Synchronoss Announces Strong Messaging Platform Growth in Asia Pacific Fueled by Advanced Messaging

Global Service Providers Utilizing Synchronoss Platforms to Deliver Value-Added Services to Tens of Millions of Subscribers

BRIDGEWATER, N.J., Feb. 27, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (“Synchronoss” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq: SNCR), a global leader and innovator in cloud, messaging and digital products and platforms, today announced strong growth in Asia Pacific, primarily fueled by growth in its Advanced Messaging business. Through partnerships with global service providers, specifically in Japan, the company continues to expand its global footprint, supporting tens of millions of subscribers in the region.

In Japan, Rich Communications Service (RCS) technology enables consumers to engage with brands and businesses safely and securely, and provide the best user-experience for the Japanese customers. Through a long-standing partnership with WIT Software, Synchronoss Advanced Messaging is enabling mobile operators NTT DOCOMO, KDDI, and SoftBank to deploy a cross-operator RCS experience supporting 32.5 million subscribers.

“We are delighted to witness the unique success of the +Message service in Japan based on the WIT RCS messaging platform, and together with Synchronoss we are ready to leverage our common offer of rich messaging for other carriers that want to generate new revenue opportunities,” said Luis Silva, CEO at WIT Software.

Another prominent service provider in Asia Pacific recently announced a major milestone, delivering email services to over 50 million users. The end-to-end email platform, powered by Synchronoss Email Suite and the Mx9 core messaging platform, is highly scalable and ensures security and data privacy for its subscribers.

“The recent deployments and milestones are fueling the momentum of our Messaging platforms in the Asia Pacific region,” said Jeff Miller, President and CEO of Synchronoss. “This year, we look forward to working with our strategic partners, especially WIT Software, to deliver innovative messaging solutions that enable new ways to connect, collaborate, engage, and transact business.”

About Synchronoss
Synchronoss Technologies (Nasdaq: SNCR) builds software that empowers companies around the world to connect with their subscribers in trusted and meaningful ways. The company’s collection of products helps streamline networks, simplify onboarding, and engage subscribers to unleash new revenue streams, reduce costs and increase speed to market. Hundreds of millions of subscribers trust Synchronoss products to stay in sync with the people, services, and content they love. Learn more at www.synchronoss.com.

Media Relations Contact:
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Investor Relations Contact:
Matt Glover / Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com

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Daniel Teklehaimanot is back, in Tour Du Rwanda

For the world of cycling, he was missing, evaporated since the brutal end of his professional career in Europe. More than 4 years after his last international race, Daniel Teklehaimanot is back, in Rwanda, where he won 5 continental gold medals, in 2010, at the very beginning of a unique career.

Daniel Teklehaimanot will remain the first professional rider from Black Africa, the first to participate in the Tour de France (in 2015, with his compatriot Merhawi Kudus), the first, again, to wear a distinctive jersey on the Grande Boucle, the jersey of the best climber, that same year. A true living legend in Eritrea, the great Daniel finally explains his years of silence and evokes, at the age of 34, his intact appetite for competition and the sport of cycling.

RFI: It seems that you forgot the pins to hang your bib before the first stage. It’s true ?

Daniel Teklehaimanot: (He laughs) No, it’s not true, it’s a joke! I haven’t lost my touch, I’m still a cyclist. We may not know it in Europe, but I resumed competition a little less than 2 years ago now, at home, in Eritrea, in local races. I never wanted to stop.

And yet, you left cycling aside, at some point?

I didn’t have much choice. At the end of my contract with Cofidis, in December 2018, I did not receive any offers, I suddenly found myself without a team. It was hard, very hard: I wanted to continue, I still had the motivation, the form, but nobody wanted me, so, yes, at one point, I completely withdrew from the professional world, from social networks, of all that… I drove less and less, sometimes several times a week, sometimes just on Sundays, between my home and the capital, Asmara. I then tried to take up duathlon, a sport that combines cycling and running, but hey, cycling is my job, I always had that in mind.

You feel a certain bitterness about the end of your professional career in Europe. Yet you are not totally forgotten…

(He closes) Really? By who ? I’m still sad, it’s not what I wanted, but today, I’m making my way. Maybe I wasn’t doing all the right things besides cycling. The aspect of communication, social networks, etc. it’s not my thing. I prefer to speak with the legs. I did what I had to do, as I wanted to do, I have no regrets. And then I’m not talking about my career in the past tense, I’m not yet a historical figure, I’m looking ahead.

So you have resumed competition at the local level?

Yes, I found myself in front of kids and I trained hard to be at the level, I needed to be pushed to surpass myself to get results. I didn’t just want to hang a bib with the name “Teklehaimanot” on it.

This selection for the Tour of Rwanda, you owe it not only to your status, you had to prove that you were still in good shape?

Yes, and so much the better. If I didn’t have the legs I would have stayed home, there are plenty of good runners in Eritrea. (A little offended). They are very strong, these young people, but don’t worry, I manage to follow them. You may think I’m finished, but I still feel strong.

You are in Rwanda in the role of road captain of the national team, but are you also thinking of playing your card?

If the opportunity arises, if I can take a good breakaway, why not, but the idea is first to stay with my young teammates. For them, it’s the first stage race, so they need a guide. I give them very simple instructions: stay focused at all times, pay attention to running movements, etc. Then, it is their talent that must speak.

Speaking of talent, seeing your more and more numerous “little brothers” in the professional teams, should that make you happy?

Ah yes… and unlike them, I wasn’t so lucky, during my first professional years, to have other Eritrean or African riders alongside me in the peloton. Today, Henok (Mulueberhan, double African champion) or Biniam (Girmay, winner of the Belgian classic Ghent-Wevelgem and of a stage of the Tour of Italy last year) are stronger than me, but ‘to have paved the way is really rewarding, though.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Reuters.com: Exclusive: Ethiopia seeks to end U.N.-ordered probe into Tigray war abuses

Ethiopia is courting support for a motion to cut short a U.N.-mandated inquiry into atrocities in the Tigray war, five diplomats said, in a move that could divide African and Western nations.

The Ethiopian government’s two-year conflict with forces in the northern Tigray region ended last November with thousands dead and millions uprooted. Both sides blamed each other for widely-documented atrocities, including massacres, rape and detentions without trial.

Though the Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council has never ended a probe before its mandate, Addis Ababa has circulated a draft version of a resolution calling for the Tigray inquiry to stop some six months early. That would also block publication of findings and a final debate at the council.

Ethiopian government spokesperson Legesse Tulu and Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s spokesperson Billene Seyoum did not respond to requests for comment.

Addis Ababa has opposed the investigation from the outset, calling it politically motivated and trying to block funding.

Ethiopia’s proposed motion has not yet been formally submitted to the 47-member rights council, which meets from Monday until April 4. Two of the diplomats familiar with the matter said there were ongoing efforts to dissuade Addis Ababa.

“It would be a terrible precedent,” said a Western diplomat in Geneva.

AFRICAN OPPOSITION

The war pitted the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) against federal troops, who were also backed by fighters from nearby Amhara region and Eritrea.

Allegations of abuses have persisted since the formal cessation of hostilities on Nov. 2.

Since three independent experts began work at the end of 2021, the inquiry has found “reasonable grounds to believe” that parties in the conflict committed war crimes and other abuses.

But political support has faded in recent months, most notably among African states which all opposed its renewal in October. The probe was extended for another year by a tiny margin.

Diplomats said any vote on a possible Ethiopian motion would be tight and would pit Western countries, including the European Union that helped set up the investigation, against African partners. The West needs allies against China in the divided council and against Russia over the Ukraine conflict.

“It would be a big fight,” said one of the diplomats, who opposes early termination of the mandate. The U.S. ambassador to the council, Michele Taylor, confirmed that Ethiopia was considering an early halt to the mandate: “We oppose the precedent that it would set.

We do not think that it is helpful for their (Ethiopia’s) current process and progress.”

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online