Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop
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Panic! At The PitStop
@Rombe__
🇰🇪 Left Brain Logic, Right Brain Creativity. Pretty much your average guy, except for the average part. ⚽️ #AFC 🏎️ #CL16 🎾 🎧
Eau Rouge Chicane Bergabung Mart 2011
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Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet

I almost fell out of my chair. What kind of agenda is this one? 😂😂
NORTHERN SCUM🐊@Unserious_Exrha
You say Messi is not a racist but the one time Africa hosted the World Cup, he refused to score. #obxaving
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Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet

Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet


@alliewanjiru @ScuderiaFerrari @LewisHamilton @Charles_Leclerc @peroniuk Waki kujibu utuambie ... Because I just can't
Indonesia

@ScuderiaFerrari @LewisHamilton @Charles_Leclerc @peroniuk That was a mess. What the fuck were y'all thinking
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Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet
Panic! At The PitStop me-retweet

🚨 BREAKING: The Ruto government is planning to roll out a digital Maisha Card.
Interior CS Kipchumba Murkomen says Kenyans will be able to access it on their phones, and it will carry a barcode that authorities can scan to instantly verify your identity.
He also says birth certificates will be downloadable online, with the system eventually replacing many uses of the physical ID.
On the surface, this is a good move.
It could eliminate long queues, reduce paperwork, and make accessing government services much easier for millions of Kenyans.
But here's the part that should concern everyone.
Your identity.
On your phone.
In one digital system.
One barcode.
One database.
One place holding the identity of an entire nation.
If that system is ever hacked, abused, or accessed by the wrong people, the consequences could affect every Kenyan.
Convenience is attractive.
Privacy is priceless.
We've already seen government systems suffer breaches and outages before.
So the real debate isn't whether Kenya should go digital.
It's whether Kenyans can trust the people running the system with every detail of their identity.
This could become one of the best reforms in years.
Or one of the biggest privacy risks we've ever created.

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