For years, and across nations, military bureaucrats have become worried of the possibilities that a foreign rival might strike their communications networks, computers, and databases. They have reasoned that the age of warfare done within the nexus of information has arrived. Such an “information warfare” attack could be part of greater conventional military operations. Information […]
16.0 – Cyberspace & Cybercrimes
Security of data is in everyone’s best interest. It can only be accomplished with mutual power. Cyber threats are global issues, and so handling them must be global too. The fast developments of computing systems and networks have provided opportunities for attackers to exploit systems and network vulnerabilities, attacking private and public critical data. Individuals, […]
A Solution for Your File and Hard Drive Recovery
Errors are inevitable and unavoidable- everybody makes mistakes and it is an important part of how we learn to live through experience… except when the mistake is accidentally deleting an important file. Then there is only pain and regret! It happens to the best of us so there is no shame in admitting that you have often deleted a file either by accident or thinking you will not be needing it, without knowing that you would be in the future.
So, what do you do in such a situation?
Fortunately, there is now a way to undo the deletion of a file! How, you ask? By using the EaseUS hard drive recovery technology. The solution is a free file recovery software that allows you to restore deleted files and folders quicker than you may expect. It is basically your knight in a shining armour when it comes to deletion sprees that got just a little bit out of hand.
OPERATING THE EaseUS INTERFACE
The EaseUS Data Recovery Software is a free software that you can download on your computer. It works with both, Windows and Mac systems, making it convenient to be used by anyone. Let’s take a comprehensive look at how to recover your files using this free file recovery application.
- Installing and Operating the Wizard
The program is free and easy to download. After it is downloaded, simply launch the program and you will be able to observe first hand that the interface is super user friendly and easy to make sense of. You can find everything you need inside the Menu icon on the top of the window.
- Beginning the Search
Beginning from the ‘Home’ screen, you can select what kind of files (documents, audio, video) you would like to search for. The next screen will ask you to select which part of the hard drive or the attached drive you would like the software to scan for the deleted file.
- Quick and Deep Scans
The next step would be to click on ‘Scan’ on the bottom right of the page.
When you do a Quick Scan, the software takes just a few minutes to extract a small bunch of files from the selected place. The Deep Scan, however, extracts over hundreds and thousands of files for you to select from and recover. It is also understandable that such a difficult feat takes a considerable amount of time as well. You can pause or stop the Deep Scan anytime you want if you are not willing to wait through the two or three hours of searching. You are still able to preview and restore the files that the software has recovered till that point in time.
- Exporting and Importing Scans
You can save your scan results if you would like to view them later by clicking on the ‘Export Scan Status’. Whenever you would like to view them again, you can simply choose the ‘Import Scan Status’ option and bring back the Recovery State File into the window.
- Finally: Recover!
Once you have decided which files you want un-deleted, you can either right click on that particular file and choose ‘Recover’, or in the case that there are several files you would like recovered, you can tick all the files and press the ‘Recover’ option on the bottom-right corner. You can choose where you would like to place these newly recovered files. It is better to store them in a new place if they were deleted because of a damaged drive.
For times when you are extremely joyous at having recovered something you thought you had lost forever, you can even share your ventures on Facebook, Twitter, and Google!
FREE TRIAL
You can experience the EaseUS software on a trial before you actually download the software, if you would like to. The trial, while does not let you recover files, gives you an idea of how thorough the software’s searching and recovering abilities are. You can even preview the deleted files the application searches for you while on trial.
THE SAFETY NET FOR YOUR DELETING SPREES
With the EaseUS software, you do not have to worry anymore whenever you end up deleting a file you weren’t supposed to. Simply allow this software to work its magic for a few minutes or hours, depending on your scan, and you are always good to go!
by Peter Ken
The Nigeria’s New “0.005” Electronic Transaction Levy
South Africa wants to regulate Showmax; Naspers, the owners of Showmax, also wants the country to regulate Netflix. Where South Africa cannot regulate Netflix, then Showmax should be left alone, Naspers maintains. Naspers sees Netflix as a mortal threat since South Africans can use their credit cards and subscribe to Netflix with no stress. So, if you cage Showmax in South Africa with regulation, it would die because South Africans will switch to the world of Netflix.
Through DStv, MultiChoice has been the dominant player on African television screens in the last decade, available in 48 African countries. Yet, in the last week, the Naspers-owned media giant has been appealing to South African regulators, trying to make a case for why it could not survive any regulation in the face of streaming.
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To it’s advantage, Netflix’s standard $11.99 monthly subscription has made it more attractive than DStv’s satellite services that cost more than $40 in Nigeria and nearly $65 in South Africa for all-access subscriptions. MutliChoice is clear, though, that it wants all streaming services regulated.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as part of the implementation of a certain section of the Cybercrime Act 2015 would be collecting a new levy on all electronic transactions into a National Cyber Security Fund account with the CBN. The Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) hates that because it would make your phone calls and browsing more expensive since telcos would pass the costs to you. Banks, insurers and fintechs would also help to collect the new levies since anything electronic transaction would be levied the 0.005%. Unfortunately, WhatsApp, Skype, Instagram etc would not be in that list. And that is the problem.
The Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) has rejected the move of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to start the implementation of a certain section of the Cybercrime Act 2015. The section provides for the collection of ‘0.005’ levy on all electronic transactions into a National Cyber Security Fund account with the CBN.
Its National President, Mr. Olusola Teniola, warned yesterday in Lagos that the collection of the levy would inevitably lead to a sharp increase in ‘charges paid by customers’ for telecoms services. He said tariff on voice calls and data cost would certainly go up because the impact of the levy would be passed on to the end user of telecoms services.
The businesses which are to be affected by the levy include telcos, Internet Service Providers (ISPs); banks and other financial institutions; insurance companies and Nigerian Stock Exchange.
Africa’s Web Regulatory Challenge
I have noted that Internet would destroy value; it would also create new value. However, the translation of that value may not necessarily go to government, immediately. If government loses taxes on SMS and phone calls because people are using WhatsApp and Skype, the citizens have saved money but government has lost that tax revenue since the telcos cannot pay for them. Any government that is pushing to recover the bulk of that value destruction and shifting will end up hurting its local companies. In other words, if Nigeria wants to tax more on SMS in order to recover lost revenues because of WhatsApp, it would be making a big mistake. This new levy for cybercrime in Nigeria will be a burden on local companies; the foreign ones will not be part of it. Yes, the local companies have paid their usual corporate taxes which ordinarily should be used by government to protect those companies in any way possible from cybercrimes.
Nigeria is not paying attention to the potential risks of value destruction to the economy which Internet will bring to the nation. We will continue to see the erosion of tax Naira as more industries are disrupted. The telcos are first, but our banks are not immune. If the banks face this problem and fail to compete, the tax Naira will go as more value will be destroyed.. The challenge is that value is destroyed, and our local digital companies do not actually drive the destroying process – most times, foreign firms do and get the value. I project that Internet will erode more than 17% of Nigeria’s total tax revenue over the next decade. This does not mean that the absolute tax revenue will drop, rather, some sectors where government makes money, via tax, will earn less. If the telcos earn less because of OTT, they will pay lesser tax. Period. But government can still get more artisans and farmers to pay tax (I want to make that clear – my prediction is not the absolute tax which can be compensated if more people join the tax paying base. I am focusing on taxes from those paying tax right now. While those paying now can drop, proportional to growth, the total absolute tax could be higher because of bringing more informal sector participants into formal sector).
Our digital companies are supposed to help us cushion the impact from this Internet-enabled value destruction. Yes, but they will need to grow and blossom first. I will explain how they can do this.
All Together
In the age of unconstrained and unbounded internet, distribution is no more what it used to be. That is a very important element African regulators must consider. If you continue to pile fees on telcos, you are simply making it easier for more people to be pushed to WhatsApp since SMS would become more expensive as the telcos would certainly increase prices to recover their costs. And when you think your indigenous streaming company is dominant, you have forgotten that it is competing with extremely more dominant global empires. The old adage that business is local remains, but for internet companies, local means everywhere. Yes, everyone on the web is local to all!
Specifically for Nigeria, the push to digital & cashless society should not be seen as an avenue to make more money from the citizens. We already pay stamp duty on electronic transactions. This new levy needs to be revisited.
Thank You, Members of House, James Faleke (APC, Lagos) on JAMB Fee Resolution
Let me begin by thanking the Members of House of Representatives, Federal Republic of Nigeria, for leading on the price of JAMB fees. Special thanks to James Faleke (APC, Lagos) for a strong speech on the Floor. I have noted (here, here and here) that it was unethical for JAMB to become a profit-center for the Nigerian government. Simply, JAMB has to charge what it needs – Nigeria does not need any remittance from JAMB. NNPC, CAC and other agencies will continue to fund Nigerian budget; JAMB should focus on helping our young people to enjoy the only benefit of being a Nigerian: subsidized public university education.
As I have noted, I do not expect JAMB to be revenue generating for the federal government. Let it just charge enough to cover its expenses. Anything more would be troubling. Yes, JAMB should not be NNPC or Corporate Affairs Commission which are expected to generate revenue for the federal government.
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We know that Nigeria does not have cash. But the revenue from JAMB will not fix anything. We know where to go for revenue: we have NNPC, LNG, and other entities structured to generate revenues for Nigeria. JAMB is not supposed to be one. And government should make it clear to JAMB that it does not need its money. Let the exams be affordable, accessible and revenue-neutral. Set the fees to the extent that you can cover all your expenses. Do not wire anything to CBN.
The Members of House have taken action and they want JAMB to reduce the cost of JAMB exams (pardon me for this extensive reproduction).
Members of the House of Representatives on Thursday urged the Federal Ministry of Education to cut the cost of Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) application forms.
The House also proposed that the cost be reviewed downward to about 50 per cent from the current N7000.
The House, while adopting a motion by James Faleke (APC, Lagos) urged the Federal Ministry of Education to ensure that the cost of the other ‘ancillary forms’ for changes must be free or at the very barest minimum of N500.
Moving the motion, Mr Faleke noted that the JAMB remitted N7.8 billion to the Federal Government being excess of the N12 billion made from sales of Unified Tertiary Examinations (UTME) application forms for University Admission in 2017 at the rate of N7,500.
”This excludes incomes from the sales of other forms such as Change of Course Forms and Change of University Forms at the rate of N5, 000.00 each,” he said.
He said an estimated 250,000 candidates purchased the UTME forms, bringing the income from sales of the forms to about N2.4 billion per year.
“The cost does not include the Post-UMTE Examinations that are conducted by Universities at an average cost of N2, 500 per candidate excluding the expenses made on logistics,” he added.
He said thus JAMB had a surplus of N7 billion budget in 2017, ”meaning that the sum under consideration is from sales of forms only, making the Board a profit making venture to the detriment of educational and social development of the country”.
He also noted the increase in the number of universities from 12 at inception of JAMB in 1798, with less than 50,000 candidates to over 400 Tertiary Institutions with more than 1.7 million candidates writing the exams. He said indices show only about 50 per cent of those who wrote the examinations were admitted in the universities as at 2017.
He reminded the parliament that JAMB as a government agency is not set up for profit making but ”to promote educational development of the young citizens in pursuit of their professional careers”.
We would continue to write here. I know many are reading.






