Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)

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Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)

Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)

@nidiongo

Building Africa’s Biometric-first Financial Infrastructure

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Kasım 2016
2.2K Takip Edilen729 Takipçiler
JB of Lagos ✈️
JB of Lagos ✈️@_jboflagos·
Nothing will happen my bro. I understand there's major fragmentation between CBN / SEC. But any company willing to operate crypto services in Nigeria has the legal right to do so. Get your license from SEC and then approach CBN / NFIU for regulatory clarity. Crypto is a taxable asset and it is legal in Nigeria
Robinho@deolarepublic

@_jboflagos @CoinMarketCap @coinfomania @WatcherGuru @SECNigeria @Tradepal_ai @Blockwisely @BinanceAfrica @CointelegraphMT @beincrypto @BossDR7 @UseLemfi Baba, open your fintech/bank and start using stablecoins without approval from CBN. Let's see what happens.

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Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)
@Ssaasquatch I honestly don’t understand why people hype so-called professor so much. It’s so annoying and not even worth it.
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Ewgi
Ewgi@Ssaasquatch·
These guys in Money Heist point guns at themselves every 5 mins. So annoying.
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Robert Kehinde
Robert Kehinde@iamKingRobert·
@nidiongo True talk! The resilience is unmatched. Building dual-layer solutions with zero to no funding is pure African founder magic. Keep pushing and keep up the great work, brother!
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Mark Essien
Mark Essien@markessien·
The average Akwa Ibomite is happy to see another Akwa Ibomite doing well globally... right or wrong?
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Robert Kehinde
Robert Kehinde@iamKingRobert·
One thing I respect deeply about African founders: many are solving infrastructure problems and business problems at the same time.
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Mark Essien
Mark Essien@markessien·
KYC is the biggest hurdle to growth for fintechs, but many of them make it far more complicated for the users than it could be.
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Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)
Did you actually read the full story before responding, or did you choose not to look at the situation objectively? 1. She was in the UK. 2. She is now in Nigeria. 3. Whatever brought her back is honestly none of my business. What we should be focused on is the child... a child who deserves to be raised in an environment filled with opportunities and a better quality of life. Who seriously compares the UK and Nigeria in terms of opportunities and structure for a child’s future? Realistically, whoever is currently in the UK is in a better position to provide better opportunities and care for that child.
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Dorcas🍀
Dorcas🍀@Dorcas943599·
@nidiongo @toyinjaz @omo_akin4real Dont do this They both own the child She has a right to him too They should better come to a conclusion Instead of bring this to online strangers wey just want gist
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Olutoyin a.k.a Iya Chukwudi
If you like follow internet talk and leave your child with a man. Your eyes will peel. They are gonna dump the child with relatives. That boy is never going to take the child to the UK. Plenty examples abound. He cant solely parent a small child in this country.
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-valar morghulis-
-valar morghulis-@eldivine·
Lmao some of our bigger tech overlords raise a bajillion dollars and then go on a poaching spree. They are always throwing crazy offers at my team trying to get them to switch. They rarely do. And on the rare occasion they switch, many of the team members often come back to tell me that what we have at @risevest is far better than what many try to build with money. No be brag. Some have actually switched back, when there is room. But even that is also extremely hard to do. One of my PMs spent 3 years trying to return before we all agreed to move on. I also don’t try to fight it, imagine paying someone x and then someone offers them 5x. That’s an opportunity to discover there are more important things than money, and I cannot deny them that.
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Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)
Idiongo S. Nelson(Jnr)@nidiongo·
You’re building your entire argument on misguided sentiments rather than clear logic. Telling people to avoid married women isn’t the same as ignoring men’s responsibility. Both are wrong. But the advice to “avoid people’s wives” exists because many men actively pursue married women, knowing they’re off-limits. That doesn’t absolve cheating husbands, they’re equally (if not more) guilty. A better one would be: Should we stop warning people not to touch a live wire just because the electrician who installed it was careless? The warning protects everyone involved. The core issue is personal accountability. Married people (both men and women) should honor their vows and stop cheating. But that doesn’t make it wise for outsiders to knowingly get involved with someone else’s spouse. Two wrongs don’t cancel each other out. Frank cheated? Yeah. So? Should the wife cheat? Yeah. Then, what becomes of a society that holds such logic? Let's hold everyone to a higher standard instead of playing “whataboutism.”
Idongesit Uduehe(Chef_idy)@IdongesitUduehe

I don’t understand the logic of telling people to avoid people’s wives and not saying married men should stop cheating too. If a married woman is sacred, so is a married man. Married people should be the ones being held accountable and should stop cheating on each other. 🙏🏾

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