THISDAY

Tech Top 5 News

- Nosa Alekhuogie

HEALTHTRAC­KA; COME-HOME HEALTHCARE-BASED START-UP IS $1.5M READY

To reach more people, save more lives, and ensure that healthcare is better in Africa, Healthtrac­ka has launched itself into enriched healthcare-based start-ups in terms of infrastruc­ture developmen­t. This was made known after the CEO of Healthtrac­ka, Ifeoluwa Dare-Johnson, confirmed that the start-up had secured a $1.5 million seed fund in June. On the list of investors are VC Ingressive Capital, Hustle Fund, Alumni Angel Alliance, and Flying Doctors.

The Lagos-based test lab is known for providing test services, including full body count, fertility test, STD, and COVID-19. The start-up’s goal, according to Ifeoluwa, is to make the lab testing experience stress-free and affordable for Africans.

Healthtrac­ka solves this challenge by providing digital test results within 24 hours after sending their phlebotomi­st to the client’s home to collect test samples. The high-quality service keeps the start-up attractive to partners in the preventive care and lab-based industry. Aside from testing results, Healthtrac­ka equips clients with medical reviews of results as well as specialist and consultati­on services.

The seed funding is expected to impact the one-year-old start-up in widening the retail market by launching her retail subscripti­on plans. She also envisions enlisting her APIs to healthcare service companies to provide a come-home sample testing for their clients. There is also the tenacity to expand the country’s visibility beyond Nigeria.

FG TO TRAIN ONE MILLION SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS

The Federal Government of Nigeria has said it is working on training one million software developers in Nigeria in the next eighteen months.

To achieve this target, the government has called on various stakeholde­rs across sectors of the economy to come on board.

The Minister of Communicat­ions and Digital Economy, Prof. Isa Ali Pantami, disclosed this at a virtual workshop organised by the Nigeria Software Testing Qualificat­ion Board (NGSTQB).

The Minister said training and certifying more Nigerians as software testers have become imperative with the increasing integratio­n of software into every sphere of human life and the need for a secure system.

Also speaking, the President of NGSTQB, Mr. Boye Dare, stated that NGSTQB aims to work assiduousl­y to make Nigeria the software testing hub for the outsourcin­g software testing market in Africa.

AFRICA TO JOIN THE GLOBAL AI REVOLUTION

Business leaders in Africa are optimistic about the potential of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to transform the continent and are actively investing in the technology to be a part of the global AI market.

According to the 2022 State of AI in Africa Report published recently by AI Media Group, in the past five years, many companies across the continent are leveraging AI for business efficiency.

Most nations believe AI is at the centre of the Fourth Industrial Revolution

(4IR), described as a period of rapid transforma­tion anchored on frontier technologi­es such as AI, 5G, blockchain, IoT, cloud, 4D printing, quantum computing, and the metaverse. They are pushing through their challenges to make it a business enabler. Much of Africa’s AI growth has been attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, which accelerate­d digital transforma­tion.

According to reports, over 2,400 companies list AI as a specialty, of which 40 per cent were founded in the last five years. In what shows that the industry is at its initial growth stages in Africa, 34 per cent of companies using AI are medium enterprise­s with less than a hundred staff, while 41 per cent are start-ups with less than ten employees.

Also, PwC has projected that AI could contribute up to $15.7 trillion to the global economy in 2030, more than the current output of China and India combined. Analysts say AI could expand Africa’s economy by a staggering $1.5 trillion by 2030—about 50 per cent of its current GDP—if it could only capture 10 per cent of the fast-growing global AI market.

Countries that dominate in AI in the continent’s cardinal regions are Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, and Egypt.

SHOPRITE SUFFERS CYBERATTAC­K

One of Africa’s largest retailers, Shoprite, has been reportedly hit by a sophistica­ted cybersecur­ity attack.

A ransomware group known as ‘RansomHous­e’ has reportedly claimed responsibi­lity for carrying out the attack compromisi­ng customer data such as names and ID numbers. While no financial data or bank account figures were undermined due to the data hack, the gang claimed to have obtained 600 gigabytes of data from the retail business.

According to the message by the cyber attackers on their Telegram platform, they have gathered private details from the archived files that were unsecured and kept in the form of raw photos and plain text. The cyber clan, known for targeting only companies with poor security, has contacted Shoprite’s leadership for negotiatio­ns and indicated that if they do not adhere to the former’s terms, they may sell the content and make some of it available to the public knowledge.

The statement issued by Shoprite stated that interrogat­ions were initiated with forensic experts and other data security authoritie­s to determine the nature and extent of this episode while alerting the informatio­n controller at the South Africa headquarte­rs.

Shoprite has instituted additional security actions to help safeguard client data from further informatio­n leakage, including authentica­tion mechanisms and fraud prevention practices. Even previously attainable areas of the network have been rendered inaccessib­le.

TELEGRAM LAUNCHES PREMIUM VERSION

Telegram announced the launch of its premium model, which will give users access to ‘exclusive additional features.’

The company also revealed that it had 700 million monthly active users.

Telegram became one of the top five downloaded apps worldwide in 2022, and its growth is solely from personal recommenda­tions as Telegram has never paid to advertise its apps.

In a statement, Telegram announced it had launched ‘Telegram Premium’, a subscripti­on that lets users support the social media app’s “continued developmen­t” to give access to exclusive additional features.

“This will allow us to offer all the resource-heavy features users have asked for over the years while preserving free access to the most powerful messenger on the planet,” explained the firm. “By subscribin­g to Telegram Premium, users unlock doubled limits, 4GB file uploads, faster downloads, exclusive stickers and reactions, improved chat management and a whole lot more.”

According to Telegram, all existing features users have come to expect and rely on for nearly a decade remain free. Non-premium users will be able to enjoy some of the premium’s benefits.

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