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The digital divide is a term used to describe the disadvantage in access to information which people without access to ICT suffer. [1] Nigeria's digital divide refers to the inequality of Nigerian individuals, groups, or organizations with regard to access to Information and communications technology (ICT) infrastructure or to the internet for daily activities. [2]
Several papers in the literature attempt to quantify the economic impact of increased product variety made available through electronic markets. [39] [40] Bar-Isaac et al. (2012) [41] derive a theory of when lower search costs will result in 'superstar' and 'long-tail' effects.
The digital divide in Nigeria is impacted by education, lack of electrical infrastructure, income, and urban drift, as well as a variety of other social and political factors contribute to Nigeria's growing digital divide. [40] [41] There have been efforts to reduce the digital divide by both government agencies and technology corporations. [42 ...
By the 1970s the paper dominated the Nigerian publishing industry with a string of related papers and magazines. [1] By 1975 the Daily Times had grown to a circulation of 275,000 copies while the Sunday Times reached 400,000. No other Nigerian newspaper has achieved such levels apart from MKO Abiola's Daily Concord in the early 1990s. [17]
While this definition is adept at measuring the impact of digitalization on economic growth, it only focuses on the nature of output and offers an incomplete view of the Digital Economy's development. [12] In a bottom-up and broad perspective, the Digital Economy is "all industries using digital inputs as part of their production process".
Daily Times may refer to the following national newspapers: Daily Times (Nigeria) , newspaper published in Nigeria Daily Times (Pakistan) , newspaper published in Pakistan
Daily Times (Nigeria) From a page move : This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed). This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
Online newspapers have also been able to bypass government restrictions because content can be shared without the need for any physical infrastructure. The result has been a disruption of the traditional sources of news which have dominated the media industry. Recent online newspapers include Sahara Reporters, Ripples Nigeria, and Premium Times ...