Digital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Anambra Sweeps Four Awards, Affirms Digital Dominance At NCCIDE 2025
  • At “Celebrating You” 2025, TD Africa Reaffirms Collaboration As Africa’s Digital Power Engine
  • CeBIH Annual Conference 2025: PalmPay’s MD, Nwosu Seeks Deeper Financial Inclusion
  • Inside Amobi Ogah’s ₦1 Billion Mega Empowerment Programme In Isuikwuato/Umunneochi
  • YouTube Unveils Nigeria’s 2025 Top Lists, Launches New Personalized ‘YouTube Recap’ Experience
  • Siemens Healthineers, NSIA Seal 10-Year Partnership To Accelerate Nigeria’s Diagnostic Healthcare Transformation
  • Konga Launches Naija Shopping Festival, Offering Economic Relief And Festive Excitement To Millions
  • Optimus AI Labs Unveils Next-Generation AI Support Services For Nigeria’s Financial Sector
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Digital Times NigeriaDigital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Digital Times Nigeria
Home » AfriTECH 5.0: Rudman Links Local Traffic Exchange Critical For Nigeria’s Digital Future
CONFERENCE

AfriTECH 5.0: Rudman Links Local Traffic Exchange Critical For Nigeria’s Digital Future

mmBy Rommy Imah18 November 2025No Comments3 Mins Read4 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Local Traffic
Mr. Muhammed Rudman, CEO, Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN) addressing the AfriTECH Forum in Lagos
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email WhatsApp

The Managing Director of the Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN), Muhammed Rudman, has underscored the urgent need for Nigeria to strengthen its local traffic exchange ecosystem, describing it as a strategic national imperative for speed, security, and digital economic expansion.

Speaking during a presentation at the African Tech Alliance (AfriTECH) Forum on Thursday last week, Rudman explained that local traffic exchange, where ISPs, content providers, and networks exchange data within Nigeria rather than routing it through international paths, remains the backbone of a modern, efficient internet economy.

He noted that Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) enable this by ensuring that data generated in Nigeria stays within the country, leading to faster connectivity, better user experience, and significant cost savings.

Rudman emphasised that the most visible benefit for users is dramatically reduced latency.

According to him, internet traffic routed abroad often travels through undersea cables to Europe before returning to Nigeria, resulting in delays between 150ms and 300ms. However, with local peering at IXPN, latency drops to as low as 5ms to 10ms.

“This is the difference between a frozen video call and a smooth one,” Rudman said. “For real-time applications like gaming, fintech transactions, and cloud services, milliseconds matter.”

He added that lower latency boosts productivity for businesses and enhances the performance of modern digital tools.

Rudman listed data sovereignty as another critical benefit of keeping traffic local, and explained that when Nigerian data is forced to travel through foreign infrastructures, it exposes the country to unnecessary security and surveillance risks.

“Local traffic exchange keeps Nigerian data protected under Nigerian laws and reduces exposure to foreign interception,” he stated.

READ ALSO  AfriTECH 4.0: Blockchain, AI Offer Africa Unprecedented Opportunities - NITDA DG

He also stressed that maintaining local routing is essential for continuity during cable cuts. “If an undersea cable fails, locally hosted services, such as .ng websites and email, continue running normally,” he added.

Citing a major milestone, Rudman revealed that the Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria has recently crossed 2 terabits per second (Tbps) in peak domestic traffic, and described this as evidence of the rapid localisation of Nigerian internet traffic, with some members already achieving up to 70% traffic localisation.

According to him, this growth has saved the Nigerian economy hundreds of millions of dollars in international bandwidth costs, positioned Lagos as a digital hub for West Africa, and provided the foundation for local innovation in fintech, media, cloud services, and more.

“A fast, cheap, and reliable internet is the platform upon which new digital businesses are built,” he said.

Rudman urged policymakers, telecom operators, businesses, and global content providers to deepen their commitment to local peering, and recommended that government recognises IXPs as critical national infrastructure, mandate public-sector peering, and create policies that incentivise local hosting.

He further noted that while Telecoms and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) peer more aggressively to strengthen the ecosystem, content providers such as Google, Meta, Netflix, and the rest, deploy more local caches.

While urging businesses to choose ISPs that participate in local exchange and adopt Nigeria’s online identity such as .ng, the IXPN Chief Executive posited that local traffic exchange is no longer a technical luxury but a cornerstone of Nigeria’s digital sovereignty, economic competitiveness, and national security.

READ ALSO  ABoICT 2025 Lecture To Explore AI Governance And Standards

“Local traffic exchange is the foundation for a faster, safer, and more sovereign digital future,” he said.

The fifth edition of the Africa Tech Alliance Forum, (AfriTECH 5.0), which held on Thursday, November 13, 2025, at the Oriental Hotel, Lagos, had as its theme, “AI & Sovereign Tech: Building Africa’s Digital Independence.”

#IXPN #Local Traffic #Rudman AfriTECH 5.0
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWhy Konga Yakata 2025 Is Different
Next Article Emadeb E&P Ushers In New Chapter For Indigenous Oil Production With First Oil From Ibom Field
mm
Rommy Imah
  • Website

Rommy Imah is Founder/Editor of Digital Times Nigeria (www.digitaltimesng.com). He has been in active journalism in over two decades with a bias for technology and business reporting. He is particularly passionate about technology and how it can be used to transform human life, businesses and services.

Related Posts

CeBIH Annual Conference 2025: PalmPay’s MD, Nwosu Seeks Deeper Financial Inclusion

11 December 2025

ITREALMS, EPRON Partner Globetech E-Waste Collection Drive Ahead Of Dialogue 2025

19 November 2025

Nigeria Poised To Enact Landmark Digital Economy, E-Governance Bill – VP Shettima

12 November 2025

NITDA DG Highlights Nigeria’s Leadership In Digital Governance, Calls For Inclusive AI Development

5 November 2025

George Agu To Lead Discussions At AfriTECH 5.0

3 November 2025

Digital Africa 2025 Conference Opens In Abuja With Focus On AI Sovereignty

28 October 2025

Comments are closed.

Categories
About
About

Digital Times Nigeria (www.digitaltimesng.com) is an online technology publication of Digital Times Media Services.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Latest Posts

Anambra Sweeps Four Awards, Affirms Digital Dominance At NCCIDE 2025

12 December 2025

At “Celebrating You” 2025, TD Africa Reaffirms Collaboration As Africa’s Digital Power Engine

11 December 2025

CeBIH Annual Conference 2025: PalmPay’s MD, Nwosu Seeks Deeper Financial Inclusion

11 December 2025
Popular Posts

Building Explainable AI (XAI) Dashboards For Non-Technical Stakeholders

2 May 2022

Building Ethical AI Starts With People: How Gabriel Ayodele Is Engineering Trust Through Mentorship

8 January 2024

Gabriel Tosin Ayodele: Leading AI-Powered Innovation In Web3

8 November 2022
© 2025 Digital Times NG.
  • Advert Rate
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertisement
  • Private Policy
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.