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Home Blog Page 6727

The Injustice Against the ORide/OPay Rider

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The misuse of power on an Opay rider.

Everyone prays for a good life every day because life without money could be frustrating. They say money is power, while some believe that money without power is meaningless. Some also compare money with power but I think they are wrong.

 The rate at which power is being abused in Nigeria is unglorifying. Especially amongst the forces – soldiers, police, FRSC and VIO.

Imagined, I ordered an Opay ride through the App two days ago. On our way, we met a VIO who stopped us for inspection. We respectfully obeyed and tried to park at the other side of the road as we are in the middle.

The next he did was to start dragging the bike. Maybe he felt we wouldn’t comply. I got upset and shouted at the manner in which he had treated the Opay rider.

He demanded his particulars which he gave him. After going through, the next he asked was for his driver’s license. A bit strange to me though. I had no idea if Okada riders do use the driving license.

The Opay rider said it’s Okada permit they do issue and not drivers license. I thought as much also. But that never solved the matter as he grabbed his keys and drove the bike into their office.

I frowned at the greatest height of injustice, so I followed the Opay rider to the VIO office across the road.

On getting to their office, he was issued a fine ticket – 30,000 naira.

I had no idea what his offence was actually. The Opay rider went to one of the senior officers and pleaded. He reduced it to 5000 naira.

The most annoying part was a lady that was arrested for an expired document that same day. All she did was to put a call through. She was freed without paying a dime. This was because she put the VIO senior officer through on a call. It’s glaring he was talking to an important personality from the way the VIO senior officer was responding. 

This hurts me in the manner the common citizens are being treated. There’s too much of an abuse of power at every sector.

 That’s why I wrote about the state of education in Nigeria in one of my articles. We get everything through connection. It makes those working hard to be discouraged. Instead, they opt for a short cut.

According to Mayur Sharma, he said he’s been asking himself lately; ”before stepping out of our childhood, we are made to think that money is power. As we near completing teenage, we realized that money itself is not the power but it has the power to buy power. Power buy power. Once you step out into the real world all on your own and if you start thinking freely and fearlessly, you realize that there is something more than power existing in the real world, something that is more than power and cannot be bought by money.”

 He continued: ”Wealthy people dream of it and powerful people fear it. That’s called ’Respect’. In this thought – Real power is not something that can be bought by money or achieved by hard work, instead, it’s something that can only be earned with respect; respect of your own and that of others, I mean the majority of others.”

 Although power is good, I plead with everyone in a position of power to tread with caution.

As Ben Ramedani would always say – be human in everything you do. 

Lagos Needs This Code

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A school bus and other vehicles travel on a partially shadowed East Lombard Street, Tuesday, July 2, 2019, in downtown Baltimore. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

With 25,000 students and United States’ highest transportation costs, by school district, the Boston Public School District needed a better way to get kids to classes. They turned to an algorithm to route the school buses. Simply, a team of researchers wrote a code to optimize school bus routes, helping the public school system save $5 million.

With no clear vendor to turn to with this problem, BPS instead sought out experts, hosting a competition where researchers could experiment with anonymized BPS data sets to create efficient routes and optimal start times for each school

[…]

So the team worked to swap the start times of high schools with elementary schools in the district, and optimize the start times based on route feasibility, teen health, parent preferences, and equity. Their school start time algorithm explored the tradeoffs to different start times, and found a balance point between all considerations. If it had been deployed, it would have changed the number of teenagers with early high school start times from 74 percent to just 6 percent.  

I am very confident that Lagos needs that type of code for the public transportation network, and (who knows) the privately-run danfo, molue and taxis. But a code for Apapa Port may have to come first for trucks entering and exiting the nation’s largest port terminal. Software can “eat” most of the paralyses in Nigeria.

Boston did not award any contract – it simply opened a competition and asked the geeks to submit codes and test with anonymized city data. May the best code win. The best won and Boston is keeping $5 million yearly as saving. Nigeria needs to open fixing Apapa gridlock to our techies to help. I promise you that our young people will fix that problem immediately if the big people can just make way!

Concerns After Jack Dorsey’s Twitter Account’s Compromise

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Everything was going on well on Twitter on Friday, until its Chief executive and Co-Founder, Jack Dorsey’s account started sending derogatory, racial and anti-Semitic tweets. That’s quite off it,  a sudden “heat wave in winter” because it breaks Twitter rules, and coming from Jack himself, it’s a red flag.

For 15 minutes the tweets keep pouring in the direction of everything that Twitter stands against. Something has gone wrong for sure. The next tweet from TwitterComms confirmed that:

“We are aware that @jack was compromised and investigating what happened.”

“Who compromised the account”? Was a question the tech team needed more time to answer. How it was compromised came quickly though not detailed. The tweets were sent via Cloudhopper, a service Twitter bought in 2010 to improve its SMS service.

So whoever hacked the account must have done so through a third party app, not Twitter password breach. The TwitterComms statement said:

“The phone number associated with the account was compromised due to a security oversight by the mobile provider. This allowed an unauthorized person to compose and send tweets via text message from the phone number. That issue is now resolved.”

So it was simswapping. The hacker tricked the service provider into believing he is the owner of the sim, and needed it swapped to another number. And for the next 15 minutes, the hacker was sending tweets via text messages, smiting over 4 million followers of Jack with his rogue tweets.

In the early days of Twitter, texting was largely used for updates, which was the reason for the 140 characters’ limit. Though Twitter App has become popular, Twitter didn’t rule the method of text messaging out for the sake of people tweeting from developing lands where data cost is high.

It is not clear who the service provider is, since Twitter didn’t say. But through the previous activities of Chuckle Squad, a hackers group who have taken responsibility for the compromise, AT&T seems to be the service provider.

The screen shots collected from the Discord server of Chuckle Squad show that the group has been responsible for series of other hacks involving some celebrities on Twitter, in the past week. Beauty Vloggers James Charles, Shane Dawson, the late Desmond Amofah a.k.a @Etika and Comedian King Bach were all victims of the last week’s attack. And they all have the common claim that their accounts have been compromised through simswap conducted by AT&T employees.

TwitterComms has long sent a message indicating that the situation is contained:

“The account is now secure, and there is no indication that Twitter’s systems have been compromised.”

But it doesn’t quell the concern that the breach has generated, knowing that it is not the first time something like that is happening. Mark Zuckerberg has had his account hacked, because he didn’t use the two-factor authentication.

And for a platform hosting celebrities, academics, world leaders etc. it has prompted a great concern that people’s accounts could be a finger tip away from being breached. Twitter is yet to say anything about what it’s doing to address the concern.

Nigeria to Introduce Solar-Powered Vehicles to Nigerian Transport System

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The Ministry of Transportation has announced the Federal Government’s plan to introduce solar powered vehicles to Nigerian transport system. The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, said the plan involves the introduction of vehicles that can dive on water and land also.

He said the steps are necessary to reduce pollution emanating from combustible vehicles, which has been hazardous to the environment and public health. And the Federal Executive Council has approved plans to effect the initiative. The Nation reports.

It’s an initiative that has waited for so long to come by, at a time when climate change is wreaking havoc on the planet, and the world is tirelessly looking for a solution. Countries like France, Sweden, Norway etc. have set a goal to eliminate combustible vehicles by at most, 2050.

Unfortunately, only a few African countries seem to be interested in spearheading the drive in the African continent, the rest are dragging feet. And Nigeria for long has been leading the group of the lax countries.

Earlier this year, the Senator representing Bayelsa East, in the 8th Assembly, Ben Bruce Murray introduced an electric bill that will see Nigeria gearing toward cleaner energy, but it was killed on arrival by other senators.

In fact, the former Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu called for the Nigerian Government to frustrate the efforts of other countries trying to replace diesel engines with electric and solar engines. He said that Nigeria is an oil producing country, and will suffer a great revenue loss if the rest of the world switch to cars with cleaner energy. But in response to the fears of Nigerian Government, Senator Ben Bruce said:

“The world is going beyond electric cars. Now, the next generation is thinking of electric planes. Meanwhile, Nigeria rejected my electric car bill, claiming it is a threat to our oil industry. An Ostrich that buries its head in the sand fools only itself.”

Senator Bruce added that electric cars and the quest for cleaner energy do not depend on whether Nigeria implements policies that are environmentally friendly or not. “The world is moving ahead, and it has already left Nigeria behind,” he said.

To demonstrate his staunch belief in the future of electric cars, Senator Bruce ordered his company, the SilverBird Group, to henceforth, purchase only electric vehicles. But that’s just a drop of water in a sea of backward swimmers. The idea of protecting the oil industry at the cost of innovation and environmental cleanliness seems to be winning right now.

However, the introduction of solar powered vehicles by the Federal Government has given hope for a future where electric vehicles will also thrive.

Nigeria’s Blame Game

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Our dear nation is seen as a model by other nations. Not only do her youths excel in various fields such as Medicine, Arts, Technology, etc; they excel in games as well. We are seen as the giant of Africa. However, in recent years, there is a game in which almost everyone of us plays , and in which we are very good at – which is the Blame Game.

WHO IS TO BLAME?

The best years of your life are the ones in which you decide your problems are your own. You do not blame them on your mother, the ecology, or the President. You realize that you control your own destiny.” ~~Albert Ellis

It is no longer news that we always find a scapegoat as the cause of our predicament. The youths blame those in leadership positions, without improving themselves or upgrading their skills to meet opportunities. For everything that happens, the masses blame the President, and even the ruling party. Some others would even point fingers at Islam, and the Muslims in the far north. To them, they influence the policies made, and the activities of the President – who is a Muslim. I was pissed up during the recession, when there was a fall in the oil prices. Why? Many refused to understand that the President and those at the House of Assembly were not the ones who caused the problem. They refused to acknowledge that the fall in oil prices was global, and not just a Nigerian issue. It saddens my heart to know that many educated Nigerians blamed the Presidency as being the cause of the exchange rate fluctuations. How is that possible? Is it not absurd? How about the market forces of demand and supply?

If you want to enter hell, don’t complain of the dark; you can’t blame the world for being unfair if you start on the path of the rebel.” ~~Liu Xiaobo

We love the Blame Game so much, despite the fact that we never win. We resort to violence, crime and other social vices, because we feel the government is not doing enough to assist us. How about those that rob or defraud their kinsmen? Is the government also responsible for that? We sell the truth, and buy excuses, using the excuses as cover-up for our actions. An average Nigerian will tell you that he/she is fed up with the country. Why? He/She feels that that there are no jobs in the country. To such a person, the leaders haven’t created jobs for them. Is it the government that should create jobs for us? Can’t we create jobs for ourselves? Are we not good at anything? These people are so desperate to leave the country, while foreigners flood the country for investments. These foreigners see so many opportunities in our dear country, while most of our youths are blind to them. An average Nigerian prefers traveling overseas to be a dishwasher or a cleaner. Most times, our youths do not get to their destination, and are exposed to such risks like hunger, death, discrimination, sexual abuse, and even deportation. Of course, those who returned from Libya are not done with their narrations, yet.

We love giving excuses. We are never tired of that. Some weeks ago, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) black-listed some names. These fraudsters would blame the presidency, and even the country. How about the drug dealers who were to be executed by Saudi Arabia? Of all the noble professions and occupations, why should they venture into illicit trades? Maybe, this time, it is the devil himself that made them do it. Of course, according to Stephen Covey, ”Reactive people… are often affected by their physical environment. They find external sources to blame for their behavior. “

Great leaders don’t rush to blame. They instinctively look for solutions.” ~~Nina Easton

Our leaders excel in the Blame Game, too, but they never win. They do not understand that nobody wins the Blame Game; they hurt themselves instead. Why is it that there is always something to say? Perhaps, if our leaders learn to listen well, they would know the right way to relate with everyone. Some sects, and ethnic groups feel unloved because to them, the government prefers a particular ethnic group, and a particular religion, over the others. During elections, it is usually tense. Everybody is talking, instead of listening. If you are a parent, how do you ensure that nobody feels useless in the house? Do you pay more attention to some and leave out some? Do you consult those you feel are relevant, and neglect the others? Is that not one of the major issues we face as a nation? Even if we are from different mothers, and have been adopted into the Nigerian family, are our voices not supposed to count as well? Do the lives of some Nigerian citizens not matter to you? Perhaps, there is a reason why you had to do all you did! There is a reason why people had to be shot, and others imprisoned! How about when the courts have directed for the release of those imprisoned ? Is there not still a reason why they have to be locked up for days, weeks, months and even years? That is it! Everybody has something to say! Nobody understands each other anymore! Perhaps, if our leaders had listened well before acting, we would not have gotten to this point. The fact that we miss, is that we are all leaders. Everybody is a leader, and Everyone is guilty of this.

In the words of Robert Anthony, “when you blame others, you give up your power to change.” It is time we acknowledge that we are responsible for what happens to us. When the image of the country is tarnished overseas, foreigners are more interested in knowing the country. We are the ones who get to pay the price. Yes! Everyone! It is everyone who gets the restriction on the use of PayPal and other Payment platforms! It is everyone who gets to be embarrassed at the airports, through several search procedures! It is every Nigerian who gets to be asked several questions at the embassy! They see us as a whole number, but we see ourselves as fractions ! So sad. Must we have to blame someone or the society, whenever something bad happens? As Thomas Sowell would say, “In various countries and times, leaders of groups that lagged behind, economically and educationally, have taught their followers to blame all their problems on other people – and to hate those other people. ”

How do we Quit the Blame Game?

We must learn to pay attention to our needs as a people, and address these issues. A seed can never germinate when it receives acid , as a substitute for water. It can only grow, when it receives supply of water. Therefore, we can never grow when we give hate, as a substitute for love. We will only grow as a nation, when we begin to love one another as ourselves.

We must create economic opportunity, build a culture of entrepreneurship, get people to take responsibility for improving their lives, rather than putting them in a position where they sit back in their poverty and blame others for it. ” ~~Paul Kigame

It is time to quit this Blame Game. We do not have to pause, and continue later. We have to stop it entirely, and never engage in it again. We have had countless meetings as a country. Some years ago, delegates from all the ethnic groups converged at an agreed venue in Nigeria, to deliberate. Till date, the report of that meeting has become history. We have been unable to execute certain projects because we are not united. We don’t even know what we believe in, anymore. There is still a lot of hate being served as an appetizer, a main course, and even dessert. Nobody wants to forgive. What happened during the civil war is still in the minds of those who never witnessed the war. Some ethnic groups still discriminate against others. Some never forgive the wrongs done to them, neither do they forget. If it takes them fifty years to get their pound of flesh, they would not mind. It will be sung as a song, and recited as a verse, until the innocent ones are indoctrinated into seeking for vengeance. Is that how we will grow? Is that the way forward? How long shall we continue like this, deceiving ourselves?

In conclusion, it is important to note that “When a man points the finger at someone else, he should remember that three of his fingers are pointing at himself“~~Louis Nizer