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Don’t Use Nulled WordPress Themes, Plugins In Your Websites

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Although they are very risky, nulled WordPress themes and plugins are regularly used by countless web designers on their clients’ websites. The practice has been in existence for years, but many business owners aren’t aware of the threats that this practice poses to their website and their business.

The aim of writing this post is to state the reasons you shouldn’t allow such themes and plugins to be installed on your business website. But before that, let me explain what are regarded as nulled WordPress themes and plugins.

So what are nulled WordPress themes and plugin?

To make you understand fully, I will start my explanation with the process by which most websites are built nowadays. When you ask a web designer to design a website for your business, he or she uses a software called WordPress for the project. By using WordPress, the web designer doesn’t need to write a line of code to do the job.

But he or she needs to install a theme and some plugins on WordPress, so as to be able to customize the website and increase its functionalities. The challenge is that most themes and plugins used for designing a website aren’t totally free.

At some point – or to use premium features – themes and plugins users are required to upgrade, and the upgrade is usually expensive. In order to circumvent upgrading, many web designers resorted to using nulled WordPress themes and plugins, which are the cracked versions.

The cracked or null versions often work, but they can cause serious harm to the website because their codes have been altered by a third-party. Below are the reasons you shouldn’t allow your web designer to use them on your business website.

Why You Shouldn’t Allow Them on Your Website

  1. The website can easily be hacked

The first, if not the main reason, you shouldn’t allow nulled WordPress themes and plugins to be installed on your website is because of security. To be credible, the original developers of themes and plugins constantly make sure that they are safe for use on websites.

But once crackers turn them to null, most of the time, the layers of security are removed and a backdoor is left on the themes and plugins. The backdoor allows hackers to bypass security check, and through it, they can inject malicious scripts into the website and totally take control of it.

  1. Visitors and customers information can be stolen

The second reason you shouldn’t allow nulled WordPress themes and plugins on your website is that they can render a website’s SSL certificate useless. Normally, when an SSL (HTTPS) certificate is installed on a website, the information of the visitors is protected, in that the interactions between the website and the users are encrypted.

However, if the website runs on nulled WordPress themes and plugins, the certificate can be rendered useless. Personal information of users such as their names, home and email addresses, passwords – and even bank card information – can be stolen.

  1. Ranking of the website on Google can be negatively impacted

In today’s marketing landscape, Google and other search engines are the cheapest sources of getting customers. But in order to deliver an excellent experience to their users, the search engines have made it clear that don’t like deceitful websites that redirect visitors to spammy websites.

They have also stated that they don’t like websites with malicious codes. But, sadly, lots of nulled WordPress themes and plugins contain malicious codes and redirect visitors to unwanted spammy websites. No matter the amount of search engine optimization (SEO) best practices deploy on a website, if its theme and plugins are suspicious, Google and other search engines wouldn’t send traffic to it.

And that means you have to spend lots of money on other channels in order to bring visitors to your website.

  1. No support from themes and plugins developers

If the free or paid version of a plugin or theme is installed on your website, you can get the necessary support. On the other hand, if you have a nulled version installed, there is nobody to support you if you have any technical or non-technical issue. No warranty. No guarantee. You are on your own.

Nulled WordPress themes and plugins are also known for not getting updates. Once they are installed, they can’t get the latest security patch, bug fixes, and added features.

  1. You can be sued

This hardly happens – but it can happen, especially if your business is big. The original developers of a theme and plugin can take you to court if they find out you are using the nulled version. They can do these because nulled WordPress themes and plugins are illegal.

Be safe and avoid the unexpected. Don’t allow your web designer to use nulled WordPress themes and plugins on your business website.

South Africa Needs to Focus on Human Development

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South Africa is seen by many as one of the most developed African countries, if not the best of them all. Nigerians that have visited the country do not waste time to praise her infrastructural development. In fact, some believe that Nigerian government needs to emulate its South African counterpart. I don’t blame anybody for this, after all our infrastructure is nothing to write home about.

But this comparison reduced significantly after the 2015 xenophobic attack in South Africa. The slogan then changed from “You need to visit South African” to “If you visit South Africa”. Many people started expressing their fears about having anything to do with the country. I believe that was when Nigerians realised that all that glitters isn’t gold.

The problem with South Africa isn’t infrastructural development. Their problem is human development. If you ask me, I’ll say that much attention has been paid to the provision of basic and aesthetic amenities without a corresponding attention given to the psychological, mental and economic development of the citizens. The result of this is that the country attracts foreigners, who come with their innovations and skills that are lacking in her natives. Since these natives couldn’t compete with the foreigners, they lost their jobs, customers and businesses to them (the foreigners). This only aggravated the South Africans, who showed their disapproval of their foreign competitors through hostility.

I believe another reason behind these series of xenophobic attacks is the apartheid. The residue of the intense racism experienced by South Africans still left a bitter taste in their mouths. It could be that they still see every foreigner as a segregationist that will resurrect the spirit of apartheid and enslave them in their own country. Or that they believe that other countries still practice apartheid. Honestly, I strongly believe that South Africans have consciously and unconsciously become racists, and dangerous ones at that.

But racists don’t really have to destroy lives and properties to send their messages home, do they? All they have to do is to exclude those prejudiced against from social and economic activities. But it looks like the South Africans couldn’t succeed in doing just that, so they resolved to the use of violence. In other words, South Africans are volatile in nature. They can explode any time; all they need is a little inconsequential excuse to go off.

Each time I look at the South African xenophobic cases, I don’t see any phobia. I only see a group of people whose mindsets have been programmed to hold other people responsible for their challenges and failures. The worst thing here is that they use violence to send their messages home without waiting to see if their applied method yielded any good result.

I am not in a position to say this, but I believe these people have been fed with wrong and dangerous information about the causes of their social and economic problems. This means that attention has to be paid to what they are taught in schools and what is circulated within their society. Something is fanning their hatred against non-natives.

The South African government and natives may be relaxed because at the moment, only the non-natives are receiving this negative attention. But they need to understand that it is just a matter of time before this attention will turn around and face them. Yes, these South African thugs and ‘human weapons’ will, one day, get tired of harassing the foreigners and turn to face their own people. The worst thing is that by then, the world will just sit down, sip a hot cup of tea, and watch the drama unfold in South Africa. No one will come to their aid. This nightmare can only be averted if something is done, and done immediately.

What the natives of South Africa need to do right now is to learn how to develop and improve on themselves. They should stop blaming anyone for their poverty and unemployment, except themselves. The time and energy they spend on looking for scapegoats should be channelled towards self-development. I will suggest that they do the following, and more, to help themselves out of their bad situations:

a Dispelling their Fears: Like I stated earlier, South Africans are still afraid that apartheid may come back to haunt them. They need to let go of this fear and live freely. However, if they see any thing that shows that this monster, named apartheid, is still trying so hard to come back into their society, they should be civilised enough to voice it out. Violence will only send out negative signals to their helpers.

  1. Skills Acquisition: One thing I like about we Nigerians is that we never stop learning. The natives of South Africa need to emulate that. They should take advantage of the presence of foreigners to acquire as much skills as possible. This will help them greatly in their career pursuit. At least, they can then have what it takes to compete in the labour market.
  2. Entrepreneurship: If Nigerians can establish businesses in South Africa and thrive, I don’t see why the natives can’t. The fact that some people’s businesses are doing well shows that the government provided an enabling environment for that. So, the South Africans should strive to create more jobs by becoming entrepreneurs. All they need is to learn the intricacies involved in it and be ready to build up businesses from scratch.
  3. Change of Mindset: No matter how they look at this, the natives need to change their mindsets towards their challenges. They need to accept that they are responsible for their failures and successes. They have to be ready to look for the best solutions to their problems. They should stop complaining and go into action. Besides, they should also bear in mind that only people without values destroy valuable things. So, they should quit destroying other people’s sweat.
  4. Education: If the natives couldn’t compete with the foreigners, then the education system needs to be queried. It is obvious that their education system didn’t prepare them for life after school. They have to find ways to sort that problem out.
  5. The Government: Of course the government has a share in the blame for the xenophobic attacks. They need to find ways to help their citizens to develop themselves. And, the government should also protect the lives and properties of all the people within that country.
  6. Respect for Lives: Every civilised human being respects the lives of others. If South Africans fail to realise this, they are therefore barbaric in nature. And no one wants to deal with a barbarian. In turn, their problems will increase.

I am a strong advocate of human development. I believe that human development is more important than infrastructural development. This is because I believe that when humans have better living conditions they will turn around and make the environment conducive for themselves. Only then can they put in place, things that will make life easier and less stressful for them.

What South Africans and the South African government should concentrate on is finding ways to develop the citizens so that they can have the type of lives they want. Destroying lives, businesses and properties in the name of xenophobia will not take the country anywhere.

Fixing Kano’s Girl-Child Education and Metropolitan Tricycle Paralyses

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I was just six years old when my family and I relocated from the ancient city of Kano to a different part of the country. Yes, that was over two decades ago, but I found myself reminiscing as the plane entered the city’s airspace and gradually made its descent toward the Aminu Kano International Airport. Peering through the darkness that filled the sky, beneath us was the metropolis, full of light and life; it reminded me of images I saw of Las Vegas in the movies, and I was awed by the level of growth and development since I left.

The next morning I set out for Ado Bayero Mall for my official assignment. I boarded a tricycle popularly called Adaidai ta sahu from my hotel in Sabon Gari. As we journeyed, I noticed a metal barricade on the left side of the tricycle that allowed passengers to board and alight through the right side only. ‘This is a weird personal style that is inconveniencing,’ I pondered. As we arrived at the bus stop to the mall, I realised that all the tricycles had the same metal barricades. ‘I must find out the reason the next time I ride,’ I assured myself.

‘Assalam ‘alaikum (Arabic: peace be unto you),’ I saluted the little girl seated beside me. She bowed her head blushingly. Then, impulsively, I leaned forward and poked the driver in a bid to gratify my curiosity on the metal barricades. Getting his attention, I turned leftward pointing at the bar but was shocked at what I beheld. A few months old baby kept with reckless abandon on the seat. ‘Wanene da jariri? Dauke ki rike ta da sauri!’ (Hausa: Whose baby is this? Pick her up and hold her quickly!), I said. And hastily she picked up the baby and held her in her arms.I told the driver not to bother, I have seen the reason to the question I wanted to ask him. He said mothers here are careless with their children. Everyday kids fall out from tricycles suffering serious and sometimes fatal injuries. To stem this, the government gave a directive that every tricycle operator must barricade the left side of his tricycle.

We got to a roundabout where a traffic policeman saw how the little girl held her baby and he showered her with praises saying, “Haka ya kamata! Chigaba haka! Allah ya tsare! (meaning: That is how it should be! Continue like this. May God protect you!)

Throughout the journey, I was unsettled at the reality – the reality of forced/child married. This child-mother is not more than twelve (12) years old, yet she has been put in the family way. How can a child nurse another?

In 2017 in Nigeria, 43% of girls were married off before the age of eighteen (18). 17% were married before they turn 15. Nigeria is the 11th highest nation in the world for number of child marriages (Wikipedia, 2017).

Africa Development Information 2015 Report on Sustainable Development Goal, SDG ranked Kano State wit 68% prevalence of forced/child marriage. Jigawa and Abia States recorded the highest and lowest rates of 87% and 9%, respectively.

With this statistics, the barricades on the over seventy thousand (70,000) tricycles currently plying the city can only do little in preventing children from falling.

The Reality of Forced/Child Marriage

Table showing high and low official marriage ages across countries dominated by a particular religion.

* Extrapolated by me

According to the table, every religion has breached the provisions of the United Nations Convention on Rights of the Child, UNCRC by legislating marriage ages below 18. It is, therefore, wrong for Nigerians living in the south of the country to stereotype Islam or the north on this issue. According to studies, forced/child marriage is more endemic in Less Developed Countries, LDCs, and less in the First World Countries. Countrywide, it is more prevalent in the north due to their peculiar development challenges.

Solution to Forced/Child Marriage in Kano State

“The people need to prioritize their commitment towards the education of females just like their male counterparts.” — Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Emir of Kano.

A society can not make progress by neglecting an important part of human development — the women. An African adage says, “If you educate a man, you educate an individual; but if you educate a woman, you educate a whole nation.”

“Children begging on the street instead of going to school will be arrested and their parents arrested and charged to court for prosecution because begging is not our religion. Begging is not Islam.” — Abdullahi Ganduje, Governor of Kano State.

I would like to say with every sense of respect, ‘child/forced marriage is not Islam or Christian. I therefore, call on Governor Ganduje to extend this directive to the education of the girl-child in his domain by arresting and prosecuting anyone who gives and/or receives little girls in marriage. Secondary school education should be the least for the girl-child. I have known the governor to be radical and fearless with his development policies, thus, he should not look back on ending this anti-human and anti developmental tradition. As the leading state in the north, Kano should be the first to outlaw forced/child marriage.

The Tricycle Menace in Kano City

In 2013, the state government introduced the use of tricycles for commercial transportation as a replacement to the banned motorcycles in order to eliminate the dangers of crime and accidents and return sanity to the city. The decision was received with much excitement by Kanawas. But their celebration was short lived as the tricycles out did the motorcycles in infamy. Public security and safety was under attack daily by rape, kidnapping, accidents, robbery, and murder perpetrated with the use of tricycles.

The government is considering banning the tricycles in favor of buses. Hear the Managing Director of the Kano State Road Traffic Authority, KAROTA:

“The security agencies are compiling their reports with regards to the menace being caused by the tricycle riders in the state and if in the end, the security agencies bring to the notice of the Kano State Executive Council that the menace is too much to be accommodated, and the operation be stopped, certainly, we will have to impose the recommendations by stopping the operation of commercial tricycles in the state the way operations of commercial motorcycles were banned.”— Daily Trust, 2019

The Cause of the Menace

The cause of the problem aside criminality, is lack of knowledge and obedience of traffic rules and regulations, you can call it Traffic Illiteracy, and abuse of substances. If they know better, they will act better. This issue is not peculiar to Kano. In Lagos, commercial motorcyclists, danfo and molue drivers exhibit the same behaviour under the influence of cannabis and alcohol. No one certifies them fit before they get behind the wheel.

The Solution — A Tripartite Partnership

Since ignorance and disregard for traffic rules have been identified as the root cause of the threat to road safety, I therefore recommend a tripartite partnership involving KAROTA, the Association of Commercial Tricycle Operators, and the merchants of tricycles in the sate. The government should consider doing the following:

  1. A new body or the existing one should be set up and/or empowered to orientate and test the existing and new tricycle riders for one week and at the end issue them licenses of road worthiness.
  2. The association of tricycle operators should make sure all their members partake in the program, and also exercise punitive measures in cases of indiscipline.
  3. Merchants of tricycles in the state should not sale tricycles to buyers until they provide their license from the state agency. Confirmation would be made by checking the data bank of qualified persons from the state government traffic agency. A mobile app can be developed for this purpose.
  4. Lastly, the government should impose fines that are affordable and easy to collect from defaulters. This revenue can be used to fund the work of the traffic agency.

Conclusion

Kano is world renowned for its rich history of city states, trade and commerce, and rich cultural heritage. However, it is long overdue for this regional center of commerce to move to the next level of becoming an industrial hub. It can only achieve this by prioritizing the education of the girl-child, and also, sanitizing the transport system by orienting the operators. This should be done with the highest level of creativity and innovation with respect to the customs and traditions, and development challenges local to it. I am proud to be born here.

Long live Kano!

Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria!

Strategy for Data-Driven Healthcare Management and Innovation

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By Mr. Oludotun Akinwunmi (FIIM)

Globally, one thing is certain; the use of data in the integration of systems, structures, plans and processes.

Data like we say today is the new Oil, its management is critical to the different sectors in the economy today. When we talk strategy for data driven healthcare management, I believe we want to begin looking at the different ways in which data can produce for the health care system a holistic view in managing the records and information of patients throughout the medical system, process, and operations.

The age we are now has been technologized, technology seems to control major forms of business and industries. Scaling to the healthcare industry we must ask the following questions:

  1. Is Africa ready for a data driven health care system?
  2. Is information governance actively managed presently in Africa

I start with Information Governance – What is IG?

A health innovation event

This is the management of information at organizational level, it balances the use and security of information; IG helps with legal compliance, operational transparency and reducing expenditures associated with legal discovery. Bringing this into healthcare, we must begin to see or betterstill understand how complex the legal framework governing the use of personal confidential data is. In the US for example, this includes:

  1. NHS Act 2006
  2. Health and Social Care Act 2012
  3. Data protection Act
  4. Human Rights Act

Africa boasts of some of the best minds in the Healthcare industry, but all have been exported for some reason Africa should be asking herself the big question: WHAT HAPPENED TO MY HEALTH CARE HUMAN CAPITAL RESOURCES?

I decided to start with the legal phase of data for us to see how and the importance of getting it right from the start, we must begin to measure our compliance against the law and central guidance to see if we can handle information correctly and protect such from unauthorized access, loss, damage and destruction.

Importance of a good information governance:

With the proliferation of data in different formats at different levels in organizations, we must look at the following and restructure our mindset to work with processes and structures.

  1. Data gathering
  2. Data analyses
  3. Data refining
  4. Data governance
  5. Data security
  6. Data currency
  7. Big Data

We are talking about “Strategy for Data Driven Healthcare Management”…

How can a nation build an interface of data driven solution that integrates all healthcare players into one house and manages their different information as at when needed?

This is where Technology comes in, technology can aid healthcare management in the following areas:

  1. Improves data quality
  2. Enables quality care
  3. Enhances clinical researches
  4. Supports strategic decision making.

Principles of Information/Data driven system:

  1. Accountability
  2. Transparency
  3. Integrity
  4. Reliability

How do we transform data into business asset?

The governance of information must be holistic through management by implementing processes, roles and metrics. The storage and movement of information must be guided and treated with care to attain a proper data governance for effective use in healthcare management.

All around the world, Innovation has been brought into the healthcare system and one of such that we see that deals with our topic today is Medcera.

Medcera is a web-based EMR (electronic medical record) and EHR (electronic health record) system with patient portal. It provides physicians and medical professionals with EMR/EHR and medical practice management technology that includes charting, scheduling, e-prescribing, medical billing, lab and imaging center integrations, referral letters, training, support and a personal health record for patients.

Snapshot of Medcera portal (source: medcera.com)

This is Guest Port by Mr. Oludotun Akinwunmi (FIIM).

Diary Of An Entrepreneur – Marcel Badia

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”Moving to another country was a hard transition for me. I could not speak English, and barely had any friends.”Marcel Badia

The journey of entrepreneurship is not always an easy ride. You have to go through unfavourable transition. If care is not taking, you could rise or sink.

Marcel Badia shared his entrepreneurship journey and how he overcame.

In my interview with him, he shared his true-life story.

How did you become an entrepreneur?

I had never thought of being an entrepreneur while growing up, just like nobody is born to become a lawyer or an uber driver. We all make certain choices as we grow.

How did you overcome the language barrier?
Learning a new culture, system, and language takes time but when you have the passion to be better or help others become better, that passion makes you overcome any challenges.

How were you able to make a living in a new environment?

Once I set up myself here in the United States, I started working at a small restaurant and that was a lifesaver. While working I knew I could do something bigger, and between working and learning English.

I thought about selling things online since people buy things online.

Can I sell some of those items cheaper?

Yes, I can.

Always thinking outside the box is what can make you see what others can’t.

You have to try if your gut tells – you are right.

But hold on, I’m not saying you can do any random business without making research.

Ask strangers and don’t limit your research to your family alone because they will always say it is a good idea.

Have you ever experienced failure as an entrepreneur?

Some of my early ventures fail, even now, I still make mistakes but I am human. I don’t know it all.

How did you handle it?

At some points in life, we have to sit back and analyze what we are doing and where we are going to have a better perspective. And sometimes we have to reinvent ourselves and come back stronger.

At a point, I said to myself – “Marcel you can do it”. Mistake after mistake will teach you the right way to build a business. When everything fails, we need to think again because it’s failing for a reason and after missing it many times, you will finally get it right.

Going forward – I drafted a plan and designed a deck. I looked for a team. I built everything from scratch. I hired advisors, marketing associate, and a co-founder, they all came onboard without a salary scale because they believed in my vision.

Nothing is impossible!

Before your startup kick-started, how did you survive in that period considering the financial constraint?
I am not ashamed to say that I had full-time jobs to support my family and my venture but I never let my paycheck distracted me. Instead, it fuels the passion to carry out my goals and made me stronger.

What keeps you going everyday?

I am not a millionaire. In fact, I don’t have one hundred thousand followers but I will always answer you.

Why? Because my soul and my gut tells me every day – “Marcel let’s do something today to help others”, even if it is getting a bottle of water and an energy bar to a homeless person and his dog.

I know in my skin how it feels to be ignored by someone you ask for help to mentor you, to help you validate your idea, or to give you feedback.

The will to help others keeps me going in life.

What advice do you have for people who want to embark on the entrepreneurship journey?

Don’t be a loner. If someone reaches out to you, answer them. You can have a quick chat. Networking in any way is the bread and butter of any entrepreneur.

For those that are struggling with their ventures, I am here to help and guide you on your  entrepreneurship journey.

Thanks for your time Marcel Badia.