Gulf News

Silicon Valley looks to Africa as the new tech frontier

GOOGLE PLANS TO OPEN AFRICA’S FIRST ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE LAB IN GHANA’S CAPITAL

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With its colourful hammocks and table tennis table, a new tech hub in the Lagos metropolis wouldn’t look out of place among the start-ups on the other side of the world in Silicon Valley.

But the NG_Hub office is in the suburb of Yaba — the heart of Nigeria’s burgeoning tech scene that is attracting interest from global giants keen to tap into an emerging market of young, connected Africans.

In May, both Google and Facebook launched initiative­s nearby.

Last week, Nigeria’s VicePresid­ent Yemi Osinbajo was in California to court US tech investors for what he said could herald a “fourth industrial revolution” back home. But it isn’t just Nigeria that is piquing the interest of tech giants.

Last month, Google said it would open Africa’s first artificial intelligen­ce lab in Ghana’s capital, Accra.

Demographi­cs are a key factor behind the drive: Africa’s population is estimated to be 1.2 billion, 60 per cent of them under 24. By 2050, the UN estimates the population will double to 2.4 billion.

“There’s a clear opportunit­y for companies like Facebook and Google to really go in and put a pole in the sand,” said Daniel Ives, a technology researcher at GBH Insights in New York.

“If you look at Netflix, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, where is a lot of that growth coming from? It’s internatio­nal,” he told AFP.

Facebook is operating from the NG_Hub as it doesn’t yet have a permanent office in Nigeria.

The company’s Africa head of public policy, Ebele Okobi, said at the opening of the premises that the goal was to cultivate the nascent technology community.

The social network has pledged to train 50,000 people across the country to “give them the digital skills they need to succeed”, she added.

In exchange, Facebook, which ■ currently has some 26 million users in Nigeria, gets more users and access to a massive market to test new products and strategies.

“We are invested in the ecosystem. Just the fact that they are engaging ... that in of itself is a goal,” she added.

Many African government­s have given the tech titans an enthusiast­ic welcome.

In California, Osinbajo the Nigerian government said will “actively support” Google’s “Next Billion Users” plan to “ensure greater digital access in Nigeria and around the world”.

Epocalypse Now

As Africa’s technology sector grows, fuelled by growth in mobile phone use, so too does pressure on government­s to protect its citizens’ personal data.

Osinbajo told tech leaders Nigeria was keen to create the right environmen­t for developmen­t, including for regulation.

But the debate over privacy is muted in many African countries, unlike in Europe, which recently passed tougher new data protection laws.

Facebook has also been at the centre of a storm for failing to protect user data in connection with claims of manipulati­on in the 2016 US presidenti­al election and the Brexit referendum.

Global Justice Now, an antipovert­y group, fears tech companies are being given free rein to create a global surveillan­ce state. “We could find ourselves sleepwalki­ng towards a world in which a handful of tech companies exercise monopoly control over whole swathes of the world economy, further exacerbati­ng inequality between the global north and the global south,” said the activist group in a May 2018 report titled Epocalypse Now.

Renata Avila, from the World Wide Web Foundation in Geneva that campaigns for digital equality, said that has not come to fruition but there were pressing concerns.

 ?? AFP ?? Nigerian Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo (second from right), Nigerian billionair­e Aliko Dangote (left), and Microsoft founder Bill Gates (centre) arrive for the closing ceremony of the National Economic Council (NEC) in Abuja on March 22.
AFP Nigerian Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo (second from right), Nigerian billionair­e Aliko Dangote (left), and Microsoft founder Bill Gates (centre) arrive for the closing ceremony of the National Economic Council (NEC) in Abuja on March 22.

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