DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 4189

Flow’s NFT Ecosystem Secures $3M Funding, Big Eyes Coin’s Presale In Final Stage

0

Flow is set to revolutionise the NFT market. The rollup-centric NFT ecosystem has recently secured $3 million in seed funding with their groundbreaking ‘place bid once, buy from everywhere’ technology. This allows users to bid on NFTs with ease, protecting them from frontrunners and unnecessary gas fees.

Led by Nima Capital and participation from other industry heavy-weights, the $3 million seed funding positions Flow to be at the forefront of a modular NFT ecosystem.

“We are entering a modular world where execution environments, data availability, consensus and transaction sequencing are moving towards a plug-and-play model. NFT platforms built on this modular stack can leverage shared security from an underlying L1 while building fast, low-cost NFT trading infrastructure and creator tooling. Flow’s matching and execution engines are well positioned for this future.” said project founder nneverland.

Flow’s developers, who have experience with Google and Binance, plan to integrate Artificial Intelligence (AI) I into its platform, such as LLM-based NFT analytics solutions, cutting-edge agents to automate technology, and tools for the community to create and deploy NFTs.

Stay updated on Flow’s journey by following them on Twitter and joining the conversation on Discord.

What are NFTs?

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are a new type of digital asset. ‘Non-fungible’ means the asset is unique and can’t be replaced. ‘Tokens’ are digital assets stored on the blockchain. So, in short, NFTs are unique digital assets that are stored on the blockchain.

NFTs can include anything from artwork to photos to music to even tweets. And because they’re unique, they can be bought and sold just like physical art pieces.

NFTs have taken the world by storm, and many celebrities have gotten in on the craze. Musician Grimes recently sold off her digital artwork as NFTs, making over $6 million. Rappers like Eminem, Snoop Dogg, and MIMS have also created and sold their own NFT collections.

NFTs: Pros and Cons

One big benefit to NFTs is that they allow artists to sell their work directly to customers, eliminating intermediaries. This allows the creator to keep more of the profits for themselves.

NFTs are also a neat way to prove the authenticity of a digital asset. Because each NFT is unique with its own blockchain record, it’s almost impossible to create a duplicate or fake.

But, as with anything, there are also a few drawbacks to NFTs. Creating and selling NFTs has been terrible for the environment, because of the amount of energy required. And just like cryptocurrencies, the value of these digital assets can be rather volatile, as prices are determined by how much someone is willing to pay for them.

Catch the Big Eyes Cat Before it Launches!

Cat meme token Big Eyes Coin (BIG) presale ends on June 3rd, followed by the highly anticipated launch! BIG has created quite a splash in the crypto world, with its stage 13 presale raising $34.42 million.

This aww-dorable kitty cat has its mintable NFTs, focus on community, savvy social media marketing, commitment to charity, and loot boxes to thank for its success.

Apply code END300 and enjoy a bonus of 300% when you purchase BIG or loot boxes. Join the countdown!

 

Find out more about Big Eyes Coin (BIG):

Presale: https://buy.bigeyes.space/

Website: https://bigeyes.space/

Telegram: https://t.me/BIGEYESOFFICIAL

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BigEyesCoin

The Rise of Meme Coins: A Comparative Analysis of Big Eyes Coin and Floki Inu

0

As the crypto world continues to evolve, meme coins have gained significant popularity among crypto communities. With meme coin season and alt season becoming buzzwords in the crypto industry, investors and meme coin lovers are constantly on the lookout for the next big thing that could potentially rival the success of coins like Dogecoin and Shiba Inu.

In this article, we will explore and compare Big Eyes Coin (BIG), a new meme coin, with other popular meme coins like Floki Inu, in terms of their utility and potential impact on the crypto space.

We will analyze the similarities and differences between these coins and discuss how the rise of meme coins shapes an inclusive ecosystem that benefits every stakeholder.

Big Eyes Coin – A Presale You Can’t Miss Out On

Big Eyes Coin, like many other meme coins, is a decentralized cryptocurrency that operates on the Ethereum blockchain. It was created with the aim of offering a fun and inclusive investment opportunity for meme coin lovers and investors.

The utility of Big Eyes Coin goes beyond just being a meme coin for speculation. The project has plans to launch multiple products where holders can use their Big Eyes Coins to purchase NFTs and merchandise thus adding tangible value to the coin.

This utility sets Big Eyes Coin apart from other meme coins that solely rely on speculation and hype for their value. The integration of AI and utility in Big Eyes Coin’s ecosystem aims to create a sustainable and inclusive investment opportunity for all stakeholders.

How Does Big Eyes Coin Compare to Floki Inu?

Compared to other popular meme coins like Floki Inu, Big Eyes Coin stands out with its unique approach. While all these coins share the same concept of being meme coins, Big Eyes Coin’s use of tokens for repairing the ocean’s ecosystem sets it apart. To achieve this, Big Eyes Coin will be reserving 5% of all tokens.

Floki Inu primarily relies on community-driven initiatives and partnerships for their success.

The rise of meme coins like Big Eyes Coin and Floki Inu is not just about speculative gains, but also about creating an inclusive ecosystem that benefits every stakeholder.

These coins aim to empower their communities by offering unique features, utility, and innovative technologies. They provide opportunities for investors to participate in the crypto space in a fun and engaging way, while also contributing to the development of the crypto industry.

As meme coins gain popularity, they are also challenging the traditional notions of investment and finance. They are democratizing the crypto space by providing accessible and inclusive investment opportunities to a wider audience, beyond just traditional investors.

This is evident in the strong community support and engagement that meme coins like Big Eyes Coin and Floki Inu have garnered, and this is exactly what will drive their future growth.

 

Big Eyes Coin (BIG):

Presale: https://buy.bigeyes.space/

Website: https://bigeyes.space/

Telegram: https://t.me/BIGEYESOFFICIAL

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BigEyesCoin

Venture Capital Investment Firm Anthemis Group Lays Off 28% of Its Employees in A Restructuring

0

Anthemis Group, one of the leading actors in the world of innovative financial services, has laid off 28% of its workforce, which is 16 employees, as it completes restructuring at the company.

The company disclosed that the downsizing of its workforce was necessitated in a bid to better reflect current market conditions and to set up the business for future growth against its strategic priorities.

Anthemis however failed to disclose which roles were impacted, but an insider familiar with the incident disclosed that a former managing director of the firm was among the group that was laid off.

Since the layoffs, the company has made two new hires, an Investment Principal and the Head of Intellectual Capital, and currently has a team of 43 people across Europe and North America.

The VC firm which currently has $1.5 billion in assets under management in late 2021 raised $700 million for embedded fintech startups, in what a spokesperson described as a collection of capital it closed across strategies from its venture studio through to its Venture growth fund.

Founded in 2010, Anthemis is a global platform that cultivates change in the financial system by investing in growing and sustaining businesses committed to resiliency, transparency, access, and equity. In 2016, the firm made the first close of their inaugural fund at $60m, with the aim of reaching $100m to exclusively invest into FinTech companies.

The venture investment platform is founded on three guiding principles which are authentic collaboration, virtuous cycle outcomes, and diversity and inclusivity. The firm has had a concerted interest in FinTech throughout the years for its investments, accruing over 20 investments into the space since inception.

Regional focus has been restricted to Europe and North America thus far for Anthemis’ FinTech investments. The firm has also been expansive regarding FinTech subsector investments, with their investments spanning most of the subsectors within the industry

Anthemis has made more than 150 investments in fintech firms which include Betterment, eToro, Currency Cloud, The Climate Corporation, Carta, Happy Money, and many more. Its Early stage investments include Pipe, a recurring revenue trading platform; Weavr, an embedded banking provider for digital innovators and fintech; and Atomic, an investing API for fintech and banks. Venture investments include Branch, which bundles home and auto insurance; Eigen, an intelligent document processing provider; and LocoNav, a telematics-based fleet management platform.

Anthemis heavily promotes its progressive values of diversity and inclusivity. Its vision statement includes building “one of the world’s leading diversified financial services companies, with a commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion as a blueprint for the economy.”

By creating fertile ground for a diverse group of startups, investors, entrepreneurs, institutions, academics, and visionaries to cover, Anthemis believes it can solve the financial system’s most pressing challenges faster, better, and for the benefit of all.

Do We Finally Have a Business Case For Multiple Payment Rails In Nigeria?

0

One of the biggest challenges with working within the payments ecosystem in Nigeria is you tend to see things differently. For instance; while all most people see is a POS agent at a junction, the first thing that usually comes to mind when I see a POS agent is “Who is acquiring those transactions?”. When I see a mobile payments application (from an unlicensed fintech), the first thought is “Who is their wallet API provider?”, and when I see a pay with bank transfer implementation on a payments gateway, my first idea is “What is informing their choice of this specific service provider?”. This is why when news of certain fintechs being a reliable fallback option when bank networks were failing in the heat of the cash scarcity dilemma came to light (considering most fintechs runs on the same real-time rails (NIP by NIBSS) the banks process transactions with), I figured one or more of three things were happening:

  1. Banks were having issues with their core banking: A core banking is at the heart of every bank’s operations, it is basically the central operational point for all banking transactions and is the module that controls debit and credit updates within a bank. The theory that the sudden increase in transaction volumes (984% QoQ growth in transaction volumes) overwhelmed the core banking of most banks and caused a lot of transactions to fail makes a lot of sense. In all likelihood, there are banks who probably run on outdated core banking software (which is usually not the case with new-age fintechs), and that may be a key reason for failures on their end.

P.S: replacing a bank’s core banking is not very simple, it’s a very delicate process that takes time and requires expertise. I’d liken it to a heart transplant – if you did a heart transplant, there’s a risk of death, but if you had the option of managing a heart condition with medications and drugs, you’d probably want to take that option. This Twitter user also alluded to core banking failures being at the heart of Zenith Bank’s issues.

Side note: Zenith Bank recently announced a revamp of their software stack.

  1. Certain fintechs have multiple settlement account arrangements:The Nigerian payment system is designed in such a way that banks play a very key role in transaction processing primarily because they act as key sponsors to other non-bank financial institutions who want to process transactions on the Nigerian real-time payments rail.

Certain fintechs (depending on their licensing type) use settlement accounts across banks to process transactions. If a fintech has multiple settlement accounts across multiple banks when their customers wants to process fund transfers to a bank they have a settlement account with, that transaction can be structured as an on-us transaction that runs on the bank’s internal system (no need to pass through an interbank payment rail).

For instance, if Fintech A has a settlement account with a couple of banks of which Access Bank is one of them, and Fintech A’s customer wants to send money to someone with an Access Bank account, Fintech A will pass an instruction to Access Bank to debit their (Fintech A’s) settlement account within Access Bank and subsequently credit the beneficiary (who is also an Access Bank customer).

Transactions of this sort are cheaper, faster, and in most cases rarely fail (they are internal ledger updates within the bank). Executing this however has huge reconciliation implications and every reconciliation person reading this is probably hoping their boss doesn’t see this, but I digress.

  1. Some fintechs run on other third-party rails: NIP is not the only real-time payment processing rail in Nigeria. While other fintechs like Remita (via RITS), Interswitch, and eTranzact have other solutions in this market, NIP is the most dominant player, primarily because of its high efficiency and cordial relationship with the banks. NIP is also the default payment processing engine for most banks in Nigeria.

There are however alternative payment rails that other fintechs may have been riding on, and If these fintechs didn’t have multiple settlement arrangements across multiple banks, and banks weren’t having issues with their core banking, this would probably be the major reason they were able to process transactions while the banks were failing at their ends.

SINGLE POINTS OF FAILURE

At the SystemSpecs Maiden Tech Innovation Series Titled Cashless Policy: Sustaining Digital Payments Beyond the Currency Redesign, the MD of Remita, said and I quote –

“In summary, we just had a national UAT for cashless, so we need to ask who was the product manager, where was the national operating center, where was the national crisis center” – ‘DeRemi Atanda

The occurrences of the last couple of weeks (failing digital transactions etc.) were basically a User Acceptance Test to show if we’re ready for a fully cashless economy. We aren’t. And amongst a list of reasons, one of them is our overarching reliance on a single interbank payment rail.

NIBSS (Nigerian Interbank Settlement System) is one of the most important players in our fledgling payments ecosystem. NIBSS provides the much talked about NIP (NIBSS Instant Payment service) product that powers real-time payments across multiple banking providers nationwide. On a global scale, NIP is ranked as the 6th real-time payment rail by transaction volume, just behind the United Kingdom and steps ahead of the United States. In 2022 alone, NIP processed what amounted to N387trn (US$840.5bn) in transaction value and 5.2 billion in transaction count.

According to Bloomberg, about 90% of transactions in Nigeria’s informal economy are conducted using cash, in other words, Nigeria has only digitized 10% of its transactions – To be clear, NIP is a stable solution that works 99.9% of the time, but in a world where 50% of transactions occur digitally (5x more pressure on NIP), do we wait for NIP to bulk under pressure (as it may have done these past couple of weeks) or do we need to provide redundancies to ensure our payment systems stay up and running regardless of who has a downtime? I think the latter is the better option.

Our heavy reliance on NIBSS for payment processing puts a lot of fintech players under pressure when things tend to go wrong. Some months back, PiggyVest, a leading digital savings and investment platform in Nigeria couldn’t process disbursements to its customers. At the root of the problem was an issue at NIBSS end, unfortunately, customers don’t know what NIBSS is, what they know is I saved money with you, I need to withdraw and now you’re speaking gibberish because that’s what NIBSS means to a person who urgently needs his N50,000 (US$108) and you’re telling him stories.

Beyond the core payment processing engine failing, a downtime on other ancillary services on the NIBSS platform can also influence payment processing. A good example is the Name Inquiry service – payments in Nigeria are so designed that if a beneficiary’s account number and bank name are not verified on the database, those transactions will not go through, this helps avoid transfers to the wrong account – make person no see your wrong transaction call am miracle alert lol. However, this also means in situations where the Name Inquiry API is down, transactions will not go through, even though the payment engine is working just fine.

I’ll restate that NIP is an efficient service and works most of the time, but if Nigeria is going to build a cashless economy that runs on digital payments, digital payments cannot work most of the time, they need to work all the time. We need to build redundancies.

BUILDING REDUNDANCIES

The major reason we need redundancies is to foolproof our payments system. Another side reason may be to democratize opportunity. If I owned a switching company acting as a redundancy to NIP, just looking at the number of transactions processed on the NIBSS platform alone and trying to model what my revenue would look like, I would probably be driving a 2022 Mercedes G63 or a Tesla Model X by now, in fact, I’d be writing this article from the study of my private use US$2.5million Sujimoto Apartment, but I digress.

There are two ways the CBN can go around building redundancies within our payment system:

  1. Open the Doors: There are presently 16 licensed switching and processing companies in Nigeria – a switching license allows you to extend your fintech business to offer products in the PSSP, Terminal Issuance, Switching, and Super Agency Business. Fintechs like Remita, Interswitch, Flutterwave, Paystack, and TeamApt are holders of this license. Most holders of this license use it to extend their offerings, but rarely ever to build a switch.

The challenge with building a core switch is that it requires more than just coding, it requires some kind of touchpoint with a bank’s core banking, and as we shared earlier, a core banking is the heart of a bank’s operations. The same way you will not just open your heart to anyone and fall in love with them (unless they drive a 2022 Mercedes G63, then you should probably be falling in love with them) is the same way banks do not just open their core banking to anyone to interface with.

A system that allows CBN to choose certain providers (maybe two players), give them stringent security and compliance criteria to meet, and MANDATE the banks to open up their systems for them to connect with will create more potential players for redundancy plays.

  1. Mandate the banks: At a high level, the CBN has two key responsibilities – tell players what to do (in the best interest of the payment system) and mandate them to do it. I personally feel that things move forward quickly when the CBN mandates key players to do certain things as against keeping it open (like they did with crypto). This is also why I’m not bullish on CBNs recently released operational guidelines on Open Banking. While the document creates a clear standard for open banking implementation in Nigeria, it doesn’t mandate the banks (key API Providers) to do anything. In the UK where Open Banking is dominant, the top 9 retail and SME banks aren’t advised to adopt Open Banking, they’re mandated to, Open Banking in the UK is not a revenue conversation, it’s a compliance conversation.

In the same way, deposit money banks should be mandated to employ redundancies within their payment processes, and be allowed to choose from amongst the fintech players who already have these rails, and those who will hopefully be able to build in the future.

This doesn’t mean NIP will not continue to process the majority of transactions, it will, but in the few cases it fails, the banks will have a second and maybe third option to push transactions to in the advent of a failed transaction.

The banks can then build routing mechanisms on these redundancy options. So, for instance, if a transaction times out in 15 seconds, when a bank passes an interbank payment transaction through NIP, if by the 10th second NIP is still unable to touch the beneficiary banks environment, the bank can immediately route that transaction to its secondary switch to try and reach the beneficiary bank, if that fails and a third option is utilized, we can safely assume the beneficiary bank is having an issue, and that can be relayed to the sender along with the reversed debit transaction.

The implication of this is that fewer transactions will fail, and those that do fail will be because there was really no alternative way to get it processed.

CONCLUSION

The events of recent weeks have proven to us that beyond educating the masses and providing payment touchpoints, building redundancy into our payments system to withstand increased transaction volumes that emanate as a result of the cash-to-digital migration is a key next step to building resiliency into our payment ecosystem, and maybe, just maybe we may finally have a business case for building alternative payment rails in Nigeria.

Inspired By The Holy Spirit

How do we get the unemployment rate to a single digit in Abia State?

0

In 2000, Abia State unemployment rate was 4.2%. By 2019, it had risen to 32.5%. The question is: how do we get the unemployment rate to a single digit? In other words, how do we get Abians back to work?

This is a very important issue because I met Aba, the heart of the state, when it was still working. As an intern in NNPC Nigerian Gas Company (Moscow Road, PHC), my duty station was Owaza Gas Flow station. Weekly, from Owaza, I would go and read gas meters in Aba Glass Industry, etc, which received gas from the flow station. Those pipelines were there and from Owaza, NNPC supplied gas to Aba industries.

Today, we are talking of providing gas pipelines to power companies in Aba. But decades ago, there were working pipelines! What happened to those infrastructures? Big question indeed.

Good People, a new Abia is coming and we need your support to build new industries and get young people back to work!  Mr. Governor-elect, Dr Alex Otti, made that promise and we’re confident he will fulfill it to young people and all Abians. As part of helping his playbook, share your answer on “how do we get the unemployment rate to a single digit in Abia State?”

Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Co-Chair, Abia State Economic Transformation Transition Council

Comment

My Response: I have read the 50 year plan two times. Great work. But notice that it omitted clearly how to fund these elements. Abia does not have the luxury of listing every nice cookie without how to pay for it. Government does not need to run a bank. But the government should make it easier for private banks to do their jobs. With billions of naira in debt, a spending-based strategy will not pick up. We’re exploring how we create and improve ease of doing business so that companies/investors can see the opportunities and come.

Comment here:

My Response: in Igbo culture, you do not ask your host for kola because you have none. In consultative leadership, seeking inputs to refine ideas cannot be a sign of weakness. The problems are known. Some solutions are at work. But engaging communities to architect their futures has always worked because when people are part of designing the system, the execution is always better. We do not want to stay in one room, write and push on the citizens. So, we’re speaking with community leaders and we’re confident that a transparent honest conversation will help to shape priorities.

Comment 3: Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe, I strongly believe you and your esteemed team have all it takes to reduce unemployment rates in Abia State, Nigeria, to single digits. The state’s unemployment rate rose from 4.2% in 2000 to 32.5% in 2019, making it important to create new industries for job opportunities.

To tackle unemployment in Abia State, solutions include:
Promoting and supporting entrepreneurship (by providing support programs, training, and funding to enable young people to start their businesses), attracting investments (local and foreign investors), developing infrastructure (to enhance transportation, communication, and energy supply), encouraging public-private partnerships (PPP) (The government can work in partnership with the private sector to provide support and investment in critical sectors of the economy), and improving education and skills development (The government can invest in education and skills development programs that will equip young people with relevant skills for the job market.)

Comment 4: There has to be a way to move Micro Enterprises into Small and Medium enterprises by helping them grow, Having access to what’s needed

I’ll opine there should be a functional business school in Aba where thorough knowledge of how to build aright, can be shared

Open up The Technology Incubation Centres and industrial parks to serve as sandbox for various industries… food, leather, fashion etc… where ideas can be birthed and place some government owned Enteprise support fund [Part Loan, Part Grant or Part Equity]. The industrial hub should have its own power or dedicated power lines

Aba Needs Indigenous Tech startups that can digitize ecosystems and Capture values and employ people in large volumes. But more importantly, facilitate transactions – I think the tech ecosystem needs to be built for startups incubation, harnessing of its Higher Education students for localized and remote works

Can we Gamify SME support!? and reward get getting

These, and more I believe can be done