that will help employers identify software developers with the required skills necessary to tackle modern day challenges.
According to a release on CMU website,
“the Software Developer Certification will be what’s known as an authentic exam, in that it will require people taking it to perform the kind of tasks encountered in an actual work environment. Exam takers will add software features, correct errors or otherwise make modifications on a model software system.”
The exam will initially be implemented in Kenya, but CMU intends to push that it become “an international benchmark for use by employers worldwide.”
The unveiling of the certification by the Kenyan government will be on Tuesday 7th February at Strathmore University. Kenya has been sponsoring development of the certification through the Kenya Transparency and Communications Infrastructure Project (KTCIP), which is funded by the World Bank and headed by Victor Kyalo.
A project scientist who has been leading the project, Philip Miller, said that a pilot exam will be ready by March 2013, and the main certification should be fully operational in Kenya by October 2013. It is not clear when the certification will be available worldwide.
Kenyan techies might not jump at this opportunity now considering that there were previous attempts by the Kenya Bureau of Standards (KeBS) and Communication Commission of Kenya (CCK) to come up with standards for local IT products including software. The effort became a cropper and have not been heard of ever since.
Apart from Bryant and Miller, the other CMU researchers involved in the project include Roger Dannenberg, associate research professor of computer science; Robert Seacord, secure coding team lead at Carnegie Mellon’s well-known Software Engineering Institute (SEI), and SEI certification experts Jefferson Welch, Marsha Pomeroy-Huff and Mary Ellen Rich.
The Kenyan seconded from the ICT Board to work with the researchers is Andrew Lewela Mwanyota. Andrew is an alumni of Deakin University and University of Nairobi.
Carnegie Mellon University recently announced that it will be opening a campus in Rwanda to offer graduate degrees in Engineering.
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Kenya is already enabled among the few countries which can post on their Google+ accounts using SMS. I was just reading tweets from #gTanzania when I was alerted to the impending availability of the service to Tanzanian users. I decided to check if its is possible to Kenyan users. It is very much possible.
You can post on your Twitter and Facebook networks using SMS, this is not one surprising move by Google considering the kind of competition it is trying to give to Facebook and Twitter.
To enable this feature on your Google+ page, you will have to add your phone number in Google+ settings, following which Google will send a verification code. After verifying your SMS number by entering the verification code, you will be able to choose what you want enabled for SMS alerts and postings.
To set up Google+ posting and notification reception through sms;
.Again you might want to add a PIN for extra security. You can modify the notifications like below;

In Kenya you will be able to post to your Google+ by sending an SMS to +254700999412. Your operator will charge you the normal SMS costs. The update you send through SMS will be visible to all your circles by default.
Some tips;

Airtel yesterday launched its mobile money, Airtel Money, in Uganda. The platform which provides Airtel’s clients access to financial services through their mobile phones. It also allows consumers to top up their phones with air time, send and receive money, pay their critical utility bills, access their bank accounts and withdraw Airtel money across all interswitch ATMs country-wide.
Airtel has partnered with various banks to provide customers with access to deposit and withdraw cash, money transfers, banking services and pay bills. The partner banks include Standard chartered bank, Post Bank, Pride Micro Finance, Centenary Rural Development Bank, Equity Bank, Diamond Trust Bank, United Bank of Africa, Kenya Commercial Bank, Baroda, Eco Bank and Finance Trust Bank.
Mr. V.G. Somasekhar, Airtel Managing Director noted that rural populations have inadvertently been left out of the financial system due to cost and distance from urban centres. Airtel Money Uganda already has more than three thousand eight hundred agents.
According to Airtel Uganda’s M-commerce National Sales Manager, Mr. Nuhu Kanyike, Airtel Money will be available to all Airtel customers, both Prepaid and Postpaid and registration is free at all Airtel Centers and Airtel Money outlets countrywide.
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Three app developers, one each from Kenya, South Africa and Uganda, have been selected to to pitch live for Best App of the Year at the 6th Annual Mobile Premier Awards on February 27th, in Barcelona - coinciding with the Mobile World Congress. Two Kenyans, Christine Ampaire and Anne Githuku-Shongwe are among the 3 app developers selected to pitch at the premier event.
All the 3 are among the top 20 global apps submitted for the AppCircus 2011 World Tour.
Each finalist was selected by an international jury of mobile industry heavyweights, including experts from Facebook, Twitter and Mozilla out of 47 other AppCircus World Tour winners from 26 countries world-wide
The 3 top African Apps which will also be given a chance ti pitch at the Mobile Premier Awards are:
The three AppCircus World Tour 2011 finalists will be competing for the Best App of the Year Award in February 27th, at the prestigious Sala Apolo Theatre in Barcelona, Spain. The three were winners of their respective countries categories during the AppCircus world tour in 2011.
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Samsung has today launched its second Samsung Electronics Engineering Academy in Africa . The academy which is based Nairobi, Kenya came into being as a result of Samsung’s core vision to fast-track the entry of African youths into the electronics job market. The Engineering Academy program has an initial short-term goal to develop 10 000 Electronics Engineers across the continent by 2015, and align to the vision of various continent’s government key being, to encourage entrepreneurship and self-employment initiatives.
For a start, the first 120 students for the Engineering Academy will be selected from Samsung E-learning Centers located at PC Kinyanjui and Kabete Technical. They will attend the Samsung Electronics Engineering Academy and receive hands-on, practical skills training at no cost.
After completing their training at the Academy, Samsung will absorb them as interns before releasing them to serve as independent service technicians or employees in Samsung retail channel outlets in Africa.
Samsung also opened a Customer Service Plaza in the same building. The service plaza is a one-stop shop for service, repair and inquiries on all Samsung products . The Customer Service Plaza will also be a great venue for the Engineering Academy graduates to intern at.
“We believe we can best achieve our goal of positively impacting the communities in which we operate by connecting our CSR initiatives to our history and core business,”
says Samsung Business Leader, Robert Ngeru.
“Our aim is to promote co-operation, innovation and the exchange of new ideas in technology so that our products and technologies continue to respond to the real needs and conditions of the continent. To reach our business goals, we need a skilled workforce of technicians and exclusive service experts to differentiate Samsung as a quality service-oriented company. We also need to sustain our level of innovation, which can only be achieved if we invest in education to facilitate thought-leadership in Africa”.
The pilot phase of the program officially ended yesterday, 31st January, as the first class of students graduated from the first Engineering Academy in Africa in Boksburg, South Africa. The Engineering Acdemy in SA was launched in March 2011.
Samsung plans to launch the third Academy in Nigeria in the first quarter of this year.
Notes Ngeru,
“We envision a future where products are designed by engineers in Africa, manufactured in Africa and tailored to meet the needs of consumers in Africa. Today’s launch of the second Samsung Electronics Engineering Academy is going to help us realise this vision and ensure that the wealth of opportunity that exists in the region is shared by all”.
The academies are a part of the Samsung’s global ‘Hope for Children’ initiative.
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Airtel Kenya has today launched a promotion where its customers will get up to 100 SMSs daily. The offer is available to prepaid customers for one month starting today till the 29 February 2012.
Customers only need to send the first 3 paid for SMS to any Airtel number to qualify. Each of the first 3 SMS are charged Kshs1/ per SMS making it only KSh3/- for 100 SMSs daily. The Free SMS are valid for one day for Airtel-Airtel SMS only. The customers will enjoy the SM’S automatically after sending the 3 SMS. The offer is open to all Airtel prepaid customers and requires no subscriptions.
Airtel Kenya chief operating officer Mr. Shivan Bhargava said,
“This offer gives our texting community the opportunity to get more and communicate more with their mates strengthening bonds between friends and families across the Kenya”.
This launches on the back end of the Changamsha Maisha na Airtel Friendzy promotion that ended yesterday, a promotion in which over 2,000 Airtel customers were rewarded with a range of prizes including cash prizes of Cash Kshs1 million and Kshs500,000, Samsung handsets, trips to Old Trafford to watch soccer games at Manchester United, Free SMS top up.
Airtel is also currently running a night calling campaign dubbed Sikika na bob, offering its customers a preferential rate to call other customers within the network for Ksh1/- per minute from 10:00 P.M. to 6:00 A.M.
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Intel has indicated that it will be unveiling “A New Era in Computing” into the East Africa market – with the launch of various Ultrabooks.
Intel East Africa General Manager, Danie Steyn says Intel’s vision for the Ultrabook is to deliver a no-compromise, complete, satisfying and securer computing experience in one device.
Ultrabooks are some of the thinnest and lightest PCs. Intel east Africa promises to deliver some Ultrabooks which will be going for as low as under $1,000 (Kshs.85,000) in the local market. The only available Ultrabooks in the Kenyan market currently are the Samsung Series 9 and Apple MacBook Air laptops. They all go for above Ksh 110,000.
“A few Ultrabook models debuted last year, but more than 75 Ultrabook designs are in the pipeline for 2012 and will come in a variety of screen sizes, shapes and styles. Nearly every major manufacturer will be introducing one or more models this year”, says Steyn.
Intel says that it would be looking to fuse together a compact laptop with a tablet to make it a thin, lightweight laptop, with some models featuring a detachable screen that can be used as a tablet. He added that security was increasingly becoming more important to consumers who want to protect their data and personal assets.
An Ultrabook fitted with Intel Rapid Start Technology boots much faster than a normal PC. The battery life of these category of PCs is also much longer.
Most of the Ultrabooks are also enabled with Intel Smart Connect technology allowing to to update your email, favorite apps, and social networkseven when the system is asleep. Theys will also allow you to lock down your lost laptop with Intel Anti-Theft Technology and protect your online ID with Intel Identity Protection Technology.
]]>But all in all, let me make it very clear,You need not be a great writer to be a great blogger. It is just the same as you needing not being a great crammer to pass your exams.
You don’t need great grammar skills to be a great blogger. Again if you are the worst writer, don’t consider blogging as a career. You need to be in between there. You need to be between great and worst.
As a full time blogger and social media enthusiast, I literally live on blogs. I log off on my desktop, pick my laptop to access some few apps and then when I log off to lounge and watch some TV, I find myself using apps like Flipboard just to check on other blogs. I find those who use conventional ways of narrating stories or writing stories boring. There are those who are not even good with spellings or grammar but their ways of telling stories makes you enjoy it whether they get the spellings right or not.
There are some tips which might encourage you to be a better blogger while you are not a great writer.
1. Who is reading your blog? You need to create or target and existing market. You can’t write for everyone. You need to look at whether you want the corporates, cools jamaaz or just diaperkids to read your blog. As long as your target market enjoys what you write, Don’t waste lots of strength trying to please the trespassers. They tumbled on your blog without being invited nor targeted. They should sort themselves out. You main guests are happy so the gate-crashers should really check for the leftovers.
2. Be Creative. Be creative in thoughts. As a tech writer, sometimes I just walk around and see what people are doing with the technology which deserve a mention. If I don’ put it on the blog, I will share it on Twitter and Facebook. The how-to’s write-ups really help a lot. Most of the people looking for information on blogs needs also see their issues solved. The how-to’s sort most of them up.
3. Use Catchy and Appealing Headlines. Let your headlines not be boring. I was once accused by a blogger turned corporate prostitute that I love sensational stories. I thought for myself how foolish the guy was and since at one time he mentioned that he believes that a local media gossip blog was his favourite, I asked myself. WTF!! Gossip of whatever nature rides on sensationalism. You find me sensational and so you would not comment or react but what make you wet your pants is sensational news. Mhhh… We need some schooling. Seriously!!
4. Add Some Multimedia Content. You need to add some images and videos to make you use fewer words. Pictures and videos tell a lot. Sometimes a single picture is just worth a million words. Use them well and you will be surprised how much hits they attract. My most popular stories are the ones which have video’s or pics accompanying them.
5. Blog about what you know. There is nothing as embarrassing as trying to be a wannabe. You need not start blogging about tech just because you see others blog about it. I have seen some very pedestrian thoughts about all tech ideas from all the wannabes everywhere. If you are an Arts specialist, stick to arts. If you studied architecture, its best you talk about what you studied or if you have a passion elsewhere, blog about it. Don’t be a joy rider. You will never succeed as a blogger by being a joyrider. Writing what you know makes you generate great content.
6. Maintain Your Style. You need not change your style to please those who are no in your niche market. When you do as many blog posts regularly, that is as important as someone who writes one post he reviews 500 times before posting online. A talent in writing is no necessary for perseverance.
7. Seek help from a great write. You might want to seek help from an accomplished writer to better your blogging. You might join a journalism club or simply use social outings as a way of interacting with great writers. When you are alone, you are bound to ignore most of the mistakes. An extra eye on your blog might just help you sort the grammar and spellings you get wrong.
What do you think of the above tips?
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The CEO of Essar Kenya (yuMobile) has called on Safaricom to open up its M-Pesa platform to other network operators. Speaking on NTV’s PM Live, Madhur Taneja, said that yu is willing to pay Safaricom royalties if it were to allow it to also offer its clients the M-Pesa service.
Mr Taneja said;
“We cannot have a situation where someone with an account in Equity Bank cannot transfer to someone in StanChart. I am calling on Safaricom to please open up M-Pesa. We will pay you royalty. Let us do e-commerce. Do they want a royalty of 2.3 million customers? We are open to that.”
From his statement, it seems Madhur believes that number portability failed because clients do not want to lose their mobile commerce services.
The CEO of Essar Kenya also said that he totally disagree that Safaricom is not dominant. Mr Taneja called on CCK to check on Safaricom since it was still a dominant player which should be contained.
But reacting to the story, Safaricom CEO, Bob Collymore said;
“The mobile transfer market in Kenya is one of the most competitive in the world with all MNO’s operating their own. The M-Pesa platform is not Safaricom’s to license but Vodafone’s.”
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Safaricom has launched daily and monthly unlimited data plans for BlackBerry users. Through the offer, Safaricom BlackBerry services users will be able to choose a daily unlimited bundle rate of Ksh 20 or monthly rate of Ksh 499. To access the service, clients would have to dial *210# to activate the unlimited bundles.
Through the bundle, you will get;
Excluded in the offer is online video streaming. The daily bundle will also be auto-renewed.
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Thailand has taken up the option for Twitter to have tweets being viewed from the country censored. Authorities in the country publicly endorsed Twitter Censorship with the ICT Permanent Secretary, Jeerawan Boonperm, telling the Bangkok Post that it was a ”welcome development”.
The government also confirmed that it is getting ”good cooperation” from Facebook and Google but it will soon be contacting Twitter to begin collaborating on the new feature.
Thailand’s lèse-majesté law bans criticism of the country’s royal family. The law gained popularity because of of the blockage of YouTube in 2006 till when the offending videos were removed from the site was YouTube access allowed in Thailand.
Meanwhile, Thailand’s Ministry of Information, Communication and Technology requested Google to remove 225 YouTube videos for allegedly insulting the royal family.
In 2011, Mallika Boonmetrakul, deputy spokeswoman of the Thailand’s Democrat Party, tried to lobby for an all-out block on Western social media sites, claiming that the China was a good model to follow. The campaign did not succeed. Thailand has jailed number of its citizens for posting messages on Facebookt. An example was a 61 year old man who got a 20 year prison sentence for sending SMS messages. There was also a case of a dual Thai / US citizen who was jailed for two and a half years for translating a banned book about the king into Thai.
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Google has reportedly fired its Country Lead in Kenya, Olga Arara-Kimani, according to Nairobi Tech. The action is said to have been taken as a measure to assure those who read the Mocality saga. Not much detail is available but Google’s VP for EMEA, Nelson Mattos, indicated on Friday on his Google+ page that action had been taken in Kenya regarding to Mocality data scraping saga.
He wrote;
We’ve concluded our investigation into the serious allegations about our use of data from Mocality’s website in Kenya. We’re very sorry this happened. We’ve taken appropriate action with the people involved and made changes in our operations to ensure this doesn’t occur again.
Google had to find a sacrificial lamb regarding the data scraping issue. The issue got the attention of international media and tech blogs that even Mocality which was almost getting irrelevant in the Kenyan tech scene was getting as a start-up underdog which was being bullied and exploited by the big bully in Google.
The potrayal of Mocality as an underdog is very wrong since the company is part of Naspers which also owns products like Mail.ru, Nimbuzz, Tencent and Tradus. Mocality has also been accused by rivals of scraping data to feed its directory pages. MIH Internet group which is the subsidiary of Naspers which owns Mocality, has also been accused of stealing data from other niche classifieds sites to feed pages in Dealfish.
Google has not officially released statement over the reported sacking of Olga Arara but is expected to do so in the course of the day. We have made contacts with Google Kenya and hope to get a statement soon.
Update: Nation reports that Olga has claimed to have left on her own terms.
]]>“I confirm I have left Google Kenya. As the leader of the Kenya office, I felt that the buck stopped with me and I decided to leave,’ she wrote in a phone message to the Nation on Monday.”

I am doing this post here because it is all about hate speech on social media.
First let me quote Maya Angelou;
“We allow our ignorance to prevail upon us and make us think we can survive alone, alone in patches, alone in groups, alone in races, even alone in genders.”
On her column on The Star, radio presenter Caroline Mutoko bitterly attacks Kenyans on social networks regarding hate speech. Mutoko refers to most Kenyans using social media as “myopic and with little else”. He writings is full of all manner of negative adjectives she uses to describe Kenyans on social media. By the end of paragraph 3 of he column, you get the drift. Mutoko’s real beef is not with “hate speech on social media” but really she wish that someone contained the rise of social media because it makes her powerless unlike before when Kenyans had to rely on her to have the leaders address their issues.
Kenyans on social media are from the same mothers and fathers who begot Mutoko. Some of them are CEOs, radio presenters, ICT geeks or just enthusiasts whose actions online does not deserve such tirades from Mutoko or anyone else. You cannot generalise everyone online and then use words like “numbskulls” and “small-minded”, you get to wonder if this lady really knows what she is talking about. Mutoko is so yesteryear because the numbskulls and small-minded nincompoops online decided so. She will not determine to us when we need to hold Martha Karua, Raila, Uhuru, Ruto or Kibaki to task. She lost that power because Safaricom now serves up 95% of the 4.7 million internet users meaning that this is a key constituency of smart Kenyans who will not have to rely on Mutoko or whoever to get what they want.
These people had to depend on FM stations 95% of the times just few years ago. Now for every one hour this group spend to listen to radio stations, they spend a further 4.3 hours on social media to get the facts rights by comparing notes with their friends or getting news online. This constituency worries Mutoko because despite Kiss FM being one of the few stations to go online, they terminated their streaming services saying that they thought that internet would eat on their influence. Kiss FM and Radio Africa in general is still very cagey about the internet. That is why all news on The Star would not be available online until a day or two later. They believe that by breaking news online, they kill the paper copy. The same argument they apply over streaming their shows online. It is so arachaic and ignorant you wonder which century the editors at Radio Africa lives
Some lecture to Mutoko, being on radio does not equate you to being smarter than the average kenyan. You might just be as dumb and ignorant as you are now even if you have been exposed on radio that much. Sometimes exposure does not help because you are so thick and proud in your dumb self that you don’t want to listen to the innocent advise from a mama mboga participating in a call-in session.
Calling Kenyans on social media “lazy numbskulls” just because they “have not ignited a revolution equal to the Arab spring” is simply foolish and pedestrian. What revolution do you want in Kenya? Do the Kenyans on social media share your desire for a revolution. Kenyans on social media are a bit much more smarter than the poor slum and village dwellers whom the likes of Caroline Mutoko and Joshua Sang can incite to kill and maim anyone.
Just like most Kenyans are “small-minded” , Mutoko should not expect anything different from social media. The real beef Caroline Mutoko has with social media is its power. The internet has given very kawaida Kenyans the power to stop stupidity in the media and even force action. When Mutoko says that “the majority ……will remain anonymous because even they don’t wish to be openly associated with they trash they write”, she misses the whole point and shows that she understands nothing about social media, leave alone the internet. She should care to read about internet anonymity here. It is a well protected right that not even Facebook, Google or the US government will dare mess with.
Anonymous speech is older than even the US and is well protected by the first amendment. A much-cited 1995 US Supreme Court ruling in McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission reads:
Protections for anonymous speech are vital to democratic discourse. Allowing dissenters to shield their identities frees them to express critical, minority views . . . Anonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the majority. . . . It thus exemplifies the purpose behind the Bill of Rights, and of the First Amendment in particular: to protect unpopular individuals from retaliation . . . at the hand of an intolerant society.
What is hate speech online to Mutoko? The only case of hate speech online presented by Mutoko in the article happened in South Africa where a South African policeman, Juda Dagane, ranted against “whites” in South Africa and promised to teach them a lesson after the death of “black messiah” (Mandela). In the whole write-up, there is no single case mentioning hate speech by Kenyans online.
Mutoko goes even further to create her own definition of hate speech limiting it to hate because of ethnicity. Hate speech goes beyond ethnicity. It encompasses the disparage of a person or a group on the basis of some characteristic such as race, color, ethnicity, gender, disability, sexual orientation, nationality, religion, or other characteristic.
When Nancy Baraza was running roughshod over a poor security guard at Kenya’s premier shopping mall, Village Market, Caroline Mutoko saw Baraza’s actions as a reflection on the empowerment of the females. She even throw a childish tantrum once at the UNHCR parking lot at Lion Place when she double parked her car and when she was requested to remove it, she insulted the UNHCR and called them all manner of names. Just for requesting that she stop double-parking and consider others.
I don’t deny there is hate speech online. But people like Mutoko are fighting the power social media has given to the majority of Kenyans with the excuse of hate speech. If she dresses badly or her show is whack, Kenyans will say it easily to million others through Facebook and Twitter. That really makes Mutoko goes mad because just as politicians, the only other constituency which would never allow kawaida Kenyans to have so much power is the mainstream media.
Social media dilutes the influence of the likes of Mutoko and other adults-in-diapers running our media. The days when Caroline Mutoko would fake her kidnap and then Kenyans would be kept guessing are long gone. Now every move is monitored and even a Caroline Mutoko faked breast blunder would not escape the attention of kawaida Kenyans acting through social media.
Mutoko should be the last person to lecture Kenyans on good behaviour considering that she has insulted even an innocent politician like Martha Karua, having a good time just because she had access to a microphone. The craziier you are on TV and FM Radio stations, the higher the ratings you get. And if Bonoko is a presenter, does Mutoko think that she will ever convince anyone that it requires anything saner or normal to make it on radio. Success on Radio looks to be directly proportion to the degree of madness you display on air.
The fact that the government knows who runs or present on such-and-such a radio station has not stopped them from spreading porn to the living rooms of millions of Kenyans. The reach of radio and TV in Kenya is estimated to be around 65% according to this CCK sponsored study, internet reaches less than 10% with only around 45% of the around 3.8 million Kenyans regularly using internet active on social media.
Get some education Mutoko. The internet is like Gikomba, don’t condemn all traders in Gikomba just because you don’t agree with some. And also care to specifically mention those you believe does wrong. You cannot condemn all Kenyans on social media platforms while you rely on a case of a confused South African as evidence of such behaviour by Kenyans.
]]>Cellulant will be providing the services to Barclays Africa as part of its ‘One Africa’ strategy”. Through the strategy, Barclays Africa looks to make its customer digital experience – mobile and internet banking as well as ATMs -more convenient for customers across its 12 African countries. Cellulant will help Barclays Africa deploy a new aggregation platform to achieve this end.
Cellulant will also be looking to increase Barclays Africa customer’s activity on its E-channels allowing them to transact with a wide network of merchants across the Barclays Africa and Absa network. The model will be rolled out in phases and will see Cellulant provide a merchant/bill payment platform as well as a Mobile Network Operator (MNO) aggregator to facilitate mobile commerce solutions’ for Barclays Africa.
The new aggregator platform will be deployed in Ghana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Mauritius, Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda, Seychelles, Botswana and Kenya. It will allow Barclays Africa users across the Africa to access mobile banking, merchant payments and other banking services on a multi-channelled system.
Barclays Africa believes that making use of Cellulant as an aggregator will also save it time and money by providing real time connectivity to critical third parties and enable applications such as Hello Money, Internet Banking, Mobile Wallet (e.g. MPESA) and airtime top-up on all Barclays Africa e-channels.
Cellulant has deployed mobile commerce services in 10 countries: – Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, Mauritius, Rwanda, Uganda, Zambia, Botswana, Malawi and now Zimbabwe and Mozambique.
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On Thursdaylast week, Twitter announced that it plans to censor tweets as per demands in certain countries. The community on Twitter is not asleep. So on Friday, guys had started sharing how to bypass the Twitter censorship. And even without the help from the online community, Twitter’s own Help Center actually reveals how you can bypass the censorship.
How it all works.
The tweets are going to be blocked on a country-by-country basis. First Twitter will have to identify the country from which you’re accessing the tweets. Twitter will be using your IP address meaning that there are ways that the country can really be masked or just wrongly identified.

Twitter’s Help Center gives you tips on how you can change your country setting if you believe that Twitter has wrongly identified your location. Go to your “Account Settings” and scroll down to “Country” drop-down menu. You can then select which country you are in or is accessing Twitter from. Your selection here overrides the IP detection system.
This is great since you will be able to use this to chose a country in which tweets are not censored. It is that simple.

So if you now see a tweet which is blacked out similar to the example above, you know what you will have to do in order to find out what it says.
Make sure that you change the country listed in your “Country” setting and not your “Profile Location.” Also avoid changing your country to “Worldwide” since it seems Twitter is automatically using your IP to detect your location. Change to a country where tweets are not censored.

Ding Dong! We have won the first round and it is a battle which we must keep pushing on. Orange has apparently adjusted its speed caps on unlimited bundles to 256kbps. The move has been prompted by this blog post. We still don’t find it encouraging or pleasing that Orange should cap its data speeds at 256kbps.
They are not even going to be that competitive considering that Safaricom caps at 512 kbps and Airtel does not cap there yet to be announced 3G services.
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According to Wall Street Journal, Facebook could file papers for its IPO as early as Wednesday next week. The timing is still being discussed and Morgan Stanley is close to being chosen
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Zantel Tanzania has re-branded its Z-Pesa service. The service is now known as Ezy Pesa, has been upgraded and comes with a new bill payment module.
Bundled on the Ezy Pesa service is a micro insurance option allowing users to buy daily or monthly insurance premiums. Daily premiums start at KSh150 and a monthly premium of KSh4,500 giving a policy holder cover for up to TSh3 million. The insurance service on Ezy Pesa is known as Farijika insurance and is provided in partnership with the National Insurance Corporation Tanzania Limited.
The menu options on Ezy Pesa also gives users who are clients of CRDB Bank access to their accounts using their mobile phones.
Zantel was the first mobile phone operator to launch its mobile money service in Tanzania. The Z-pay service never picked up much hence the re-brand and re-launch. Four years since its launch in 2008, Z-Pesa managed to attract only 23,000 registrations with only 500 clients being active customers. Zantel plans to attract over 1000 new clients in the next few weeks and targets one million customers by the end of this year.
Other mobile payment services available to Tanzanian users are; M-Pesa of Vodacom Tanzania, Tigo Pesa by MIC Tanzania, Airtel Money by Airtel Tanzania and now Ezy Pesa by Zantel.
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yuMobile is rolling-out Relationship Centres in Kenya. Tod saw the opening of the first centre in Nairobi Central Business District.
The Centre is the second of several new-look relationship centres to be rolled out countrywide as part of yuMobile’s expansion plan intended to serve its rapidly growing number of subscribers countrywide. The new-look Relationship Centre is located at Nairobi’s Gilfillan House along Kenyatta Avenue and will provide a range of services such as yuMobile data settings, postpaid activation, bill payments, selling of prepaid lines, airtime, modems and handset sales.
Customers who visit the center will also enjoy free calls booth, a service that allows yuMobile subscribers to make free yu to yu calls, free phone charging and also free downloads at the data experience corner.
According to CCK quarterly sector statistics, Yu mobile acquired an additional 46,742 new subscribers.
]]>Google Trader is now also panning out well on phones with smaller screens, according to the blog post.
]]>The data was collected by Portland and Tweetminster analysing 500 most active Twitter accounts in Africa. The study found that;
Mark Flanagan, Portland’s Partner for Digital Communications, says:
“One of the more surprising findings of this research is that more public figures have not joined Africa’s burgeoning Twittersphere. With some notable exceptions, we found that business and political leaders were largely absent from the debates playing out on Twitter across the continent. As Twitter lifts off in Africa, governments, businesses and development agencies can really no longer afford to stay out of a new space where dialogue will increasingly be taking place.”
Check the infographic below
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YoungAfricaLive (YAL) has finally been launched by Praekelt Foundation and Safaricom. Kenya is the second country in East Africa after Tanzania but third after South Africa also which used to enjoy the mobile community services live. YAL Tanzania was launched on 1 December 2011.
The YoungAfricaLive (YAL) portal gives the youth a platform to speak their minds, through a medium that is accessible, and encourage conversations on topics that impacts their lives positively. The portal is available to users in Kenya through through SafaricomLIVE portal on www.safaricom.com/wap or through http://www.yal.co.ke.
While YoungAfricaLive Tanzania is available free to Vodacom subscribers through http://m.vodacom.co.tz, there is no mention whether it will be available to Kenyans for free. It might not be the case I guess.
A 2005 study showed that 60% of Kenya’s unemployed are under 30, and where UNICEF statistics reveal 20 % of the population live below the international poverty line of US$1.25 per day. In addition, research published by the World Bank indicates that 6.3% of Kenya’s popular of 40.5 million is HIV positive, many of those young people.
Safaricom’s Director of Corporate Affairs, Nzioka Waita, says;
“This partnership is key to our digital inclusion agenda. We believe that the best way to improve the utility and therefore take-up of the Internet among the youth of Africa and Kenya in particular, is by having relevant content on it and making it accessible to them. Being in the vanguard of the Internet explosion in Kenya, we have the network to deliver YoungAfricaLive’s socially relevant and well-packaged message to as many young Kenyans as possible.”
Gustav Praekelt, founder of the Praekelt Foundation, says;
“To follow-up a very successful launch in Tanzania late last year with YoungAfricaLive:Kenya is a great way to start 2012. We are confident that young Kenyans will embrace the mobile platform with the same passion that their South African and Tanzanian counterparts have and use it to create a community that informs, supports and entertains.”
YAL South Africa, in partnership with Vodacom, has close to 1 million unique users, according to Praekelt Foundation.
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Orange Kenya launched its unlimited data bundles last week. There was a disclaimer which the company looked to hide as much as possible. First things first. In the “unlimited data bundles”, Orange is offering an unlimited data bundle for 7 days at Ksh 990 and one for 30 days at Ksh 2,990.
There is a fair usage policy disclaimer which means that if you are a heavy data user, your usage will be limited in quality. That means that if you download or upload more than the threshold set on the network, your download and uploads will be limited to a certain speed. Orange , we have discovered, throttles the data at 64kbps. Now that is EVIL.
Speed tests done in Nairobi over the Orange link shows that when you consistent demand more speeds on the Orange network, your data will be capped at 64Kbps.
When did you last use a 64kbps connection? I tell you that not even yuMobile‘s GPRS network would be so boring. When you have a 3G dongle, it is simply unimaginable that any operator would limit users on their “21.1mbps network” to only 64kbps. That is just about 0.3% of the capacity of their network.
The last time I used a 64Kbps network was in 2003 I think. I really would not expect even the most backward of providers to cap data speeds at 64Kbps, leave alone 128Kbps. The minimum which I will also fight is 512Kbps. It is simply deceiving and I believe that CCK should look on how they measure quality.
I might also have to go to my call that Kenya must have minimum data speeds providers have to deliver to achieve national development goals. 64Kbps is simply dragging Kenya backward.
The second evil thing which Orange Kenya does is simply to steal your data bundle. THIEVERY!! The operator says that all its limited data bundles expires after 30 days. After that period, you will get a grace period of another 30 days. If you don’t renew your data bundles after that, you loose it. PERIOD. The honest thing about this THIEVERY by Orange is that they openly state that they will STEAL your data.
You know that Orange Kenya has capacity to beat any data provider in Kenya hands-down. The only problem is that its managers are so much interested in cosmetic changes than addressing real issues and exploiting heir true potential. Orange Kenya is like a beautiful woman with good education and from a good family who instead of looking for a decent job or harness family resources to better her life, has resorted to prostitution for easy money.
Safaricom has unlimited data bundles offer which is throttled at 512Kbps. Most users want the speed to be capped at 1Mbps. While we understand that unlimited data bundles affect voice quality, it is not fair to boast data speeds of up to 21Mbps but not be able to offer even 10% to the heavy users. While announcing its financial results last year, Safaricom CEO said that only 10% of its mobile data clients brings 85% of the revenue. They are the heaviest data users.
Airtel Kenya is still testing its 3G network (we don’t know if it will ever be launched). It has only 30 days unlimited package at Ksh 3,250 and is still not capping data speeds. They might be avoiding the speed caps because not many users know that Airtel Kenya has a 3G network running in Kisumu, Nairobi and Mombasa and so the traffic on it is not that much.
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The government of Zambia has said that it will take over the running of Zamtel for the time being before floating shares to the public. Finance Minister, Alexander Chikwanda, is quoted by Times of Zambia as having informed journalists at a media briefing that “Zamtel was a viable company which the previous Government wanted to give away in a corrupt manner. ”
Mr Chikwanda said that the government would look to stabilise the state corporation before floating shares to the public. The government also said that it was looking at the interest of Zamtel employees.
“We shall recapitalize Zamtel and make it viable. Zamtel will be reverted to the Zambian people,” Chikwanda is reported to have said.
Meanwhile, President Michael Sata has said that no international court would entertain the sale of Zamtel because it was shrouded in corruption. The President said that LAP Green failed to meet three benchmarks as prescribed by the Zambia Development Agency (ZDA) in the sale process.
The President’s spokesman said that the said benchmarks which LAP Green Networks couldn’t meet are;
Zambian Drug Enforcement Commission last week froze all Zamtel accounts except for one used for payment of salaries and daily operations.
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