
72 ( Seba Hulet )
430 posts




Let’s call it what it is. This was never about our users. It was never about security, compliance, or "protecting the community." It's about the fact that an Ethiopian team decided to build something real. No foreign investors. No big corporate backing. No safety net. Just a team building an Ethiopian P2P exchange from the ground up and actually shipping while others were busy posting opinions. That seems to make some people uncomfortable. The funniest part? The loudest critics are often the people who have never built anything themselves. Suddenly they're security experts, compliance experts, and user-safety advocates overnight. Where was all this concern when Ethiopians were getting out of all foreign p2p platforms, blocked from services, or left with no local alternatives? Interesting. Here's what actually happened: We found issues. We fixed them. We communicated openly about them. That's how products improve. That's how builders operate. To everyone in the Ethiopian crypto community who supported us: thank you. You recognized the difference between genuine feedback and envy disguised as criticism. And to the people spending their days posting hate about EBR on X, Telegram, and TikTok: Keep going. Every post, every comment, and every attempt to tear us down introduces EBR to someone new. You're doing more marketing for us than you realize. We'll keep building. We'll keep improving. We'll keep shipping. EBR Exchange. Built in Ethiopia. Built for Ethiopians. Still here. Still growing. ebr.exchange






Many are wondering "what Google saw" that caused them to revise their post-quantum cryptography transition deadline to 2029 last week. It was this: research.google/blog/safeguard…














