Tag: Social Media

Social Media

  • I am not afraid of home wreckers- Nkechi Blessing Sunday

    I am not afraid of home wreckers- Nkechi Blessing Sunday

    Nkechi Blessing Sunday is one actress who is not afraid to flaunt her man irrespective of what people say.

    Asked if she is afraid of home wreckers, she said: “Me, afraid of home wreckers? Never! Let them come and break us now. Is it that easy to break a home? Well, we both don’t have skeletons in our cupboards; that’s why we are simply doing us and minding our businesses. Social media doesn’t scatter relationships; it’s the lies that partners tell themselves that scatter it. Diggers can dig all they want, we have no nothing to hide”, she told The Sun.

  • I may not expose cheating partner on social media- Biodun Okeowo

    I may not expose cheating partner on social media- Biodun Okeowo

    Popular actress, Biodun Okeowo has averred that if she finds her partner cheating, she may not expose him on social media.

    According to her: “I might not bring the matter to the social media because I don’t like bringing personal issues on the Internet, but never say never. Our emotions could betray us at times even to our surprise, then we react differently to emotional issues.Cheating is a painful thing, especially for me – a very jealous person. But if I find my partner cheating, I’ll forgive him because nobody is perfect. Everyone is a sinner, although we sin differently and ask God for forgiveness, she told The Sun.

     

    However, the movie star said she’s considered taking a break from Nollywood to fully focus on her business. “The year 2021 is almost over, and my greatest achievement is being alive. The year has also taught me some lessons. It taught me to cherish life and be grateful for God’s blessing. Looking back from January till now, I would say I am fulfilled with how far I have come. I have taken a break from movies. I now make more money influencing for brands, and also from my business, compared to what I make from movies.”

     

  • Everything is now being judged by social media appearance -Yul Edochie laments

    Everything is now being judged by social media appearance -Yul Edochie laments

    Actor, Yul Edochie has lamented over the way social media is presently being used in Nigeria.

    Edochie who loves to comment on trending social media issues took to his instagram page on Tuesday, 30th of November to pour his mind.

    The outspoken actor wrote: ”Husband and wife get issue, they bring it to social media to settle. Everybody wants to look successful on social media rather than being successful in real life. Everything is now being judged by social media appearance. We have to watch it, social media will consume us if we are not careful”, he wrote in parts

     

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Yul Edochie had said his father, Pete Edochie made them tough.

    Accoridng to him: “Those days as kids, when we had malaria, my mum could spend so long petting and begging you to take your Nivaquine drugs which were very bitter then.

    “When that style no work, she’ll now send someone to go call Popsi.

    “Omo, once my Dad comes into the room, standing at the door staring at you with his mean face and his belt in hand, bros you go rush your drugs instantly and be happy after taking them.

    “And once he’s around, you must take your drugs with water, no matter how bitter it is,. No drink for you, just water.

    “Popsi was strict to a fault. Him no get time to pet you oo. No nonsense man. Those days we dey fear am. Now I appreciate him so much.

    “He made us tough. Ebubedike 1 of Africa @peteedochie. I love this man. My man forever.

     

  • Social media has killed ‘godfatherism’ in Nigerian entertainment – Mr Funny

    Social media has killed ‘godfatherism’ in Nigerian entertainment – Mr Funny

    Popular skit maker and comedian, Chukwuemeka Emmanuel a.k.a Mr Funny has revealed that social media has killed ‘godfatherism’ in Nigerian entertainment.

    Speaking in a chat with Punch, he said: “I advise up-and-coming entertainers to make good use of social media. Social media has been able to kill “godfatherism” in the business. Right now, not everyone has to climb the stage to make everyone laugh. In the comfort of one’s home, one can make one’s audience laugh and make money from it. I encourage them to hone their creativity as they can be great on their own. Also, they should be humble and not allow fame to distract them”.

    Asked about the first time he did stand-up comedy, the funnyman fondly called ‘Sabinus’ said: “The first time I did a comedy was when I was in secondary school, pupils would gather to watch me perform mimicry of teachers after class. They laughed and encouraged me to study teachers well so they could watch me mimic them. On the other hand, the first time I did a stand-up comedy was at University of Port Harcourt where I schooled. I had a crew with a guy then called Bottle and Strong. We went to a competition but we didn’t win. The crowd chased us from the stage. I would say the first time was hectic but I kept pushing”

  • Signs your phone may have been hacked

    Signs your phone may have been hacked

    Hackers are on the prowl, and while they might be far away, they can be closer than you can imagine.

    Smart hackers don’t get caught, but then, there are ‘our village people’ hackers, who will hold your phone just to get access into your social media accounts or email addresses.

    Smart hackers can break into your device, steal everything they can, and finish without a trace.

    Sometimes they leave a trail of destruction in their wake – malware, weird ads, confused relatives, and even a drained bank account or stolen identity.

    In our clime, smartphones are mostly vulnerable to cyber-criminals. So what if they’ve already broken in, yet you don’t even know they are there?

    Here are clear-cut signs that you have been hacked.

    Programs and apps start crashing

    Now, here is a clear sign that your phone has been hacked. If apps are either crashing or disabled, a nasty virus has likely taken hold of your critical files.

    You may not be able to click on once-reliable apps. In the worst case scenario, ransomware may prevent you from opening your favorite files.

    Your gadget suddenly slows down

    One of the side-effects of malicious software is a slow gadget. Apps get sluggish, or constantly freeze, or even crash. If you start noticing some of these symptoms, your phone may very well have been hacked.

    Malicious software usually runs in the background, secretly eating up your gadget’s resources while it’s active.

    You start seeing strange pop-up ads

    Malware can also add bookmarks that you don’t want, website shortcuts to your home screen that you didn’t create, and spammy messages that entice you to click through. Apart from slowing down your gadget and eating away at your data, these intrusive notifications can also install more malware on your system.

    Criminals can also hijack your phone to modify the ads that you see while browsing. Instead of the regular ads that you should be getting, they can be replaced with inappropriate or malicious ones.

    You’re using way more data than usual

    Every Internet provider has tools that can keep track of your monthly bandwidth consumption. Look at data usage and compare the amount of data used from the prior months. If you notice sudden spikes in your data activity even though you haven’t changed your patterns, then chances are you are infected.

    For example, adware infected gadgets usually perform unsolicited clicks in the background to generate profit for cybercriminals. These stealthy tactics use up bandwidth and the unauthorized data they consume should be fairly easy to spot.

    Unexplained online activity on your device

    Hackers covet your usernames and passwords. These details, coupled with social engineering tricks, can gain access to your banking accounts, your social media profiles, and your online services.

    Keep an eye on your email’s “sent” folder and on your social network posts. If you notice emails and posts that you don’t remember sending or posting, it’s likely that you have been hacked.

    Constantly check your accounts for unauthorized activities.

    Strange 2-factor authentication attempts

    Someone might be sitting miles away and initiating a process to hack into your social media accounts or email addresses. If your accounts are protected with two factor authentication, the account will immediately alert you. If you received strange two factor authentication attempts and you granted access, your account must have been compromised.

    Your gadget suddenly restarts

    Automatic restarts are part of normal computer life. Software updates and new application installs can prompt you to reboot your computer. Your system will warn you when these happen, and you can delay or postpone them. Yet sudden restarts are a different story.

    Watch out for these signs and always keep safe with your digital life.

  • Why I don’t share private affairs on social media -Simi

    Why I don’t share private affairs on social media -Simi

    Sonorous singer, Simi has opened up on why she doesn’t share her private affairs on social media. Simi who captured the struggles women faced in her new single ‘Woman’ made this known during an instagram live session on Thursday.

     

    She said knowing what not to share on social media helps her to set boundaries.

    “It helps me to set boundaries and just keep those things to myself. I might have things that I am doing where it’s only a select few who I know that really care about me even if I wasn’t an artiste that they would know about. I don’t want to be a spectacle, but that is how people see me.This is entertainment. A lot of people don’t have boundaries. People will say things to you, they do things to you like you are not a person. When things happens to a celebrity, somebody says it’s part of what they signed up for, but that’s now what they signed up for. What you signed up for is to sing, that doesn’t mean you signed up to be unhappy. Or you signed up for people to judge you all the time. Don’t say things because it’s your opinion. You don’t have to share it.Social media has obviously broken up that divide. So there is that access. Anybody can drop comments .That is why I share only the things people should know. Because if you don’t have access to certain things, you cannot have opinions about them”.

     

    Speaking further, the mother of one said people sometimes think she talks too much.

    “People think one is talking too much has long as it is something that makes them uncomfortable, but if it is something they like, if it is something they agree with, they will support you”.

     

    The ‘Duduke’ crooner also noted that Nigerian singer, Asa is one of her music influences.

    “Asa opened the door to be able to do things that are outside the box.There was a mainstream sound, which is changing by the way. So listening to her made me feel like I can do anything”.

  • FG cannot allow Twitter, other social media platforms to cause chaos in Nigeria – NCC

    FG cannot allow Twitter, other social media platforms to cause chaos in Nigeria – NCC

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has said it cannot allow Twitter and other social media platforms to cause chaos in the country, stressing that it would be irresponsible for any government to allow unbridled use of the platforms.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the NCC made this known while saying the commission was in a process of adjusting regulatory instruments and management tools to ensure regulations are fit for future imperatives of a robust telecoms sector.

    The Executive Commissioner, Stakeholder Management (ECSM), NCC, Adeleke Adewolu made these known when he spoke at a panel session at the 2021 Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association held in Port Harcourt.

    Speaking during the conference with the theme: ‘Taking the Lead’, Adewolu, who made the declaration in a panel discussion focused on Government Regulation of Innovation and Technology, said, “In specific terms, we are taking action in the following areas:

    “We are adjusting regulatory instruments and management tools to ensure regulations are fit for the future. An example is our ongoing review of the Telephone Subscriber Registration Regulations to strengthen the framework for digital identity; and the review of the Spectrum Trading Guidelines to ensure more efficient use of spectrum.”

    Also, the ECSM said NCC is laying institutional foundations to enable cooperation with other regulatory institutions and international organisations such as the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).

    The Commission, according to Adewolu, is also developing and adapting governance frameworks to enable the development of agile and future-proof regulation; and equally adapting regulatory enforcement activities to the “new normal”.

    He said this is to ensure alignment with the rapid technological changes and innovations that are emerging at a high speed and with sophistication.

    On censorship, particularly tackling illegal and harmful content on over-the-top (OTT) platforms, Adeleke said NCC had to opt for “a middle ground that promotes safe use of digital service platforms without necessarily stifling the exercise of the citizen’s right to free expression as guaranteed in the Nigerian Constitution.”

    He explained that on technology platforms, censorship manifests in three scenarios, namely, restriction of person-to-person communications; restriction of Internet access generally; or restriction of access to specific content, which governments find objectionable.

    This, he said, was pursuant to constitutional provisions such as those in Section 39(3) of the Nigerian 1999 Constitution, as amended, which approves “any law that is reasonably justifiable in a democratic society to prevent the disclosure of information received in confidence, maintaining the authority and independence of courts or regulating telephony, wireless broadcasting, television or the exhibition of cinematograph films.”

    In particular, Adewolu declared that the third scenario is globally recognised as the ideal situation because one of the core responsibilities of government (as enshrined in Chapter 2 of the Nigerian Constitution) is to safeguard the lives and property of citizens.

    Explicating further, Adewolu said that social media platforms allow instant communications without regard for impact or consequences. He insisted that self-regulation is possible, but “as we have experienced over and over again, an ill-considered post on social media can easily incite unrest and crises.”

    He bemoaned the fact that leading social media platforms have demonstrated a rather unfortunate reluctance to moderate the use of their platforms for subversion and harm. “So, we cannot trust them to self-regulate,” he emphasised.

    According to him, self-regulation has not been very effective, and interestingly, “the largest platforms are global platforms and many of them are protected by their home governments.”

    For instance, “Sc.230 of US Communications Act provides immunity to firms like Facebook and Google from responsibility for content disseminated on their media, although they still apply fair usage and community rules which enables them to self-regulate.

    However, as we saw with the case of the former US President Donald Trump – people are often able to disseminate negative content for a while before they are cut off. Mr Trump had over 87 million followers he engaged directly with,” the ECSM stated.

    Another example he cited happened just few days ago when CNN reported that Facebook deliberately failed to curb posts inciting violence in Ethiopia despite the fact that its own staff flagged such posts, and that Ethiopia is listed as a high-priority zone, which has been fighting a civil war for the past one year.

    As Adewolu recalled, the UN Secretary General recently called for the regulation of social media platforms, and even the CEO of Facebook has made similar calls in the past.

    “So, we cannot wholly depend on self-regulation. And whilst we cannot prevent citizens from freely expressing themselves on these platforms, it would be irresponsible for any government to allow unbridled use of these mediated communication to cause chaos and imperil lives and property. Government must act to protect social cohesion and national security,” he counselled.

  • Facebook will not change – Zuckerberg

    Facebook will not change – Zuckerberg

    The founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg has said consequent upon the change of Facebook to Meta, it’s family of apps and their brands will not change.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Zuckerberg made this known on Thursday in his 2021 founder’s letter, stressing that the mission of his company remains the same — bringing people together.

    What this means is that although the parent company, Facebook has changed name to Meta, the name of the Facebook app as we know it will remain the same.

    Zuckerberg himself made this clear in the 2021 founder’s letter in which he stated: “Our apps and their brands aren’t changing… And now we have a name that reflects the breadth of what we do”.

    This goes further to mean that the Facebook app, Messenger app, the Instagram app, WhatsApp, Oculus, Workplace, Portal and Novi are now all bundled under Meta as the parent.

    Instead of having Facebook as the parent company and also having the Facebook app, the CEO has now made it easier to differentiate between the company and the products the company creates.

    “We just announced that we’re making a fundamental change to our company. We’re now looking at and reporting on our business as two different segments: one for our family of apps and one for our work on future platforms.

    “Our work on the metaverse is not just one of these segments. The metaverse encompasses both the social experiences and future technology. As we broaden our vision, it’s time for us to adopt a new brand.

    “To reflect who we are and the future we hope to build, I’m proud to share that our company is now Meta.

    “Our mission remains the same — it’s still about bringing people together. Our apps and their brands aren’t changing either. We’re still the company that designs technology around people.

    “But all of our products, including our apps, now share a new vision: to help bring the metaverse to life. And now we have a name that reflects the breadth of what we do.

    “From now on, we will be metaverse-first, not Facebook-first. That means that over time you won’t need a Facebook account to use our other services.

    “As our new brand starts showing up in our products, I hope people around the world come to know the Meta brand and the future we stand for,” the letter reads in part.

    Read Zuckerberg’s founder letter 2021 below:

    FOUNDER’S LETTER, 2021

    We are at the beginning of the next chapter for the internet, and it’s the next chapter for our company too.

    In recent decades, technology has given people the power to connect and express ourselves more naturally. When I started Facebook, we mostly typed text on websites. When we got phones with cameras, the internet became more visual and mobile. As connections got faster, video became a richer way to share experiences. We’ve gone from desktop to web to mobile; from text to photos to video. But this isn’t the end of the line.

    The next platform will be even more immersive — an embodied internet where you’re in the experience, not just looking at it. We call this the metaverse, and it will touch every product we build.

    The defining quality of the metaverse will be a feeling of presence — like you are right there with another person or in another place. Feeling truly present with another person is the ultimate dream of social technology. That is why we are focused on building this.

    In the metaverse, you’ll be able to do almost anything you can imagine — get together with friends and family, work, learn, play, shop, create — as well as completely new experiences that don’t really fit how we think about computers or phones today. We made a film that explores how you might use the metaverse one day.

    In this future, you will be able to teleport instantly as a hologram to be at the office without a commute, at a concert with friends, or in your parents’ living room to catch up. This will open up more opportunity no matter where you live. You’ll be able to spend more time on what matters to you, cut down time in traffic, and reduce your carbon footprint.

    Think about how many physical things you have today that could just be holograms in the future. Your TV, your perfect work setup with multiple monitors, your board games and more — instead of physical things assembled in factories, they’ll be holograms designed by creators around the world.

    You’ll move across these experiences on different devices — augmented reality glasses to stay present in the physical world, virtual reality to be fully immersed, and phones and computers to jump in from existing platforms. This isn’t about spending more time on screens; it’s about making the time we already spend better.

    OUR ROLE AND RESPONSIBILITY

    The metaverse will not be created by one company. It will be built by creators and developers making new experiences and digital items that are interoperable and unlock a massively larger creative economy than the one constrained by today’s platforms and their policies.

    Our role in this journey is to accelerate the development of the fundamental technologies, social platforms and creative tools to bring the metaverse to life, and to weave these technologies through our social media apps. We believe the metaverse can enable better social experiences than anything that exists today, and we will dedicate our energy to helping achieve its potential.

    As I wrote in our original founder’s letter: “we don’t build services to make money; we make money to build better services.”

    This approach has served us well. We’ve built our business to support very large and long term investments to build better services, and that’s what we plan to do here.

    The last five years have been humbling for me and our company in many ways. One of the main lessons I’ve learned is that building products people love isn’t enough.

    I’ve gained more appreciation that the internet’s story isn’t straightforward. Every chapter brings new voices and new ideas, but also new challenges, risks, and disruption of established interests. We’ll need to work together, from the beginning, to bring the best possible version of this future to life.

    Privacy and safety need to be built into the metaverse from day one. So do open standards and interoperability. This will require not just novel technical work — like supporting crypto and NFT projects in the community — but also new forms of governance. Most of all, we need to help build ecosystems so that more people have a stake in the future and can benefit not just as consumers but as creators.

    This period has also been humbling because as big of a company as we are, we’ve also learned what it’s like to build on other platforms. Living under their rules has profoundly shaped my views on the tech industry. I’ve come to believe that the lack of choice for consumers and high fees for developers are stifling innovation and holding back the internet economy.

    We’ve tried to take a different approach. We want our services to be accessible to as many people as possible, which means working to make them cost less, not more. Our mobile apps are free. Our ads model is designed to provide businesses the lowest prices. Our commerce tools are available at cost or with modest fees. As a result, billions of people love our services and hundreds of millions of businesses rely on our tools.

    That’s the approach we want to bring to helping to build the metaverse. We plan to sell our devices at cost or subsidized to make them available to more people. We’ll continue supporting side-loading and streaming from PCs so people have choice, rather than forcing them to use the Quest Store to find apps or reach customers. And we’ll aim to offer developer and creator services with low fees in as many cases as possible so we can maximize the overall creative economy. We’ll need to make sure we don’t lose too much money along the way though.

    Our hope is that within the next decade, the metaverse will reach a billion people, host hundreds of billions of dollars of digital commerce, and support jobs for millions of creators and developers.

    WHO WE ARE

    As we embark on this next chapter, I’ve thought a lot about what this means for our company and our identity.

    We’re a company that focuses on connecting people. While most tech companies focus on how people interact with technology, we’ve always focused on building technology so people can interact with each other.

    Today we’re seen as a social media company. Facebook is one of the most used technology products in the history of the world. It’s an iconic social media brand.

    Building social apps will always be important for us, and there’s a lot more to build. But increasingly, it’s not all we do. In our DNA, we build technology to bring people together. The metaverse is the next frontier in connecting people, just like social networking was when we got started.

    Right now our brand is so tightly linked to one product that it can’t possibly represent everything we’re doing today, let alone in the future. Over time, I hope we are seen as a metaverse company, and I want to anchor our work and our identity on what we’re building towards.

    We just announced that we’re making a fundamental change to our company. We’re now looking at and reporting on our business as two different segments: one for our family of apps and one for our work on future platforms. Our work on the metaverse is not just one of these segments. The metaverse encompasses both the social experiences and future technology. As we broaden our vision, it’s time for us to adopt a new brand.

    To reflect who we are and the future we hope to build, I’m proud to share that our company is now Meta.

    Our mission remains the same — it’s still about bringing people together. Our apps and their brands aren’t changing either. We’re still the company that designs technology around people.

    But all of our products, including our apps, now share a new vision: to help bring the metaverse to life. And now we have a name that reflects the breadth of what we do.

    From now on, we will be metaverse-first, not Facebook-first. That means that over time you won’t need a Facebook account to use our other services. As our new brand starts showing up in our products, I hope people around the world come to know the Meta brand and the future we stand for.

    I used to study Classics, and the word “meta” comes from the Greek word meaning “beyond”. For me, it symbolizes that there is always more to build, and there is always a next chapter to the story. Ours is a story that started in a dorm room and grew beyond anything we imagined; into a family of apps that people use to connect with one another, to find their voice, and to start businesses, communities, and movements that have changed the world.

    I’m proud of what we’ve built so far, and I’m excited about what comes next — as we move beyond what’s possible today, beyond the constraints of screens, beyond the limits of distance and physics, and towards a future where everyone can be present with each other, create new opportunities and experience new things. It is a future that is beyond any one company and that will be made by all of us.

    We have built things that have brought people together in new ways. We’ve learned from struggling with difficult social issues and living under closed platforms. Now it is time to take everything we’ve learned and help build the next chapter.

    I’m dedicating our energy to this — more than any other company in the world. If this is the future you want to see, I hope you’ll join us. The future is going to be beyond anything we can imagine.

  • Social media, Africa Magic cancelled me-Ike Onyema

    Social media, Africa Magic cancelled me-Ike Onyema

    Ex- Big Brother Naija housemate Ike Onyema has accused Africa Magic of cancelling him.

    The reality star made the accusation in an Instagram post on Wednesday.

    According to him, the organisation cancelled him because he refused to accede to their will.

    “Social medial has tried to cancel me so many times since BBN. Africa Magic cancelled me because I refused to kiss a$$ now but I’m happy now to share the music I have been working on for so long.

    “I haven’t been back home in over 3 years chasing this dream praying to become a success and I refuse to give up. Guys don’t let this one flop honestly if this music doesn’t work out it’s back to the streets,” he wrote.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that in an interview, Ike recently spoke on why his relationship with Mercy Eke crashed.

    In an interview with Vanguard TV, he noted that he had been in a couple of relationships but his relationship with Mercy was not appealing as millions of people had opinions about them.

    “I’ve been in a couple of relationships, but this one (with Mercy) wasn’t it; having a relationship where people have a million opinions just isn’t it

    “I will like to date a lady that is intelligent, pretty much independent and not so freaked about social media. I believe social media brings a lot of negative vibes from people when it comes to relationships,” he said.

     

  • Keep your marriage off social media – Caroline Danjuma

    Keep your marriage off social media – Caroline Danjuma

    Nollywood actress, Caroline Danjuma has said that marriage should only be discussed on social media when domestic violence is involved.

    Danjuma made this known on her Instagram page as she warned couples to stop taking their marital issues to social media.

    Caroline also said that marriage is a sacred institution and should be respected.

    Her post read, “We all make mistakes and learn. The only time to speak out in public is if domestic violence or extreme emotional abuse is involved and you need help. Respect this scared institution, you are not fighting one another but the devil.”

    The role interpreter said also prayed for couples who are going through a marital crisis in their homes.

    “I pray every union passing through troubles receive the grace and love of Christ. Let there be healing and songs of thanksgiving in your homes, may the Lord help you to forgive and love again. May your marital secrets never leave your home,” the Ex-beauty queen wrote.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Danjuma ended her 10-year-marriage to the younger brother of Nigeria’s former defence minister, Gen. TY Danjuma, in 2016 amid allegations of infidelity.