TRENDING
Falana, CSOs Declare Nationwide June 12 Protest Over Insecurity, Hardship • Falana, Falz, CSOs Declare Nationwide June 12 Protest Over Insecurity, Hardship • World Blood Donor Day: WHO raises alarm over blood shortage in Africa • Women, Informality, and Finance: Designing Systems That Actually Work • Jonathan: Return of the Shoe Lenders • Oyo kidnapping, rumours, and conspiracy theories • NIMASA Reaffirmed Commitment to Strengthening Seafarers’ Documentation, Maritime Digitalisation • Report: AI-first Telcos Will Lead Africa, Unlock Next Wave of Fintech Growth • AU’S STRATEGIC OPTIONS FOR SUDAN’S REINSTATEMENT • THE REIGN OF KIDNAPPERS • NIGERIA AND THE 2026 HAJJ EXERCISE • Global Educators Forum for Students Launched • Payment Gateway Set as Payment Platform for Businesses • Coy Strengthens Homegrown Talent, Graduates Second Cohort • TRAVAILS OF NIGERIAN SKILLED WORKERS IN THE UK • Firm Deepens Support for Federal Revenue Collection • LOST LESSONS OF JUNE 12 • Emiko Appointed Interim Chairman of DBI Governing Board • Investors Urged to Unlock Lagos Business Potential, Opportunities • AfCFTA Targets $250bn Intra-African Trade, Lauds  LASG on Digital Transformation • Falana, CSOs Declare Nationwide June 12 Protest Over Insecurity, Hardship • Falana, Falz, CSOs Declare Nationwide June 12 Protest Over Insecurity, Hardship • World Blood Donor Day: WHO raises alarm over blood shortage in Africa • Women, Informality, and Finance: Designing Systems That Actually Work • Jonathan: Return of the Shoe Lenders • Oyo kidnapping, rumours, and conspiracy theories • NIMASA Reaffirmed Commitment to Strengthening Seafarers’ Documentation, Maritime Digitalisation • Report: AI-first Telcos Will Lead Africa, Unlock Next Wave of Fintech Growth • AU’S STRATEGIC OPTIONS FOR SUDAN’S REINSTATEMENT • THE REIGN OF KIDNAPPERS • NIGERIA AND THE 2026 HAJJ EXERCISE • Global Educators Forum for Students Launched • Payment Gateway Set as Payment Platform for Businesses • Coy Strengthens Homegrown Talent, Graduates Second Cohort • TRAVAILS OF NIGERIAN SKILLED WORKERS IN THE UK • Firm Deepens Support for Federal Revenue Collection • LOST LESSONS OF JUNE 12 • Emiko Appointed Interim Chairman of DBI Governing Board • Investors Urged to Unlock Lagos Business Potential, Opportunities • AfCFTA Targets $250bn Intra-African Trade, Lauds  LASG on Digital Transformation
Stakeholders: Nigeria Cannot Build Its Digital Future on Borrowed Domain Name
Back to Home

Stakeholders: Nigeria Cannot Build Its Digital Future on Borrowed Domain Name

This Day about 2 hours 2 mins read

Emma Okonji

Worried about the high rate at which Nigerians patronise foreign domain names in the digital space, coupled with the high volume of data hosting outside the shores of Nigeria, industry stakeholders have warned against the implications, which they described as detrimental to Nigeria’s growth in the cyberspace.

The stakeholders gave the warning during the Tech Convergence Forum, organised by the Nigerian Internet Registration Association (NiRA) in Abuja.

Themed: ‘Strengthening Nigeria’s Digital Independence: The Role of Policy, Digital Identity, and .ng for Economic Growth’, the Tech Convergence 3.0 Forum insisted that it was time for Nigeria to own, govern, and aggressively expand its digital identity without further delay.

Among the conference’s most sobering disclosures was the revelation that Nigeria loses an estimated $850 million annually by failing to fully leverage its own digital identity infrastructure.

In his welcome address, President of NiRA, Mr. Adesola Akinsaya, called on Nigerians to begin to consider .ng domain name as their identity in cyberspace, which must be prioritised above foreign domain names.

“Digital independence does not mean isolation from the global internet. It means a secure, resilient, and competitive digital ecosystem that gives Nigeria greater control over its data, infrastructure, digital identity system, and online presence,” Akinsaya said.  

Chairman, Senate Committee on ICT and Cybersecurity, Senator Shuaib Afolabi Salisu, who delivered the keynote address, made reference to the US-China tech war, the EU’s battles with Apple and Google over COVID contact-tracing sovereignty, and Israel’s use of digital infrastructure in warfare. Based on his analogy, he referred to Nigeria’s .ng domain not as a registration technicality but as a matter of national security.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Niger Delta

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.