Good points GG.
Will all due respect to the technocrats at CA this sort of blanket announcements in the age of Hackers and Identity Theft exposes them to ridicule and a lack of understanding of the current scenario where one's phone can be used or identity hijacked without one knowing. Here's an interesting post from the FTC's Chief Technologist.
Excerpt:-
A few weeks ago an unknown person walked into a mobile phone store, claimed to be me, asked to upgrade my mobile phones, and walked out with two brand new iPhones assigned to my telephone numbers. My phones immediately stopped receiving calls, and I was left with a large bill and the anxiety and fear of financial injury that spring from identity theft. This post describes my experiences as a victim of ID theft, explains the growing problem of phone account hijacking, and suggests ways consumers and mobile phone carriers can help combat these scams.
Read on:-
We expect nothing less from the CA. Please guys upgrade your Regulation Tools from those that are meant to regulate Kenya Posts and Telecommunications Corporation and the Telegram Era to that of BlockChains, Distributed Computing, Mass Identity Theft, The Dark Web, Net Neutrality :-) and the Age of Snowden and Assange.
We expect nothing else guys. Away with this Command and Control Regulatory Thinking and embrace Crowdsourcing and Open Community Engagement.
We can help...
Ali Hussein
Principal
Hussein & Associates
+254 0713 601113
"Discovery consists in seeing what everyone else has seen and thinking what no one else has thought". ~ Albert Szent-Györgyi
Sent from my iPad
Thanks Grace.
Two questions:
1. How do hawkers get these sim cards that they sell on the streets and in traffic?
2. Can guidelines serve as law under which people can be prosecuted?
Best regards
Githaiga, Grace
On Friday, 06-01-2017 at 13:38 Grace Mutung'u (Bomu) via kictanet wrote:
Listers,
" The Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) Friday issued the stern warning, saying every Kenyan is responsible for any use of their mobile number in making calls, sending and receiving text messages as well as any financial transactions.
The regulator says all Kenyans must only use registered SIM cards to transact business as they may be culpable in the event that their number is used in the commission of a crime."
Full story here:
http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Six-month-jail-term-for-Kenyans-whose-phones-are-used-in-crime/539546-3508084-k51vwl/index.html
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