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Home Blog Page 7218

Uber Settles with Google Sibling, Waymo

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Uber has settled the lawsuit which Google sibling, Waymo, brought against it on trade secrets related to Lidar, a key component in autonomous driving vehicles. This has long been expected: Waymo may have a better technology, but Uber has the best product. Uber is light years ahead of Waymo on transportation which is what all these technologies are designed to advance. So, Waymo cannot afford to damage Uber to the extent that it cannot find a path to become a future partner. Alphabet, Waymo (and Google) parent, is an investor in Uber.

We have reached an agreement with Uber that we believe will protect Waymo’s intellectual property now and into the future.” Waymo statement

“To our friends at Alphabet: we are partners, you are an important investor in Uber, and we share a deep belief in the power of technology to change people’s lives for the better.” Uber CEO

Uber was expected to lead the way for Alphabet, and that was why Alphabet invested in Uber. See it this way: if Waymo invents this great technology, it would need a global transportation company to monetize it. Uber is well-ahead of other American companies in that space. Even though the lawsuit pushed Alphabet to invest in Lyft, most analysts believe that Lyft has no global future. With Didi already causing havoc around the globe, the only way Waymo can play a role is to see a strong Uber in the world. After all, Uber is partly owned by Alphabet!

According to TechCrunch, “The agreement also comes with a financial settlement of roughly $244 million in stock (that is 0.34 percent of Uber’s equity, valued at its Series G-1 round, which gave the company a $72 billion valuation)”. That is not close to the $1 billion Waymo has expected. It is also good the settlement is coming as stocks which ensures that Uber does not have to spend its cash on this.

I think everyone won by settling this case: Alphabet needs Uber to go after Didi which is now the hottest startup in the world. This lawsuit is a huge distraction to Uber. Now it is over, they would begin to plot how to handle their Chinese competitors who are also moving into making driverless cars with their own partners.

Just Received a Nice Letter of Gratitude from The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF)

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Good people,

I just received a really nice letter of gratitude from The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF). I have served in the selection committee of the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Programme for three years. TEF is redesigning philanthropy in Africa by pioneering new models which I am confident would be catalytic in inventing the new Africa. From Lagos to Nairobi, Cairo to Yaounde, a new generation of African entrepreneurs is emerging. They would become the pillars to architect our continent into that hopeful and prosperous land where opportunities abound and aspirations are attained.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICES AS A MEMBER OF THE TEF SELECTION COMMITTEE

Dear Ndubuisi,

Hope this finds you well. Wishing you very Happy 2018!

On behalf of the Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF), I would like to express my sincere gratitude for your service as a member of the selection committee of the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Programme over the last three years (2015 – 2017). Through your support, we have been able to empower 3000 entrepreneurs who are deploying their skills, creativity and innovations for the economic development of Africa. The stirring and inspiring testimonials of the Tony Elumelu entrepreneurs are real evidence of the power of private capital to change lives and transform societies. Please find attached a letter of gratitude and TEF 2017 CEO Annual Review.

Thank you so much for your service to the Foundation – it is highly appreciated.

Best regards,
?

Parminder Vir OBE
Chief Executive Officer

Limits of Facebook Ecommerce Operators; Small Business Owners, Not Entrepreneurs

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The last few days have brought redesigns in our broad ecommerce sector. Konga was swallowed by Zinox, the firm behind Yudala, another ecommerce firm. OLX, a classified ecommerce firm, gave up on its operations in Nigeria. They join Efritin, Ady and other entities that have struggled.

But while these entities are struggling, Facebook (Instagram, WhatsApp) ecommerce operations are emerging. Facebook is now the second largest ecommerce platform, behind Jumia, in Africa. Unfortunately, even those Facebook ones would struggle. People that do them are purely Small Business Owners, and they would never evolve to become Entrepreneurs. They would not have the scalability because they are bounded by the same factors that have crippled the capacities of the mainstream ecommerce businesses to thrive.

They could sell 200 t-shirts but they would never sell 2,000 in a day. The reason is by the time they get to 500 t-shirts, the offline challenges of logistics would affect their growth trajectories. Yes, the offline-based marginal cost will make it harder for them to grow. The implication is that the Instagram vendors would be fine as small business ecommerce operators, but none would be entrepreneurs. They would not employ hundreds as Konga did. They would not pay good taxes as Konga did. They would not even have to rent an office as Konga did. People would not make careers in them. Simply, they would be informal ecommerce operators except they would have bank accounts. This was how I put it in a recent comment on LinkedIn.

Partly as I noted in a recent Tekedia piece that Facebook is now the second largest ecommerce platform behind Jumia in Africa. Yet, even the Facebook vendors will struggle. They would be fine as small businesses but not entrepreneurs with any scalable advantage. Yes, you can sell 20 T-shirts in a day. But you cannot sell thousands. The logistics problem will bound their capacities to grow because that is a marginal cost that is totally offline.

Entrepreneurs build organizations with unbounded elasticity for growth. They run startups which are organic systems that keep growing and expanding. A startup is a company designed to scale very quickly. They pursue growth unconstrained by geography which differentiates startups from small businesses. Selling in Facebook removes the commissions you pay Konga or Jumia in their marketplaces, but that does not remove the very fact that you must sell the items to be price-competitive, to someone who lives near an open market, a supermarket, or a small (gate man) shop in another city.

Simply, even Facebook vendors would not win this market; the experimentation must continue because the future of commerce includes digital (and online).

10.4 – Penetration Testing Distributions

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A security-focused operating system supports the ethical Hacker to find weaknesses as well as exploit systems for identifying vulnerabilities in networks and computer systems. These operating systems come with pre-installed tools for the objective of penetration testing and ethical hacking. These operating systems are very important because they come with preloaded dynamic tools for building […]

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10.3 – Penetration Testing Tools

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Like weapons to soldiers, automated tools play a significant role in the viewpoint of penetration testing. Penetration testing tools are typically used to take care of laborious and rigorous works. With these tools, a tester can pay attention to more practical tasks which may not easily be automated. This section includes several penetration testing tools […]

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