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Ogey
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Ogey
@Badman_Ogey
I'm Responsible for what i Say; Not what you understand🍂 You're always at peace ,when you understand the principle of OPINION; HACKED ACC!!
MY MIND Katılım Ocak 2016
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EXPOSED: “What You’re Seeing In This Video Are Repentant And Some Active Boko Haram Terrorists Gearing Up To Fight Alongside The Nigerian Military. How Can Terrorists Who Have K!lled Thousands Of Nigerians, Soldiers, Brigadier General’s And Displaced Millions Be Given This Much Freedom And Even Be Armed By The Nigerian Military?”. ~ Danish Vlogger Jones Raw Reveals This On His First Visit To Nigeria In His Documentary On Boko Haram
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Nigerians said David hundeyin was a mad man and that the CIA was a joke 😭😭😭😭😭😭
The Disrespected Trucker@DisrespectedThe
"90% of news anchors were CIA operatives."
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Our planet already has a step-by-step plan for this. It was written in 1989, and 90 scientists from 14 countries are voting on a major update this October.
The original playbook is called the Declaration of Principles. Michael Michaud, a career US diplomat who spent 32 years negotiating international treaties, put it together for a global body of space scientists recognized by the United Nations. The steps are dead simple. You detect a signal. You keep your mouth shut and get a second telescope to confirm it. Then you tell your government. Then the UN. Then the world. And you absolutely do not send a reply until there's been a worldwide consultation on what to say. That last rule is there because no single country, no billionaire, no lone scientist gets to answer on behalf of 8 billion people.
That original document barely covered what happens after you confirm the signal, though. "Seek instruction from the United Nations" was about all it offered, and the UN itself has zero plans for this. In 2010, Mazlan Othman, a Malaysian astrophysicist who was running the UN's Office for Outer Space Affairs (real department, 27 staff, headquartered in Vienna), got swept up in reports that she'd be named Earth's alien ambassador. The UN put out a statement calling the story "nonsense." Othman told The Guardian it sounded cool but she had to deny it.
So in 2022, John Elliott, a computer scientist at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, built something called the SETI Post-Detection Hub. SETI stands for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, the global scientific effort to scan space for alien signals. Elliott's hub is basically a war room for first contact. It brings together linguists, lawyers, psychologists, AI researchers, and philosophers. They've been gaming out different scenarios. A radio transmission from thousands of light-years away? Jarring, but manageable over time, almost like discovering an ancient artifact. A signal from just a few light-years out, meaning someone close is actively pinging us? The researchers describe that as triggering "unprecedented pandemonium."
The 2026 update is the biggest rewrite in 37 years. It covers what happens when a detection leaks on social media before scientists can confirm it (because it will). It includes safety plans for researchers and observatories that could become targets. It has guidelines for using AI to help crack the signal. And it creates a permanent committee of scientists, ethicists, lawyers, and communications pros whose one job is to manage the aftermath. Over 90 members of the SETI Permanent Committee, spread across 14 countries, are expected to vote on the final draft at a space conference in Antalya, Turkey this October.
There's also a rating system to stop anyone from accidentally starting a panic. The Rio Scale, built in 2000, scores any detection from 0 to 10 based on how solid the evidence is. A weird radio blip that's probably just interference scores a 1 or a 2. A confirmed, information-packed transmission from a nearby star system scores a 10. The whole point is to give the public one clear number to hold onto instead of every outlet running "ALIENS CONFIRMED" when the signal is a 2.
Chelsea Haramia, a philosopher at the University of Bonn, is working on the one question the protocol still can't answer: how do you get permission to reply from every generation of humans that hasn't been born yet. That problem sits at the center of every proposed response plan, and so far, no one has cracked it.
Night Sky Today@NightSkyToday
If aliens visit us, who should be in charge of speaking on behalf of humanity?
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U.S. evacuates staff from Nigeria, says insecurity under Tinubu deteriorating
gazettengr.com/u-s-evacuates-…
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@NigeriaStories Rwanda Use Drone Cus it Cheaper, and don't need landing pads..
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Interswitch, one of Africa's most established payment infrastructure companies lost ₦30 billion to chargeback fraud.
Not from external hackers breaking through firewalls.
From a system glitch that allowed merchants to file chargebacks and receive payouts they were not owed.
Some of those merchants knew exactly what they were doing.
The fraud was traced back to current and former Interswitch employees who understood the vulnerability in the system and exploited it quietly over several years.
By the time it surfaced, Interswitch had to go to court, restrict accounts across 54 banks, report to the EFCC, and chase down hundreds of suspected accounts to recover what they could.
They recovered roughly ₦10 billion but
₦20 billion gone.
The lesson here is not about external threats.
It is about insider access.
Your most dangerous vulnerability is often not a hacker.
It is someone inside your system who understands it better than your security does.
Audit your access controls.
Log everything.
Nobody should have unchecked ability to trigger financial reversals without a second layer of authorization.
Interswitch learned that lesson for ₦20 billion.
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A First Bank employee named Tijani Muiz Adeyinka worked on the electronic products team.
His job gave him legitimate access to process reversals for customers.
He used that access to credit merchant accounts with money that was not theirs.
The fraudulent postings went to his wife's Zenith Bank account first.
From there to 34 other accounts.
Which then spread to 1,190 secondary accounts across multiple banks.
By the time First Bank noticed and reported it to the Nigeria Police Force on March 25, 2024...the figure had grown from ₦12 billion to ₦40 billion.
He was already on the run.
Three court orders across Lagos and Jalingo were obtained to freeze accounts.
Some of the money had already been converted to USDT through crypto traders.
This is what insider fraud actually looks like in Nigerian banking.
Not a dramatic hack.
A staff member. A privileged function. No second authorization required.
If your system allows any single person to trigger financial transactions without a second approval layer that is your vulnerability.
Segregation of duties is not bureaucracy.
It is what stands between your system and ₦40 billion walking out the door.
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@Big_Bestmann The best head you’d receive is from a babe wey her family no get Head
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