Norwegian web innovator Opera has stopped its free data campaigns in Kenya following a regulatory policy aimed at cracking down on advertisements displayed on speed dials, commonly known as bookmarks, within browsers....CONTINUE READING

The just-ended campaign, unveiled four years ago, has seen the multinational give Kenyan users up to 50 Megabytes (MB) of free data every day.

“We had to pause investment and free internet access in Kenya due to the decision of the local authorities to stop advertising on Speed Dials (Bookmarks) within browsers. We are hoping for a solution so that we can once again provide free data to you, our valued customers in Kenya,” said the browser in an update.

PAY ATTENTION:  The Government Suspends The Fertilizer Program Following The Mudavadi And PSs Meeting

In August last year, the Betting Control and Licensing Board (BCLB) ordered certified betting firms to stop displaying advertisements on the speed dial internet feature of the Opera browser without regulatory authorisation.

A speed dial is a visual set of entries compiled from the list of a user’s most visited pages on a given browser. The speed dial entries appear as thumbnails that once clicked, link to the pages.

PAY ATTENTION:  I Will Die A Hero, Show Me No Mercy – Kano Cleric Sentenced To Death by Hanging Tells Court

The BCLB order came on the heels of a petition by the Consumer Federation of Kenya (Cofek), which had implored the licensing board to rein in internet browser providers who had continued to display betting ads against a set of guidelines issued earlier to protect minors.

Opera, which currently boasts of up to 13.5 million users in Kenya who are largely feature-phone users, says in 2023 alone, it provided over four million Gigabytes (GB) of data for free via the campaign, which was an equivalent of about Sh1.6 billion..<<CONTINUE READING>>

PAY ATTENTION:  BREAKING: Police Reveal Report, Primeboy Not Re-Arrested

Discover more from Fleekloaded

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading