The Strange Nature of the Nigerian App Market 110
zacharye writes "With 100 million mobile subscribers, Nigeria stands among leading mobile markets in the world. Its mobile content sector is quite fascinating — this is a market where $100 apps can debut at the No.3 position on Apple's list of top iOS apps. Bible and Quran apps are a major feature of the Nigerian mobile content market. The evergreen 'Message Bible' was launched globally in December 2009 at almost the same time as 'Angry Birds.' While the raging avians achieved greater global success, 'Message Bible' was a smash in Nigeria, recently returning again to No.15 among the top grossing iPhone apps. In the United States, the app didn't even crack the top 600 at its peak."
419 Scam? (Score:3, Insightful)
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And there is no greater con than God, which explains these Bible and Qur'an apps.
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Before C20, I'd agree.
Today, there is no greater con than capitalism.
Which is why anyone feels the need for an iPhone and its apps at all.
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Well Sir, when was is a Nigerian Prince one does have an reputation to maintain and all that.
Toddle Pip.
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Nope. Religion stills takes the cake.
When it comes to bullshit, big-time, major league bullshit, you have to stand in awe of the all-time champion of false promises and exaggerated claims, religion. No contest. No contest. Religion. Religion easily has the greatest bullshit story ever told. Think about it. Religion has actually convinced people that there's an invisible man living in the sky who watches everything you do, every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a special list of ten things he does not want you to do. And if you do any of these ten things, he has a special place, full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish, where he will send you to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever 'til the end of time!
But He loves you. He loves you, and He needs money! He always needs money! He's all-powerful, all-perfect, all-knowing, and all-wise, somehow just can't handle money! Religion takes in billions of dollars, they pay no taxes, and they always need a little more. Now, you talk about a good bullshit story. Holy Shit!
http://www.godlessgeeks.com/LINKS/Carlin_on_religion.htm [godlessgeeks.com]
Re:419 Scam? (Score:4, Informative)
And if you do any of these ten things, he has a special place, full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish, where he will send you to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever 'til the end of time!
Actually, the Christian Hell is the Greek Hades, in which the Greek religion said everyone went no matter what. You had some slight better places within Hades for good people, such as the Elysium Fields, but it was commonly accepted that going to anywhere in Hades wasn't good, and that staying alive was way better, thank you very much. (Olympus, by the way, was the realm of the gods and demigods, not of dead humans.) So, early Christian apologetics at the time went more or less like this:
Christian: "Hey, bro! Do you have a minute?"
Greek: "Yeah, sure. What is it?"
Christian: "I'd like to talk to you about a hot new Eastern religion I follow. But before, please tell me: where do you go after you're die?"
Greek: "Well, to Hades. Everyone knows that."
Christian: "And what if I told you you can actually go to Olympus instead?"
Greek: "What? How come!? That's unpossible!!!11!1!!!"
Christian: "Ah, but it's very possible! Let me tell you about this god of mine..."
PS.: By the way, the Christians don't think certain specific things lead to Hell/Hades. Keeping in line with the Greek religion, it's all of them. Do anything or nothing at all, and you go to Hades anyway. It's merely the standard human afterlife, no strings attached. Heaven/Olympus is an optional alternative.
Re:419 Scam? (Score:4)
You're confusing the Christian doctrine to what Christians believe. I can tell you that they're extremely different for the most part.
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You're confusing the Christian doctrine to what Christians believe. I can tell you that they're extremely different for the most part.
Ah, yes, true enough.
Re:419 Scam? (Score:5, Informative)
I (and Carlin) said Religion, not the Bible. If you think that churches are teaching the Bible, you're sorely mistaken.
More than four-in-ten Catholics in the United States (45%) do not know that their church teaches that the bread and wine used in Communion do not merely symbolize but actually become the body and blood of Christ. About half of Protestants (53%) cannot correctly identify Martin Luther as the person whose writings and actions inspired the Protestant Reformation, which made their religion a separate branch of Christianity. Roughly four-in-ten Jews (43%) do not recognize that Maimonides, one of the most venerated rabbis in history, was Jewish.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/09/28/130191248/atheists-and-agnostics-know-more-about-bible-than-religious [npr.org]
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Martin Luther is not mentioned in the bible. Nor is Augustine of Hippo, Jan Hus, John Calvin, Karl Barth for that matter. Maimonides was not mentioned in the Tanakh or Talemud.
What is your point exactly? Are you trying to point out that Atheists don't understand the concept of "sola scriptura" or what?
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Do you have a link to the specific studies you've conducted to come to that 95% statistic?
Because without any evidence, I don't believe you.
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Wouldn't that only apply to sects that believe in sola scriptura? I've only been educated in one of the religions mentioned, and the basic education had to do a lot more with tradition, ritual, and culture more than purely biblical studies.
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Are you trying to point out that Atheists don't understand the concept of "sola scriptura" or what?
Which, incidentally, doesn't make sense. For you to accept the principle of "sola scriptura" you have to accept an extra-scriptural tradition saying, as its first extra-scriptural commandment: "you shall use this scriptura". And if you accepted one extra-scriptural commandment which by its very nature is clearly superior to the whole of that scriptura, well, why not others?
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Maybe you could try reading the whole report. I just posted the summary.
And no, I (not "Atheists", we're not a club) didn't know the concept of "sola scriptura". I'm from a Catholic country, where such concept isn't well known. That said, I wasn't trying to claim that all those lines refered to the Bible.
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The Bible teaches slavery is okay, it is alright to beat your wife, you can force your daughters to have sex with other men, a raped woman can regain her honor by marrying the rapist, and that homosexuality is immoral. What else do I need to know about its Bronze Age wisdom?
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With this app, you dont have to write this anymore (Score:1)
I write to you because you are a decent person, and I need your help. My father was the minister of agriculture before the civil war broke out. In the civil war, jihadists where after the money my father had secured for building a dam. This money...
No surprise there (Score:5, Informative)
Re:No surprise there (Score:5, Informative)
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Since we are talking about mobile apps, we need to compare smartphone prevalence, not number of mobile subscribers.
In poor countries, mobile phones are very popular for a number of reasons. But most of those phones are not smartphones and won't be unless someone designs a $100 smartphone. (without contract price.)
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Since we are talking about mobile apps, we need to compare smartphone prevalence, not number of mobile subscribers.
In poor countries, mobile phones are very popular for a number of reasons. But most of those phones are not smartphones and won't be unless someone designs a $100 smartphone. (without contract price.)
..practically every phone over 50 bucks can run programs.
there's plenty of smartphone definition filling devices in the 100 bucks range, without contract. nokia has a bunch of models, that's where the bulk of their unit numbers comes. it's pathetically under targeted segment from sw developers today, not least because nokia CEO even likes to pretend they don't exist!
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I don't follow phones too much, but I think the phones you're talking about are more typically called "feature phones". They're not quite as capable as "smartphones", and the apps they run are much simpler. (I'm not even sure if all of them have separate app stores.)
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Brazil 192,787,000 GDP per capita $12,788
Russia 141,927,297 GDP per capita $12,993
India 1,210,193,422 GDP per capita $1,389
China 1,336,970,000 GDP per capita $5,430
Nigeria 162,470,737 GDP per capita $1,452
hell, Indonesia 237,424,363 GDP per capita $3,508
Nigeria is a /market/ sure, but "prime" indicates First to me. It's more middle-pack.
Re:No surprise there (Score:5, Interesting)
And with a GDP per capita of approximately USD 2 600 (a twentieth of the US) very few of those can afford to pay for apps. The fact that the “CFA Exam Audio Series: Level II 2013 priced at $100 placed #3 gives a hint as to how many Nigerians are buying apps.
Elitism (Score:4, Interesting)
You're talking about a country with a per capita income of only $2,600. Clearly only the top 1% buy these phones and thus the expensive apps.
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You're talking about a country with a per capita income of only $2,600. Clearly only the top 1% buy these phones and thus the expensive apps.
You'd be surprised at the profiles of the 'letter from a prince generator' buyers...
Re:Elitism (Score:4, Interesting)
$2,600 of reported income.
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You're talking about a country with a per capita income of only $2,600. Clearly only the top 1% buy these phones and thus the expensive apps.
A phone doesn't cost what you pay for it. You can expect that the price is adjusted to increase the customer base.
In general Africa also have very few landlines (I cannot speak for Nigeria in particular.) and this leads to a situation where a cellphone is pretty darn important. A Nigerian is probably willing to spend a lot more of their income on a cellphone than you would.
Re:Elitism (Score:4, Interesting)
The income distribution in Nigeria is radically different from Europe or America, and a great many Nigerians are outside the monetary economy, and quite a few are reasonably well off, In any case, no one in Nigeria believes statistical data, especially if it originates with the private sector or the government, or anyone else.
Aint no fool (Score:5, Funny)
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For example, in 2006, 61% of Internet criminals were traced to locations in the United States, while 16% were traced to the United Kingdom and 6% to locations in Nigeria.
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(4) The word 'scam' is an english word hence it must have originated from England and other english-speaking countries
The logic of this point defies me, however it's probably worth pointing out that English is the official language of Nigeria!
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Curiously, the only spam I get is this sort of thing, punctuated by a very infrequent resending of exactly the same Chinese programming outfit's solicitation.
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Fact:
97.3% of statements starting with "Fact:" are actually repeated talking points supported by absolutely no real fact.
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(4) The word 'scam' is an english word hence it must have originated from England and other english-speaking countries
Hey, brainiac, I'll have you know that "svindel" is a Scandinavian word, hence it must rather have originated from Scandinavia.
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You have my word.
- Nigerian Prince
P.S. Please help me and my country.
9 out of the 10 highest-grossing iPhone apps in Am (Score:4, Insightful)
"9 out of the 10 highest-grossing iPhone apps in America are free."
it's clear that americans go for nigerian scams easier than nigerians who like to pay up front.
Africa (Score:3)
Re:Africa (Score:5, Funny)
It's also interesting to see how Africa in general seems to be steadily rising towards a more developed continent.
Surely you must be talking about plate tectonics there.
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Nope, we're basically still being raided for raw resources by the rest of the world.
Drugs? (Score:3)
2. Display as proof
3. Recieve drugs
This market needs better control!
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and pay tax? money laundering at the same time.
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Angry Birds and Quran? Hmm.... (Score:1, Funny)
Faith of Nigeria (Score:3, Interesting)
40% of population are Christian and 50% muslin. No surprises as to the fervor of their faith.
Re:Faith of Nigeria (Score:5, Funny)
Those non-Christians aren't going to last long in hell... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslin [wikipedia.org]
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If they mix with other fabrics, they'll definitely end up in hell.
"Deuteronomy 22:11 Thou shalt not wear a garment of divers sorts, as of woolen and linen together."
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The remaining 10% are reportedly Muslix. They'll last a bit longer in hell and put off a sweet, savory roasted oats odor as they cook...
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a) The government of Nigeria itself is a boring, idiotic scam
b) The government of Nigeria is completely irrelevant to most Nigerians, and incapable of enforcing anything significant
Unlike America where:
a) The government of America is a boring, idiotic scam
b) The government of America controls the lives of most Americans, and is capable of enforcing anything it likes.
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And the remaining 10% are lying?
Message bible? (Score:2)
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Some people try to defend it by calling it a 'paraphrase' instead, but that is simply excusing the terrible inaccuracies and even entire verses outright rewritten.
Where exactly do you think The Bible comes from? During the Council of Nicaea, whole sections of the "Bible" (at the time) were discarded or re-written to match the prejudices of the attendees.
Re:Message bible? (Score:4, Interesting)
That is not correct, though that's a common misconception. The Council of Nicaea did not address the question of which books would be included in the Biblical canon. Rather, it concerned the nature of the relationship between God the Father and his son Jesus--it was a dispute between the followers of Athanasius who finally won out, who asserted that they were different persons, and the followers of Arius, who believed that God and the Son were separate entities. It was, of course, a political struggle, and that particular council was not the final word on the matter. There were messy struggles between the two factions (and several others that cropped up over the years) until the Emperor Theodosius I settled the question essentially by fiat near the end of the 4th century. (It was officially settled by council--but strangely enough, the results of the later councils always seemed to match the theological opinion of the reigning Augustus.)
The books that were taken to be part of the canon were largely settled somewhat earlier by consensus between the "orthodox" Christians--the ones that finally won out. Groups of Christians that disagreed were disenfranchised and exiled before the Council of Nicaea, as a result of the legal battles that ensued after the Edict of Milan legalized Christianity. At that time, the courts had to settle which groups were the actual Christians, and thus officially tolerated, and which were the churches of the false Christians that did not fall under the Edict's orders to restore seized property.
There were no Ecumenical Councils that took a position on the canon until the Council of Trent asserted the canonicity of the so-called "deuterocanonical" books--books in the Old Testament which the new Protestants rejected. The Protestants, of course, continued to reject those books, and so most Protestant Bibles fail to include books like Tobit and 1 and 2 Maccabees.
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It wasn't. It was about the color of the silly hats they were supposed to wear in the restaurant at Fuschal (Fiji). Don't get into a Red Dwarf fan war with me, I dare you.
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You dare me to don't get into a war with you?
I dare you to not don't English war go to with me.
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Read again:
(emphasis mine) and learn: "never attribute something to ignorance that can be equally wel
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Educated atheist gets lectured by uneducated atheist about religion. News at 11.
Nigerians need apps? (Score:2)
What, like Farmville, Oil Tycoon, Poacher Paradise, Sim 419, and Love(...Not) Connection?
subject (Score:4, Funny)
"Bible and Quran apps are a major feature of the Nigerian mobile content market."
Worst casual games ever.
What a major blow to religion (Score:2)
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Judging by Mein Kampf, universal access to a book does not mean it is universally read beyond the first few pages. The book (or app) becomes a sort of status symbol, while its true purpose is mostly ignored.
"Status symbol" (Score:2)
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Perhaps, or perhaps something along the lines of carrying a crucifix - replace crucifix with bible app. In either case, the real meaning can easily be ignored or avoided and the object becomes a status symbol, devoid of any true meaning.
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"You don't want people reading that thing. They'll start to see how wacky it is."
Sophisticated atheists would question it, but ignorant tribesmen in mud huts aren't different from its original audience.
Religion sells to the ignorant and the desperately self-deluding. The Third World is infested with it.
So is California (Score:2)
about the same content (Score:1)
And all three apps feature about the same kind of content.
News Flash (Score:2)