Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,165,535 members, 7,861,551 topics. Date: Saturday, 15 June 2024 at 02:18 PM

States Get 12 Months To Switch To Nigeria’s Internet Address - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / States Get 12 Months To Switch To Nigeria’s Internet Address (948 Views)

States Get Another Bailout To Pay Workers Salaries / Bailout: 28 States Get Over N373 Billion In 5 Months – FG / Lagos, 20 Other States Get New Police Commissioners (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

States Get 12 Months To Switch To Nigeria’s Internet Address by Nobody: 12:24pm On Aug 27, 2013
States get 12 months to switch to Nigeria’s internet address


Minister of Communications and Technology,Mrs, Omobola Johnson

As part of measures to ensure Nigeria plants its feet firmly on the cyberspace, all the 36 states governments and their agencies have been given till August 18, 2014, to complete the switch to www.gov.ng in order to maintain a secured presence on the internet using Nigeria’s country code top level domain (ccTLD).

The move would create a single signature for the federal and state governments and their agencies on the internet; help minimise fake government websites as well as increase the use of .ng, Nigeria’s suffix on the cyberspace.
This decision was part of 30 others taken at the just concluded National Council on Communication Technology (NCCT) which ended few days ago in Akure, Ondo State.

The NCCT recommended that the National Policy on Information and Communication Technology in principle by the Federal executive Council (FEC) recently be adopted and states should develop ICT policies that are aligned to the National ICT policies; the Ministry of Communication Technology be established in each state of the federation and the ICT secretariat in the Federal Capital Territory.

They also agreed that each state should hold Microwork/Elancing workshops with the objective of creating awareness about the work opportunities in the Microwork and Elancing space, creating job opportunities for the youths and reducing unemployment and underemployment, and also that all states and local government areas should collaborate with the NITDA on the development of their IT policy and establish the necessary institutional framework.

Others were that state governments be encouraged to commence the immediate implementation of National Economic Council (NEC)’s decision on multiple taxation and levies by the issuance of executive order and ensure strict adherence to its implementation; be encouraged to, as part of executive order, ensure that all access to telecom infrastructure by states and local government operatives would require the consent of the governors as part of the measures for protecting them as critical national infrastructure.

The NCCT recommended that state governments be encouraged to take necessary policy action on the implementation of relevant aspects of Nigeria’s National Broadband Plan; a collaborative framework to stem irregular/illegal use of radio frequency in Nigeria should be developed and in collaboration with NIPOST, build post offices in local communities within their states to enable NIPOST provide financial and ICT services.

The meeting chaired by Mrs Omobola Johnson, Minister of Communications Technology, had in attendance Dr Olusegun Mimiko, Ondo State Governor, who declared the conference open; Dr Henry Akpan, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Communication technology; commissioners and officials of ICT, science and technology sector and other related areas from 22 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) as well as the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF).

Others present were Oyetunde Ojo, chairman, House of Reps Committee on Communication; other National Assembly committee members; representative of the Speaker of the Ondo State House of Assembly, Dairo; the Presidents of Nigeria Computer Society (NCS), Association of Licenced Telecomm Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), Computer Registration Council of Nigeria and executives and captains in the ICT private sector/industry.

-@Leadership

Source

2 Likes

Re: States Get 12 Months To Switch To Nigeria’s Internet Address by oghenetejire(m): 9:08am On Oct 16, 2013
Good work. Just hope it is well followed to the letter
Re: States Get 12 Months To Switch To Nigeria’s Internet Address by Nobody: 9:22am On Oct 16, 2013
Indeed @oghenetejire.

I would go further to suggest that an increased level of awareness about the potential benefits of this top-level domain is also required within the private sector.

Here is an earlier post on the subject.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

gameaddict: The truth is country specific domain names are artificially expensive and in a world where the internet is at the forefront of globalization, the benefit of domain localization at such an expense is minimal especially for small businesses.

Also, .com.ng and .ng domains do not amount to patriotism, let us stop this devious claim. Are google and microsoft any different than they were before they acquired those domains? Did they even acquire it to look patriotic? Nope, purely business and legal reasons.

If they are serious about enabling Nigerian businesses through localized domains, they should lower the costs. Devious means such as enforcing registrations and accusations of non patriotism will only reduce the attractiveness of the domains.

I understand the trust of your argument regarding the cost of registering a domain name and think I made this much clear earlier on.

The way I see it, whether we like it or not, at some point, a change in circumstances is going to compel us to stop being so nonchalant about these matters.

My 2 cent.


Homeland Security Working Hard To Make Sure No One Wants To Use .com Or .net Domains

Remember Erik Barnett? He's the deputy director of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) unit, who seems to have a way with words. He's the guy who admitted that Homeland Security was censoring websites because entertainment companies asked them to. He's also the guy who lied about whether or not anyone was challenging domain seizures when he knew those challenges were underway.

Now he's out trying to defend the ridiculously short-sighted decision by the US government try to extradite Richard O'Dwyer from the UK, for running the site TVshack, despite it almost certainly being legal in the UK. According to Barnett, none of that seems to matter, because O'Dwyer was using a .net.

"The jurisdiction we have over these sites right now really is the use of the domain name registry system in the United States. That's the key."

The only necessary "nexus to the US" is a .com or .net web address for which Verisign acts as the official registry operator, he said
.

That's the key, but it's also ridiculous and stupidly self-damaging for the US. On a jurisdictional basis, there are a variety of different factors that people use to determine what the proper jurisdiction is, and relying solely on the registry, thus making all .com and .net (among other) domains US property, is simply ridiculous. Almost anyone thinking about it would realize that if a site is run by someone in the UK and hosted on servers in the UK, it's silly and counter-factual to claim that it's really US property.

Of course, the end result of this will be to drive more and more foreigners away from using US domain names. None of this will do anything to stop infringement, which Barnett seems to think is his job. But it will harm American companies (the ones he claims he's trying to help) by getting foreign internet users to stay away from them due to the liability that some hotshot in the Justice Department suddenly decides he or she wants to pull someone from their home and ship them to the US to face criminal charges on something that may have been completely legal where they're from.

Source

(1) (Reply)

FG To Handover PHCN To Successor Companies 30th September / El Rufai Attacked On Facebook For Uploading The Graduation Picture Of His Son / Abuja Based Cleric Predicts Another Bomb Attack In Abuja, Plane Crash Involving

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 24
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.