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The International Monetary Fund Targeted in Cyberattack -A “Sophisticated and Serious” One

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Yahoo News reports that the International Monetary Fund was investigating a cyber-attack launched in its computer system. According to the news source, the IMF maintained that the organization is fully functional without any indication that any sensitive data has been compromised. Yet, the  “New York Times cited unnamed IMF officials as saying the attack was sophisticated and serious”.

 

Concerns about the IMF attack were great enough that the World Bank cut a computer link that allows the two organizations to share non-sensitive information, according to a bank official. The move was taken out of “an abundance of caution,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the security issues around the incident.

 

The operation of the IMF requires in some cases they maintain data on some countries in financial trouble which are not made available to the general public. So hackers have an incentive to get that kind of data even for investment purposes. For instance, knowing that a country is going to default on its loan based on IMF negotiation can help an investor decide how to trade on that nation’s bond. There are many reasons why hackers can target IMF.

 

It seems that this decade is evolving as the decade of hackers with so many hacks emerging already. Even in the developing nations, we have seen the enormous level of hacker activity in banks, companies and even governments. Many Nigerian federal websites were compromised when a group of hackers launched attacks to protest the nature of  governance in the nation. This means that organizations must be up and doing and work hard to secure their digital assets.

 

In the last few months, we have noted a number of cyber breaches and this all call for a stakeholders discussion about the future of the internet and security. It is important that the world looks at this and sees how we can redesign the web architectures to curtail this trend that is harming the confidence and trust of many in participating in the digital economy.

Technology is redesigning the global structure and in most cases it is changing the ways we do things. As we move from the meatspace to the cyberspace to conduct our businesses, we must not forget that what worked in the old cubicles is still relevant now. Organizations must note that without adequate security, any investment on digital asset is unwise. We must work hard to anticipate that people will like to steal digital assets and mitigate those actions before they happen.

 

Bad guys are not going away and what that implies is that we have to put more efforts to secure and plan for our assets especially now most are moving online. 

 

Tekedia Analyses On RIM Acquisition of Scoreloop – A German Mobile Social Games Platform

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On their website, they have a very good news for their users. Scoreloop has been acquired by RIM. They noted that the focus is to get Blackberry gaming platform to move to the next level. And they promise that they will see that Blackberry platform is “unparallelled”.

What just happened is an industry consolidation which will continue in the early part of this decade. With RIM buying this German mobile social gaming community, they want to elevate the BB platform and possibly rekindle the old spark in BB they have lost since the arrival of iPhone.

Scoreloop was founded in March 2008 and has raised more than $2.8m. The initial plan was to provide  multiplayer challenge games with a focus on iPhone. But it deviated and then moved into the domain where community of developers could work to add socialgraph and interactions on their games. This include the scoring sheet, messaging, virtual currency, etc. As they made progress, Android evolved as the centerpiece of their strategy as more works seemed to make it the primary operating system. But with time, it supports all the leading mobile OS. Scoreloop supports Windows Phone, iOS, Android, and Bada (Samsung) operating systems. We are not sure if the HP Palm WebOS is supported by Scoreloop. Also,  Symbian has no information.

 

This is the entry on CrunchBase.

Scoreloop focuses on building the best mobile gaming technology to extend any game to the social arena. Scoreloop is neither a game developer nor publisher, and therefore does not compete within their market. Instead, Scoreloop cooperates with all players of the mobile gaming value chain – from game developers and aggregators, to publishers and portals – to maximize their gamers’ experience, improve their community’s cohesiveness, and provide them with additional revenue streams.

 

RIM will bring the Scoreloop technology to the blackberry. This has a potential to make the Blackberry Social Platform better. Scoreloop technology has made it a strong contender for the consolidation wave as more companies are looking for social games in their mobile ecosystems. When DeNA bought Ngmoco in a $400m deal, it made it clear that the industry was not timid on games. Also the Electronic Arts bought Chillingo for $29m while GREE went for OpenFeint in excess of $100m.

 

So, it is very obvious that anyone without a game strategy could be in peril right now. That is why what RIM has done on Scoreloop makes sense. The team will bring expertise to the BB  gaming environment and possibly  help it challenge the competitions that other OS like iOS and Android are mounting. But Rim is in catch up mode now. With the new iOS5, Apple has incorporated iMessage which can compete with BBM which has found followers in the teen market. The Apple Game Center platform is also a huge challenge for Rim to mount against.

 

Though BB is a business focused product, it cannot ignore that the line between business and leisure has blurred. So by moving agreeively into the social climate of games in its products, Tekedia believes they did the right thing. Gaming has never been the catch for business applications, yet, it will not hurt by providing it to wage off competitions to its core market. Apple continues to churn out blockbuster games through the armies of developers, with games leading the Apple Apple store download in recent months. For BB to move from its tepid gaming history and success, Scoreloop seems to be the right move.

 

Our conclusion is that this is a good acquisition and BB users in Nigeria and indeed Africa will get better value when BB service is fully integrated with Scoreloop technology. Nigerian developers that are already working in the Scoreloop community will easily migrate to offering solutions to BB gaming platform. We think that RIM did a good deal.

Facebook Auto-Tagging of Photos – EU Probes Facial Recognition Feature

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Facebook has begun auto-tagging  of photos so that users do not have to manually select their friends when they upload photos for tagging. As soon as you post the photos, Facebook will automatically know them and immediately tag them accordingly.

 

Every day, people add more than 100 million tags to photos on Facebook. They do it because it’s an easy way to share photos and memories. Unlike photos that get forgotten in a camera or an unshared album, tagged photos help you and your friends relive everything from that life-altering skydiving trip to a birthday dinner where the laughter never stopped. Tags make photos one of the most popular features on Facebook.

 

The goal is that as more users easily tag people, the level of activity in the site will increase. Easy tagging, more photo sharing!

 

In the same vein, European Union regulators said they will investigate the facial recognition technology which Facebook employs to do this auto-tagging and other products in the site. They maintained that users are not asked for permission before they are lumped into the technology.

 

A U.S. privacy group has also asked the United States Federal Trade Commission to investigate the matter as well.

 

What happens is that when users upload photos, Facebook technology, Tag Suggestions, automatically analyzes the photo database and then suggest names for the tagging of the photos. The regulators are insisting that Facebook must seek for prior consent while Facebook noted that anyone can easily opt out.

 

Facebook is a behemoth where 100 million tags are done daily.

 

Analyses

The use of facial recognition technology has been employed in different fields, including security and policing. Facebook is just bringing this to the social media network. Facebook perhaps could be using the iris recognition and the prior names people have given for each person in their database to do this.

 

It is harmless simply on the bases that anyone posting anything online should not have any illusion of privacy. The regulators can do what they want as they need to justify their jobs, but the people using Facebook may not really care for the efforts they are putting.  Technology should not be trumped on the altar of privacy and in this case, this technology can even help law enforcement. Just get a photo of a criminal, put it in Facebook and it could help you develop a footprint especially if the person is working with different names.

 

Our world is such that anything you do outside your home could appear online – it could be satellite images of Google trying to map the world or a neighbor filming  you. All we need to do is simple: do not do anything that seeing online will embarrass you because the world of privacy has since gone.

 

In most parts of the world, there is no information that a simple googling cannot reveal about people. Someone can easily find out your home address, your income level, your phone number, your age, just by knowing your name. It is a new world and Facebook is just participating in this social redesign.

 

 

You May Need This Free Event – DDS in a Nutshell: Software Architecture for Scalable Integration

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Data Distribution Service (DDS) is an industry-standard publish-subscribe data bus that can be distributed logically or physically across local processor cores, backplane buses, or networks, making it well suited for today’s multicore, bladed, and/or cloud computing platform solutions. DDS also provides network interoperability, code portability, and increased system capability while decreasing hardware requirements and lifecycle costs.

Is it a good fit for your application? Join us as Real-Time Innovations (RTI) presents a technical overview of DDS and how it can be used in various distributed messaging and database environments. RTI will also show how DDS provides lower overhead and higher availability for distributed applications.

 

Speaker:
Rick Warren- Director of Technology Solutions at Real-Time Innovations (RTI)

 

Moderator:
Chris Ciufo- Editorial Director- OpenSystems Media

 

June 14, 2011 7:00 PM Lagos Time


Go here and register

 

We think that this event will help people in Africa that are looking at implementing DDS especially when they are working to understand the interface between the hardware and software issues associated with this technology. DDS has become popular and it will surely be useful if we begin to understand how it can be used across platforms, more efficiently. As  Real-time Systems, DDS has evolved to become a specification of a publish/subscribe middleware for distributed systems created in response to the need to standardize a data-centric publish-subscribe programming model. Of course, it may take a while to get there, but this has an opportunity. If you can make this free online event, attend it.

Nigeria Software Industry Worth $6 Billion, Says DG of National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA)

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Vanguard reports that Prof. Cleopas Angaye, Director-General of National Information Technology Development Agency ( NITDA) has said that the Nigerian software industry has potentials worth $6bn (N900 billion).

“The Nigerian software industry is potentially a six-billion-dollars industry and can surpass the contributions from the oil industry, especially as the software industry is not a capital intensive sector.

“In addition, the internet has created a level playing field for software developers all around the world; proximity and flexibility would, therefore, favour our indigenous developers for local, regional and international markets.

“The foregoing, therefore, lay credence to the fact that there is an urgent need to develop appropriate policy to guide software Nigeria,” he said.

The statement made by the DG is not wrong. There is no ceiling on what the technology capacity of any nation can be. $6b is not really a big number for a nation like Nigeria considering that we are about 1/5th of Africa’s population. Some of the iconic software companies make that every quarter and to argue that software industry of the biggest black nation should be less than a quarter revenue of big US software company is not wise.

The main challenge for NITDA and the professor is to make the realization come through. The country is not working hard enough. The government is not even supporting the local software makers. The legal frameworks that will sustain the sofTware industry remains very weak. So, how can the nation make that happen.

Tekedia thinks that the country must evolve beyond making commentaries to actually doing things. We need to have a strategic plan to make Nigeria to progress in sync. Lagos gets it, Maiduguri is far behind. Owerri gets it, Opopo may not. There are huge disparities in the ways governments executes our strategies.

This is what we recommend

Government must introduce a true and visible local content requirement in the banking industry. They remain the biggest consumer of software in the nation. What the banks spend on software accounts for more than 87% of the total software bill in the nation. To avoid any shock, a five year window can be put in place to make sure than all software used in the banking industry is made in Nigeria.

If Oracle, Sybase, Microsoft and others must sell to our banks, they must be required to make those software in the nation or at least have a creative lab built in the country. That way the assessment that the DG made could hold water.

As Nigeria hovers above the $250b GDP, a $6b value of the software industry is too low. That means, it is less than 3% of the GDP. We need to jack it up to 6% in the next five years. That way we can begin the discussion that we are diversifying away from the minerals. Right now, it may not even be up to 0.2% of the GDP.