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Hosting Data Offshore Needless Capital Flight

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  • Hosting Data Offshore Needless Capital Flight

The Information Communication Technology (ICT) industry is evolving at the speed of electricity. Data centres are springing up while cloud technology has taken the centre stage in cost reduction strategies of businesses. The Managing Director, Rack Centre, a leading data centre in Africa, Mr Tunde Coker, says the firm has the capacity to host private and public data in-country. He speaks with LUCAS AJANAKU on various aspects of emerging technologies.

What is your assessment of the data centre business climate?

One of the things we have done is building to meet local needs while complying with the global standards. We have such environment that at times not too conducive for a data centre. The humidity around March period could be 90-95 per cent, sometimes 97 per cent. The temperature can be at 37 degree centigrade; that is very high. We are seemingly a power company because we generate our power. Of recent, we entered into discussions with Ikeja Electric for a dedicated line. We are working with them as engineers, not a hook and switch-on sort of, because we need industrial power. We are creating Power Utilisation Effectiveness (PUE) in West Africa. We have built something that is conducive to the Nigerian environment.

How has the recession affected business in this sector?

We saw a slow down last year, just like every other company. No doubt, we will continue to grow, but it wasn’t at the level we expected. It only required circumspective actions in spending; in the contest of the shift in the economy. However, we are tuning into the easy of doing business through our facility. The government is doing a lot too which in the areas of on e-Government and e-Governance. There are efforts to lead us up the lid by end, latest end of the year, which speaks volumes to the international community. So, strategically, for us and what we have seen in government, things will shift in the right direction. However, companies have realised they have to invest in growing at the right point in time. Instead of deploying resources to build a data centre, you could co-locate in a standard facility. Then, you can focus on the growth of your business.There are things we say about small and medium enterprises (SMEs); there are 20 million of them. They are going to power the economy. Twenty million SMEs exceed the population of Belgium- adult, children, young people put together. What we are bringing to Nigeria through Cloud-On-Ground is a high quality environment that accords these small businesses the opportunity to lower the threshold on the entry point to technology as means to break even in their businesses; even with small financial capacity. You pay as you grow/pay as you go. What we have built is key to the automation of SMEs and will impact the economy.

What is this TCCF talked about in in data centre?

TCCF stands for Tier Certification for Constructed Facility (TCCF), especially to Tier III data centre we have here. The analogy to explain TCCF is: if you have a design of an aircraft validated to be able to fly front ‘A’ to ‘B’, of course, it gives you comfort to know that aircraft is actually built according to such design. It’s after the design that the constructed certificate is issues to you. An assessment is required to obtain the certification. TCCF serves as validation that your fundamental is built as designed to be able deliver 99.99 per cent of uptime.However, since launch, Rack Centre has operated 100 per cent uptime, because we operated as a Tier III facility, constructed as designed. What does it mean? Now, if you are to board an aircraft, it is a constructed facility to a certain standard. If you are entering a house, it will be very reassuring that its construction is based on designed certification; the stamped architectural design. Therefore, the air conditioner won’t suddenly catch fire, the roof won’t leak. To further explain the analogy: if you now have your house been inspected; to be certified-constructed to a minimum standard of such facility- electricity availability, cooling system, water availability, water heaters work to certain degree/temperature, so, the process would require they will unplug the socket to verify the connectivity, the back-up system, ensure no current leak between one and the other. They may even require you pull out one of the walls to confirm the electricity diagram aligns with the design. That is the level of the details of assessment we went through. The other thing is, in translating design to constructed; though we have moved on as far as specifications are concerned, they make sure you are in tune with the current specification. If you fail to respond on that, it is an issue. We managed to respond to all the observations, because the fact you constructed to Tier III implies you can respond to questions around it.

What does this mean to Rack Centre?

First, authenticity is important to us at Rack Centre. We want to always do what we say and say what we do; do things right through the right means. So, having TCCF for Tier III has confirmed how eligible this facility is to perform the functions we allude to. There is no smoke screens, such as ‘oh, we are Tier III’ data centre, but all ends at design; some even cut corners and some sorts. These guys will actually find you out when you go ahead to construct your data centre-cutting corners. They are so detailed- a forensic analysis of the facility. Secondly, it fully demonstrated to our customers, indisputably, we are at that level of quality. Thirdly, I shared this thought in South Africa recently, ‘Africanism’. This is a data centre in Africa that says it is Tier III. Now, it has global profile, but is it the profile that we just go by? We can beat our chest and say this Tier III certificated facility in Nigeria meets the standard in any part of the world as certified by highly distinguished body- Uptime Institute. So, our customers know they are coming to high quality facility. Secondly, the world is changing: we keep talking about Big Data. If you look at the number of Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Twitter, Amazon users, (in Nigeria) and so on, it is significantly growing. It gives international players- banks and other companies that serve African market, such comfort that the footprint/facility they are going to in Africa, is certified. To Nigeria, there are a lot of data hosted abroad including government data. Historically, when there was no Rack Centre, what would you do? You host abroad. I believe that if a Nigerian facility is not built from scratch to meet standards and we go ahead to legislate that everybody should use it, we are just entrenching mediocrity. So, we have to make sure the infrastructure is on ground and as good as what is obtainable anywhere in the world. Competitive on pricing: international players come here and they couldn’t argue with us on pricing. Therefore, with Rack Centre here, there is no real reason people should go abroad. If you are still hosting abroad you have to transverse through the connectivity to someone else’s space and you will have issues around latency. But, if you are here, the services are totally seamless. We now host cloud services in Nigeria via cloud-on-ground sub-brand. It’s a heterogeneous marketplace, a cloud exchange with different cloud providers available. So, with TCCF these providers are at rest with the quality of the facility to deliver their services within Africa to Africans. Why are we excited about this? Rack Centre is the most connected Tier III data centre in Africa; constructed facility. We have all the telecos and most of the carriers of note and ISPs. This allows our customers have universal connectivity. We also have other wholesale carriers even that deliver services across Africa. If you a hosting company, Bank, then, host your services here for low latency while connecting to your offices in other African countries, at the highest quality. So, these are some of the edges the certification has accorded us. We have won several global awards, but I oftentimes tell my team this is not just about Rack Centre rather it points to the world to recognise we got the capabilities here. it is also the fact Nigerians can deliver and operate this kind of facility.

Why the time lag between design and facility construction?

Actually, you are not mandated to have facility on ground to have your design certified to Tier III. So, it is good to know what Tier III is before design. It’s like an architectural design. You have a choice once you have done the design to certify it immediately. In our case, we had a design and built it to that design. But then, we doubled the capacity from 119 to 255 racks. In that we decided to start the process of the whole series of test before construction. Then, you invite them over to conduct the certification. We doubled our capacity which went live during the middle of last year. With that, we were the first to also successfully revalidate our design which was done last July. There was never a second of downtime when we carried out the extension. It came to budget, quality, time, and no hiccup with any customer. We won an award in capacity Africa for this very project, compared to other data centre projects in Africa, including South Africa, Northern Africa. Right now, in the Data Centre Global awards, we are the only African country (finalist) in Technology Expansion. We focused on that piece of work to get it right. So, after we were done, we put Uptime Institute on notice. I was talking to an international analyst who said: “If you get the certification, the experience globally is that you earned it.” Also, there is a notification that goes with design certification, informing you that after two years, the certificate will be withdrawn if you fail to construct. Now, for constructed facility, they will come around yearly for inspection and if you fail to keep the standard they will keep you on notice of subsequent withdrawal. We, certainly, do not intend to be in that place. That is also great for our customers as global companies are looking at us, even while we deliver services to local businesses.

Why have other African data centres not get Uptime Institute Certification?

Tier III data centre is like detailed aircraft certification. You to have investment, not cutting corners in your processes, as that will push you to a tight corner. Procrastination is also not helpful when it comes to this kind of business. There a whole lot of reasons why companies are not ready to go for the certification. Anybody can say, ‘I am built to Tier III standard,’ but the certification is very important. It’s like boarding a car driven by someone with driver’s license and the other without. He might be a perfect driver, but without the license, even the law will be against you. The licence gives you more confidence in the person, as it is very rare to have someone with a license and unable to drive- he has gone through learning process and tests.

Does this align with local content?

First, in terms of investment, the facility is sited in Nigeria. We have sophisticated facilities because we want to attract international investors to the country. All our technical staff are Nigerians. There are parts of the technology we had to source experts from the United States, South Africa, but we always make sure there is technical-knowledge transfer as means to build our capabilities. We are determined to recruit the highest indigenous talents and build them through. During the project expansion, our team was at the UK; the institute they visited sent me an email hailing these guys diligence, insights, creativity and innovations that the counterparts in developed economies couldn’t demonstrate. Now, as we have built to internationally acclaimed standards, it implies we can attract more companies to host their services in Africa. By doing so, we are exporting Nigeria’s services to other players. It is a point of export that will not only discourage our people heading abroad to host, but will boost our forex. If that happens, our facilities get full, we are sure to extend it. Research has shown that for every million dollar you put in, you could get between $10million and $100million impact on the gross dmoestic product (GDP) and all through the process, local capabilities are being developed. With cloud-on-ground, we can deliver services at the right price and at higher performance.

Is the CEO/Founder of Investors King Limited. A proven foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Businessinsider, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and many more. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.

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Telecommunications

Nigeria’s Mobile Subscriptions Drop by 5.4 Million in Q1 2024, NIN Enforcement Blamed

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Active mobile subscriptions dropped by 5.4 million in the first quarter of 2024, according to data from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

The total active mobile subscriptions stood at 219 million, a 2.4% decrease from the previous quarter’s 224.4 million.

This decline has been directly attributed to the stringent enforcement of the National Identity Number (NIN)-Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) linkage policy by the NCC.

Since its inception, the policy has aimed to bolster national security measures and enhance accountability within the telecom sector by mandating the linkage of mobile phone numbers to individuals’ unique NINs.

The regulatory directive, which came into effect in December 2023, required telecom operators to deactivate SIMs not linked to their owners’ NINs by February 28, 2024. The process unfolded in three phases with subsequent deadlines set for March 29 and April 15.

However, due to various challenges and requests for extensions, the final phase was postponed to July 31.

During this period, over 40 million lines, encompassing both active and multiple lines registered to a single subscriber, were reportedly barred by telecom operators.

The majority of these lines were found to be inactive, suggesting a considerable impact on non-compliant subscribers.

The National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) disclosed that as of April 2024, a total of 105 million Nigerians had enrolled for the NIN, indicating a widespread response to the government’s initiative to bolster identity verification processes.

In April 2022, the telecom sector experienced a similar wave of disruption as operators commenced the initial phase of enforcing the SIM-NIN rule.

During that period, over 72.77 million active telecom lines were barred, signaling a pivotal moment in regulatory compliance efforts.

MTN Nigeria, the country’s largest telecom operator, revealed in its first-quarter 2024 financial report that it had deactivated 8.6 million lines due to non-compliance with the NIN mandate.

However, the company emphasized its efforts to minimize the net impact of barred subscribers through effective customer management strategies.

Karl Toriola, CEO of MTN Nigeria, underscored the resilience of the company’s customer value initiatives in mitigating subscriber churn and driving gross connections amid regulatory challenges.

Despite the substantial drop in active subscriptions, MTN Nigeria closed the quarter with a total of 77.7 million subscribers, showcasing the effectiveness of its retention strategies.

As Nigeria navigates the evolving telecom landscape amidst regulatory reforms, stakeholders anticipate further measures to enhance compliance and fortify the integrity of the country’s telecommunications ecosystem.

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Fintech

Fintechs Instructed to Report Cryptocurrency Transactions to Authorities in Nigeria

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Fintech companies across the country have been instructed to report all crypto trades to relevant authorities.

This directive comes amidst the recent freezing of 105 accounts across nine fintech firms suspected of various illegal activities, including unauthorized forex dealings, money laundering, and terrorism financing.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) obtained an interim court order on April 24, 2024, to freeze these accounts for 90 days as part of ongoing investigations.

Sources close to the matter suggest a connection between these freezes and heightened scrutiny of cryptocurrency transactions.

Following these regulatory actions, several prominent fintech players, including OPay, Moniepoint, PalmPay, and Kuda Bank, have been directed to suspend the opening of new accounts temporarily pending evaluations of their Know Your Customer (KYC) processes by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

The frozen accounts are part of a broader investigation by the EFCC into 1,146 bank accounts suspected of manipulating the foreign exchange market through cryptocurrency platforms.

The EFCC believes that some account owners exploited cryptocurrency platforms to manipulate the FX market.

In response to these developments, fintech firms have started implementing stringent measures against cryptocurrency transactions.

Moniepoint, for instance, notified its customers that it would close accounts engaged in crypto or virtual asset transactions and share their details with relevant authorities.

Similar warnings were issued by other fintech players like Paga and OPay, emphasizing their stance against crypto-related activities.

During a recent industry event, Tosin Eniolorunda, founder and CEO of Moniepoint, urged participants in crypto Peer-to-Peer (P2P) markets to cease their activities due to regulatory prohibitions.

He highlighted the risks associated with engaging in such activities, citing potential legal repercussions.

Eniolorunda linked the recent regulatory actions to the prevalence of fraud in fintech apps and emphasized the renewed focus on KYC and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) measures.

He alleged that some P2P crypto activities contributed to the manipulation of the Nigerian currency, the naira, prompting regulatory intervention.

This latest directive underscores Nigeria’s broader crackdown on cryptocurrency platforms, particularly Binance, which began earlier in 2024.

The government has expressed concerns about the role of crypto platforms in currency speculation and their impact on the devaluation of the naira.

This regulatory tightening reflects the government’s efforts to maintain financial stability and curb illicit financial activities in the country.

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Technology

Multichoice Nigeria Rolls Out Tariff Increase Despite Tribunal’s Interim Order

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Multichoice Nigeria, a prominent Pay TV provider, has proceeded with the implementation of tariff adjustments for its DStv and GOtv subscribers, despite an interim order issued by a competition and consumer protection tribunal (CCPT) in Abuja.

On April 24, Multichoice announced plans to increase prices for its cable services, scheduled to take effect from May 1.

However, the CCPT ruled that the company should refrain from raising rates as initially scheduled, following an ex-parte motion presented by the applicant’s counsel.

Despite the tribunal’s interim order, checks conducted by Nairametrics revealed that Multichoice Nigeria has forged ahead with the tariff increase, with the new prices being displayed and enforced on its official website.

For DStv Premium subscribers, the price has surged from N29,500 to N37,000, while Compact Plus subscribers now face an increase from N19,800 to N25,000.

Similarly, Compact, Confam, and Yanga subscribers witness price hikes, ranging from 20% to 25% compared to previous rates.

GOtv subscribers also experience a similar fate, with tariff adjustments reflecting significant increases across various subscription packages.

Despite legal injunctions, Multichoice Nigeria’s decision to proceed with the price hike signals a bold move in a highly contested legal battle.

The Acting Chairman of the Federal Competition & Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), Adamu Abdullahi, disclosed that Multichoice had provided a detailed explanation for the price adjustments in a four-page letter to the commission.

The company cited factors such as foreign exchange fluctuations, high electricity tariffs, and operational costs as drivers behind the rate revisions.

Abdullahi explained that the FCCPC would scrutinize Multichoice’s justifications for the price hike, collaborating with regulatory bodies like the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to ensure compliance with market regulations.

The decision to proceed with the tariff increase has sparked concerns among consumer rights advocates, who question Multichoice’s adherence to legal directives.

Despite the company’s rationale for the price adjustment, critics argue that subscribers should not bear the brunt of economic challenges beyond their control.

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