Tag Archive for 'blogging'

This Blog featured in the Business Daily.

This blog was featured in an article on the growing influence of blogging in Kenya in yesterday’s edition of the Business Daily Newspaper. You can read the article, “Kenya has the third largest number of blogs in Africa” in full here>

Day One: Mobile Web East Africa.

Thanks to Erik Hersman for live blogging a good portion of the happenings at the Mobile Web East Africa Conference 2010 today. You can access the same at his blog here>

Interview with AlreadyInspired.com on Blogging.

This is an interview I had last week with AlreadyInspired.com, a blog that covers stories about people who blog worldwide. You can read the interview here>

KTN Bloggers Roundtable with @larrymadowo, @moseskemibaro and @wanjiku

This is the KTN TV Bloggers Roundtable that was held this past week on Friday the 13th November 2009 and hosted by Larry Madowo featuring Rebecca Wanjiku and I. Enjoy the show below on Vimeo!

KTN Bloggers Roundtable meeting with Larry Madowo, Moses Kemibaro and Rebecca Wanjiku from Moses Kemibaro on Vimeo.

You can also download the entire interview in MP4 format below:

KTN TV Bloggers Roundtable with Larry Madowo, Moses Kemibaro and Rebecca Wanjiku

Iran’s Ahmadinejad underestimated the power of social media.

I’m smirking as I post this because the disputed Iranian election results have proved a very valuable point – that social media has most definitely arrived as a mainstream and global political game changer!

Iran’s disputed elections left President Ahmadinejad and the Iranian Government baffled as they tried to stop Iranians from organizing themselves by using social media to become citizen journalists. Even as Iranian and International media we’re essentially blocked from reporting the election aftermath of violence and demonstrations, Iranians, empowered by mobile phones and internet connectivity became the news makers for the rest of the world. They used Twitter, Blogs, YouTube and other social networks to get their message heard – that they we’re not taking the results kindly and would start a revolution using technology.

I hope that African Governments and Politicians will learn from this experience that we are entering a new era where the general citizenry will have a much stronger influence on politics due to the emerging importance and global reach of social media. The online conversation is going on out there and in Africa, which is now the fastest growing market for internet and mobile services in the world. The landing of high speed cables all over the continent over the next year or so will only serve to amplify social media’s political agenda, from the bottom up. This will not be be business as usual for sure.

Ruling on NightJack blogger kills blogging anonymity in the UK.

This is really scary for most of us bloggers, especially in Africa where human rights generally have an appalling record. According to The Times Online, thousands of bloggers who operate behind the cloak of anonymity have no right to keep their identities secret, the High Court ruled yesterday. In a landmark decision, Mr Justice Eady refused to grant an order to protect the anonymity of a police officer who is the author of the NightJack blog. The officer, Richard Horton, 45, a detective constable with Lancashire Constabulary, had sought an injunction to stop The Times from revealing his name. Read the full of the story at The Times here>