Sproxil gets Honorable Mention at IBM SmartCamp Global Entrepreneurship Awards

After a fantastic week in Ireland, we are glad to announce that we received one of the two honorable mentions at IBM’s Global SmartCamp finals. IBM’s corporate strategy to identify startups that are making the planet smarter is rather inspiring, shedding light on some problems largely unknown being solved with intelligent, instrumented and interconnected systems.
In a smarter planet:

  • Loggers will only cut trees they need to fulfill an order. Instead of storing felled trees over large areas of land, they can store their logs as living trees, know exactly which trees will give them the optimal number of planks (of the right dimensions) and cut the trees just in time, not “just in case”. [TreeMetrics]
  • We’ll all be able to get a parking space in no time and know that there’s a free parking spot 3 blocks away. If you are a city official, your parking enforcement staff will be able to give out parking tickets right as the meter expires, with pinpoint GPS accuracy, bringing in more revenue for the state. [Streetline]
  • Medical record software will look as great as iPad applications and healthcare professions will have more timely information to make better diagnoses. Doctors can also benefit from social networks to share information securely and reduce the costs of healthcare. [CareCloud]
  • Scientist will spend fewer frustrating hours locating the numerous images they have taken. CTRL+F may be put on life support. [VisioHost]
  • We still need oil & gas to drive today’s economies. More accurate seismic measurements using a network of portable, smart sensors smaller than a shoebox will help minimize the economic impact of oil exploration and smoothen our transition to a green economy. [World Sensing]
  • You’ll know if your tap water is any good even before a drop gets to your house. [Predect]
  • Care to challenge your energy company when you get suspiciously large bills, similar to what you can do with credit card statements or cell phone bills? Matchbox-sized self-powered snap on sensors will measure every bolt of electricity you use, and will bring transparency to utility bills by itemizing electricity bills. [Panoramic Power]
  • “Knock and listen” is a dinosaur-era way of finding out how much stuff is left in a tank. You’ll never have to use a stick to judge how much oil/feedstock/coolant you have left in a container – you’ll be able to optimize deliveries, minimizing waste. [LindCom]

And lastly, you’ll be smarter than a counterfeiter. [Sproxil]

Congratulations to Streetline (global winners) and all the regional winners for making this world smarter. Everyone benefits on a smarter planet.

FierecePharma: Nigeria is test-bed for online vs. offline fakes detection

NAFDAC continues to pioneer the use of technology to fight counterfeiting in resource constrained environments. FiercePharma recently noted an interesting comparison between online and offline authentication technologies, comparing RFID and Sproxil’s MPA technology. Take a look at the brief article here.

Recent Media Mentions

Last quarter ended with great progress on expanding our efforts across Africa while receiving praise for the milestones Sproxil and its collaborators have already achieved.
The momentum has rolled into this quarter, with some recent media mentions:

  • The ZDNet UK syndication of a Sproxil guest blog post at the UN Dispatch.
  • A mention as an alternative technology solution on FiercePharma Manufacturing‘s article on RFID that highlights some challenges faced in using electronic chips for validating drugs in developing nations.
  • FierceMobile Healthcare titled “U.S. lags behind in mobile health adoption” is worth a read:

    Saxon notes that Interpol and authorities in Zanzibar, Tanzania, last month seized hundreds of boxes of counterfeit drugs. “Using fake drugs has tragic consequences–there is decreased immunity and people lose faith in life-saving medicine,” Saxon says. “Technologists came up with a solution: individuals can verify the authenticity of medicine by sending a text message with an ID number printed on the box of legitimate medicine, then the drug company text back verifying that the medicine is OK to use.”

    Again, behold the power of the text message.

  • SOCAP 10 Headline News, highlighting Sproxil’s recent Commitment to Action at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI).
  • The mHealth Alliance’s mPulse update.

These are certainly exciting times for Sproxil and we thank consumers for their continued texting! Stay safe – avoid fakes.

Sproxil’s African Entrepreneurial Ingenuity Profits Business and Society

Sproxil, Inc. is a privately backed company that provides comprehensive anti-counterfeiting strategies for cash-based societies, including solutions for drug and product verification. Sproxil’s business model has caused it to make major business and social inroads in Africa in a short time.

“The increasing popularity of enhancing global health activities with private sector entrepreneurship signifies a shift in thinking among experts and practitioners,” said Sproxil CEO Dr. Ashifi Gogo. “By wrapping our business model around providing purchase decision support to those with little, we believe they will save money and increase their well-being, bringing new, locally-driven momentum to achieving the MDGs.”

Read more here: http://www.afribiz.info/?p=9098

Sproxil answers UNDP’s Business Call to Action

We have had a tremendous month at Sproxil. We’ve hit some major authentication volume milestones and just this week made two major announcements. Like Pfizer, Vodafone and WaterHealth, we made a commitment to improve the state of healthcare in several communities – in our case, by empowering consumers with tools to avoid getting ripped off.

http://www.maxilamba.com/player.swf

Dr. Ashifi Gogo, CEO of Sproxil, announced Sproxil’s pledge to mobilize US $4 million over the next two years to expand efforts to empower patients and consumers with mobile phones in the fight against counterfeit medication in India and Kenya. It is estimated that over 700,000 people die yearly due to imitation malaria and TB medication alone. By using mobile phones, consumers and patients purchasing medication can text in simple numeric codes placed on the drugs to verify if a medicine is genuine. The text messaging service provides a simple “Yes, genuine” or “No, fake” based on this code. Working with the Nigerian FDA, Sproxil’s codes have already been used on over 1.4 million blister packs in Nigeria, with thousands of users signing up every month.

“The increasing popularity of enhancing Global Health activities with private sector entrepreneurship signifies a shift in thinking among experts and practitioners. Global Health projects reach those with little, and entrepreneurship creates wealth. By wrapping our business model around providing purchase decision support to those with little, we believe they will save money and increase their well-being, bringing new, locally-driven momentum to achieving the MDGs.”

Our work has got even more coverage:

Counterfeiting Gets Addressed by Vatican

Information passed on to us from the Anti-Counterfeit Medical Products Task Force shows a growing concern around counterfeiting.

As recently reported in the Wall Street Journal, getting an exact metric on how challenging counterfeiting truly is can be quite a challenge in itself – it’s a dynamic illegal trade. However, there is something to which we can all agree: it’s a big problem that poses a significant risk to the trust patients have vested in health care systems across the world.

Dan Rather Reports: The Mysterious Case of Kevin Xu

Former CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather makes a trip to Nigeria after investigating the mysterious case of Kevin Xu, a convicted counterfeiter who had a wide array of prescription drugs ready for sale. The new footage shows the global nature of the counterfeit trade, where counterfeiters can take actions that directly affect others they have never met thousands of miles away.

Rather explores the back alleys of a Nigerian marketplace with Dr. Paul Orhii, the Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, or NAFDAC, where often times the small pharmacists are unknowingly pushing bad medicine.

See the press release here, and a short video on YouTube, where a pharmacy selling a fake drug is caught on camera. Don’t forget to watch the show on HDNet this Tuesday, September 14 at 8:00 p.m. ET. There will be an encore at 11:00 p.m. ET the same day, and a downloadable video file in iTunes.