Coping with onine abuse in South Africa

Online abuse is becoming more and more prevalent. The rise of technology and how integral it is becoming part of our lives is indisputable. In South Africa we now have over 5.3 million Internet users and approximately 33 million cellphones users of which over 9 million are mobile Internet users. Think about how many times when you are having a conversation with someone and their phone rings. They will most of the time stop talking to you to answer the phone. And the same goes for SMS messages being sent inside movie theatres or in meetings or in the classroom.

Online harassment is on the increase. There are increasing amounts of cyber-bullying taking place where teenagers purposefully do or say nasty things which is intended to hurt other children.

Here is some resources:

Addiction Action Campaign – People Before Profit Protest March

Warren Whitfield Addiction Action Campaign protest march Sandton SABMillerThis is may be the most important march we’ve had in South Africa since 1913 when Gandhi organized to protest the restrictions that had been imposed on the Indian population of South Africa — the first massive civil disobedience campaign.

I am bringing into the AAC aspects of online addiction that includes Internet pornography, online gambling, social networking aka Facebook, MXit, cellphone addictions and its results. After interviews with Dr Anwar Jeewa on Channel Islam and over 200 talks at schools across South Africa, I know its real. Dr Helgo Schomer @ UCT and Dr Andrew Thatcher @ WITS will be able to confirm this.

Anyway please see the press release for Friday’s protest action. I will be there, along with Warren Whitfield, the Chairman of the Addiction Action Campaign to answer any and all questions from the press with a live press conference immediately after the march and handover of the memorandums to SABMiller & their cadre ;-)

  • I’m available on 074 124 1696 to chat before Friday..

Warm regards
Ramon
p.s. Ek kan onderhoude doen in Afrikaans, geen probleem!

On Friday 30 October 2009, the Addiction Action Campaign will be holding its first protest action in SANDTON.

“Is it right to profit from addiction?”

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Join Cyril Ramaphosa on air to raise funds for the JPO

Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra patron Cyril Ramaphosa will host a live fundraising phone-in programme on Classic FM on Thursday, 22 October 2009 between 8pm and 9pm.

People may not be aware that Ramaphosa, a prominent businessman and political luminary, is also a supporter of the arts – particularly the JPO. On the evening of the 22nd, he will be lending his personal charm and professional clout to help the orchestra secure funding through 2010.

“I am thrilled to be able to host a phone-in radio programme in support of this wonderful, highly skilled and dedicated orchestra of top-notch musicians,” says Ramaphosa.

“In addition to their soul-elevating performances, the JPO does fantastic work in developing promising young musicians and holding outreach programmes in the townships. I would like to encourage – no, challenge – businessmen to put their money where their mouth is during the live phone-in, and do their bit to ensure that arts and culture continues to flourish in South Africa.”

Being entirely self-sustaining, the JPO’s continued existence is reliant on donations from members of the public, proceeds from ticket sales and corporate sponsorship.

These various sources of funding enable the orchestra to invite international artists to perform in South Africa, in addition to offering varied and high-calibre programmes during its four six-week symphony seasons every year. The JPO also regularly lends its players’ musical mastery to operatic, ballet and Education and Development productions.

Established in 2000 following the demise of the National Symphony Orchestra, the JPO has made great strides in its quest to be nationally and internationally recognised as South Africa’s leading philharmonic orchestra. A significant number of the 48 symphony concerts it presents annually are broadcast on Classic FM.

The live phone-in fundraiser on Classic FM 102.7 on the evening of 22 October is aimed at helping it carry on its good work, providing employment for classical musicians, developing and educating up-and-coming talent – and, of course, delighting lovers of fine music.

Should you wish to participate in the on-air fundraiser, the studio phone is 082 234 4000, or phone (011) 789-2733.

CSSA Event – The Dangers of Children Using the Internet and Other Technologies

Computer Society SouthAfricaIn a perfect world, the Internet would automatically shield children from contact with questionable content and dangerous people. Unfortunately, nobody exercises complete control over the online world in any centralized manner. What is considered illegal in one country may not even be considered an issue in another. This danger has been extended to free-for-all mobile IM chatrooms without moderation or age restrictions. How do we as parents, educators and IT Professionals equip ourselves for this crisis. How do we identify and deal with problems before our children are exposed to dangerous situations.

The Panel:

Adrie Stander is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Information Systems at the University of Cape Town since 1999. He has more than 30 years experience in the computer industry and has done research in many diverse areas such as the psychological aspects of computer use and data communications. He is currently responsible for the first computer forensics course to be offered by a South African university.

Naomi van Wyk is a Clinical Psychologist and works in the field of parent education. She runs a private practice in Stellenbosch and presents workshops to parents and teachers on the prevention of child sexual abuse. She has written a book about the subject which is soon to be published called Safe and Sure.

Pieter Nel started dabbling with software and electronics as a teenager in the mid-eighties. After postgraduate studies, he spent a number of years with Flextronics Design working on projects for companies such as Intel and Thales before joining MXit’s original mother-ship, Swist, where he managed software projects for the local mobile operators. He joined MXit in May 2008 as Chief Technology Officer and life began in earnest.

The presentations will be followed by a Q&A session.

Who should attend?

This presentation will be of value to educators, parents and all concerned Professionals in the ICT sector.

Date: 20 August 2009

Time: 15:00 sharp to end 18:30

Venue: The Nassau Centre, Groote Schuur High School, 76 Palmyra Rd, Newlands (map will be provided on booking)

Parking: Available on grounds

Cost: R30.00 per person; R20.00 Groote Schuur School staff. BOOKING IS ESSENTIAL.

The Q & A. will be followed by an opportunity to network. Light refreshments will be provided.

To Book: Info@interware.co.za or Lilian at (021) 447-8450

By: 18 August 2009 This event has been kindly sponsored by PANDA

Democratic Alliance leads elections race in Internet performance

An in-depth analysis of the Internet strategy of the main political parties in South Afrca’s 2009 general elections reveals that the Democratic Alliance has a substantial lead in online performance over its rivals. The African National Congress comes in a distant second, narrowly ahead of the Congress of the People. The United Democratic Movement and Independent Democrats, in turn, are well behind COPE, while the Inkatha Freedom Party trails so far behind, its web presence is described as “damaging”.

The first formal web site benchmarking survey of South African political parties was released today by World Wide Worx, which uses its Webagility system to evaluate and benchmark web site usability and strategy of companies, organisations and institutions in South Africa and globally.

The Webagility system breaks the analysis down into several modules, including usability, social media, campaign effectiveness, and content strategy. Each module contains up to 30 micro-elements, which are each assigned a score, providing a detailed measure of overall effectiveness of online presence. Webagility has been used to analyse sites for clients as diverse as major retailers, banks, bookstores, the City of Jo’burg, SA Revenue Services, the SA Institute of Chartered Accountants and Wits University.

“The DA site achieves only an average score from a usability point of view, but their content strategy sets them apart,” says Steven Ambrose, manage director of WWW Strategy, which conducts the Webagility analyses on behalf of World Wide Worx. Ambrose heads up the Webagility team of analysts. “Benchmarked against global best practise, the DA scores 81% on content strategy, against 64% by the ANC and 60% by COPE.”

In usability, the DA score drops to 69%, while the ANC is consistent at 63% and COPE drops to 57%. Campaign effectiveness sees similar ratings for the DA, at 65%, while the ANC scores only 48%, COPE 45% and the UDM comparing well with these at 43%.

The much vaunted use of social media like blogging, Facebook and YouTube by the political parties is revealed by the analysis to lag behind global best practise. While the DA still leads substantially here, its benchmarked score drops to 69%. The ANC plummets to 47% and COPE 43%.

“The difference lies not so much in what they are doing, but in how they are doing it,” says Ambrose. “The ANC have clearly invested heavily in their online presence, and their YouTube site looks most impressive at first sight. But it is put to very poor use, with uninspiring content, and little opportunity for voter engagement. The DA, on the other hand, has spent less money on the Internet, but scores far higher due to the direct engagement of its own representatives. Their blogs are not only relevant, but interesting, so it comes across as real engagement rather than a public relations exercise.”

The overall Webagility scores of the major parties, benchmarked against global best practice, are:

  • DA: 76%
  • ANC: 61%
  • COPE: 56%
  • UDM: 43%
  • ID: 32%
  • IFP: 23%

“The poor performance of the IFP web site, which our system characterises as ‘potentially damaging’, is a reflection of the reality that the IFP does not expect its target voter audience to be found among Internet users,” says Arthur Goldstuck, MD of World Wide Worx. “It is probably not vote-effective for them to spend too much energy online. The ID’s performance is more a reflection of poor understanding of online strategy, with its leader famous for her attacks on blogs.”

Goldstuck adds that the DA has clearly done its homework on the Obama campaign in the USA, which set the standard globally for embracing the Internet in political campaigning.

Says Goldstuck, “We have nothing like that kind of sophistication in South Africa, but lessons are being learned fast.”

A PowerPoint presentation summarising the Webagility analysis can be downloaded at the World Wide Worx web site.

Media contacts

· * For comment on this press release, please contact Steven Ambrose, MD of WWW Strategy, on 011 782 0045 or 083 601 0333, or e-mail steven@wwwstrategy.co.za

· * For further information, please contact Arthur Goldstuck, MD of World Wide Worx, on 011 782 7003 or 083 326 4345, or e-mail arthur@worldwideworx.com

Who's who in the non-white Web 2.0 South African Zoo

Mandy de Waal, a freelance journalist, wrote this article on ITWeb, which I found very offensive. The main reasons I found it distasteful is the most obvious one i.e. it is simply an example of lazy journalism. She interviewed 11 people, all white, who their Web 2.0 dream team is. Maybe if she asked one non-white person she could still have made her point without having to call it a white boys club.

Anyway here’s my dream team of non-white web 2.0 or social media experts…

Khaya Dlanga youtube video blogger Khaya Dlanga: A video blogger on Youtube has over 10,000 subscribers on his Youtube channel. I first met him at the annual Digital Citizen Indaba, a blogging conference, at Rhodes University last year. In his day job he works for an advertising agency, according to his LinkedIn profile, the Jupiter Drawing Room, one of the top agencies in South Africa. Another feather in his cap is that Khaya is one of the contributors to the Mail & Guardian’s Thought Leader group blog. What I would like from Khaya is to produce a weekly video blog for myself and in turn I would like to help commercialise his videos. There is a great potential to create a DVDs (like the Ask a Ninja DVD) based on his videos and sell this online, direct to home or to video rental chains in South Africa. His outstanding quality is his sharp sense of humour and wit.

Rafiq Phillips SEO guru bloggerRafiq Phillips: Cape Town based SEO expert, hardcore technology blogger and Internet evangelist blogs at WebAddict. He is the co-creator of iDrive a portal for finding driving schools in South Africa. Both of us represented South Africa as bloggers at the TEDGlobal Conference in Tanzania last year. The iDrive platform was accessible on MXit until recently. The innovation from him has led to him being featured on a Carte Blanche segment in March 2008. Rafiq would be the obvious person to run search engine campaigns and also act as the lead blogger to drive traffic and attention.

Charles Ash bruin-ou.com webmaster (more…)

TEDAfrica 2008 suspended, a temporary setback for South Africa

According to an email from Chris Anderson, the curator of the TED Conference, TEDAfrica due to be held in Cape Town at the end of September 2008 has been suspended. This news has also been posted on the TED Blog where I have already posted a comment and I encourage you to do so as well. This is a sad moment for Africa and more so for South Africa, which would have been the 2nd country to host the amazing TED Conference.

Last year I was blessed and honoured to attend TEDGlobal in Tanzania as a Blogger and Fellow. There were many, many connections and friendships established at this conference. George Ayittey described it as the most important conference about Africa at the beginning of the 21st century. And I agree wholeheartedly with him on this statement because never before has so many experts NOT politicians come together in support of Africa. There was a real sense of urgency among the speakers as the the aid vs investment debated heated up over the four days in Arusha.

Anyway why is this a setback for South Africa? We need to shift the focus from all the crap from Eskom, crime, Jakob Zuma, Zimbabwe and more. TEDAfrica in Cape Town would have been a dream come true for me because it represent an affirmation in our country and continent’s direction. The momentum built with the launch of the Next Einstein event in Cape Town, is a testament to the African’s ability to cope under the most severe circumstances. The students from the AIMS 2008 graduation represent the hope for future generations. So I held my breath when I first heard of the TEDAfrica announcement. But now we need to stand together more than ever before. The people on the TEDGlobal group on Facebook and members of the TED discussion group on Google need to find ways of following up and following through with promises made in Tanzania.

Remember we are the Cheetah’s and not the Hippo’s! Cheetah’s do not ask for permission from government to create value and opportunities for others. We are entrepreneurs and we stand on our own feet and make our own decisions. My dream would be that we can finally launch the annual African Bloggers Conference and an bi-annual TEDAfrica, maybe hosting the first one again, as originally planned in Cape Town in September 2009. In the mean time spread the word about TED Talks.

What’s the purpose of getting engaged before marriage?

I have never been married so this post is completely biased. However, I’ve been to many weddings like most people have in their lifetimes. And in 3 cases I have been best man, twice to cousins and once to a best friend from school. I’m not sure if they were engaged but I assume they were because it’s such an excepted part of the wedding rituals. Anyway I received the following email from an American lady…

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Spending the Easter Weekend with Paris Hilton in South Africa

Paris Hilton Jakaranda children's home in Pretoria South AfricaUS socialite Paris Hilton is currently visiting South Africa with her boyfriend, Benji Madden. She has been on the local news and some photographs have already surfaced of Paris playing with school children from the Jakaranda Kinderhuis school in Pretoria. Her boyfriend Benji Madden and his band, Good Charlotte, are to perform at My Coke Fest over the Easter weekend.

As I noticed Paris on SABC television news I wondered if there’s anyone in the world right now who is better at self-promotion than Paris Hilton? I don’t think so because she just keeps popping up. It’s almost like you cannot get away from her brazen image, not even here at the bottom tip of Africa ;-)

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How to avoid phishing emails from South African banks

For the first 8 years of my professional career I specialised in information security or Internet security working for various ISPs and banks in South Africa, England and United Arab Emirates. The particular focus I had was looking after the network security and managing the firewalls. So for the most part my work was extremely technical and I implement many security systems from the smallest companies to very large corporates. At some point I worked for Deloitte and gained an appreciation for auditing computer systems, ethical hacking as well as producing management reports assessing the major risks of the computer system in terms of the business imperatives. I met many weird and interesting characters who were either black hat or white hat hackers over the years. One of them is a very good friend who shall remain unnamed and once hacked into the company who hosts the email and websites for the ANC, Cosatu and the SACP.

Anyway the phishing emails, which are now common from local South African banks, came through from international banks as far back as 5 years ago. Back in 1997 I worked for Internet Solutions who implemented both Nedbank and First National Bank’s Internet banking products and this gave me the inside scoop like nothing else. I immediately adopted online banking being a long-term client of FNB because my mother worked for them for last 32 years. As a long time user of online banking I have seen various trends come and go but this phishing trend is only growing bigger and more pervasive. And I can say with 100% confidence I’ve never been duped into following up on phishing requests. It’s really simple for because I have 15 years of experience on the Internet I can recognise these fake emails a mile away. How do you recognise these phishing emails from your local South African bank?

First National Bank South Africa phishing email

Firstly these emails are coming through much more frequently than your bank bothers to communicate with you. If banks only began communicating with educational marketing messages they could have avoided some of the embarrassment they have since faced.

The basic thing to do here is to look at the link for the website. So even though the link above said www.online.fnb.co.za the actual link would be more like http://somespammerwebsite/fnb – what you need to do is look at if the link address (while hovering your mouse over the underlined, linked text) is the same as your bank’s actual website domain e.g. fnb.co.za, absa.co.za, nedbank.co.za or standardbank.co.za!

I have also noticed phishing emails coming from Investec and other financial services companies, NOT just the banks.

When you’re in doubt delete all such email requests. And an even better solution is to use your email software like Microsoft Outlook, Mozilla Thunderbird or Gmail to list them as spam, if the email software has not done so already. Finally I highly recommend you read up on the consumer advice from the Anti-Phishing Working Group and apply all the same to South African Internet experience.

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