 Nigeria can rely on technology to grow our economy, but the federal government must create the enabling environment for technological driven business to thrive. There's also consensus at the IOT West Africa Dirtwork Conference, an exhibition of correspondent Lavi Kukuyoedokon reports. These are young men and women breaking grounds in the technology space and ready to do more. Exploring and highlighting game-changing technologies, Dazzling Innovations is the next move through this conference. There's a gradual build up. We're not talking about very, very sophisticated stuff here. We're just talking about guys building technologies that will allow Iyam Muhammad to just manage a small shop and receive payments and track who owes her what. Do you understand me? So that technologies are enabling the under becoming cheaper and more accessible. You take skills you can acquire today will be there for life, but the hard you have today. For instance, if you put diesel in your generator, you use it after some hours or some days, but the skill that you put into yourself will last for you forever. We just have it in us that we want to solve problems. We want to find legitimate means to make ends meet and there are a lot of problems that could be solved in the area of telecom, in the area of commerce, in the area of education that people are trying to solve. So in the next 10 years, we're going to see a lot of investment. We're going to see a lot of innovative solutions coming in. Stakeholders praise the Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit in the years, though express concern about the safety of the cyborg government actually needs to encourage the industry players to group themselves into specific groups or into, you know, professional groups that can be easily accessed, that they can have a conversation in. Okay, government wakes up today. We want to come up with a regulatory framework for IOTs in Nigeria. Where are the people? It's actually going to be achieved by collective responsibility of everybody and everybody to understand that it's very important for us to learn how to stay safe in the suburbs space. So we are actively collaborating with schools, secondary schools, universities in order to create this awareness and we're going to understand how they need to stay safe in the suburbs space and how companies data, how they can protect their privacy and the rest of them. They hold strongly that technology holds the future of Nigeria's economy with the right framework in place. All do not always be there, but technology will be there. Just like power is relevant today, technology will be relevant tomorrow. The three-day conference organized by Internet of Veins IOT has industry innovators sharing expertise on emerging trends to guide the West African technology users to the right digital transformation. From Lagos, live Ikuku Uyedoku. Plus TV news.