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The World’s WorldCoin By Silicon Valley Tech luminaries

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Now the world has a WorldCoin, created by Silicon Valley tech luminaries, and it is something for Bitcoin hodlers to pay attention to: “Former Y Combinator head Sam Altman is cofounding a new cryptocurrency called Worldcoin, which has the goal of advancing universal basic income and would require iris scans to verify users’ identities, according to Bloomberg. Details are slim, as Bloomberg uncovered the startup before its launch, but the coin has backing from Andreessen Horowitz, Coinbase, and LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman” (Fortune newsletter).

A San Francisco-based company wants to give everyone in the world an opportunity to get in on the cryptocurrency game. They’ll just need to scan your eyeballs first.

Bloomberg recently learned that a new company dubbed Worldcoin promises “a new global digital currency that will launch by giving a share to every single person on earth.” To prevent fraud, the startup says, it will require an iris scan to produce a unique numerical code for each person.

It’s currently testing the technology — a “silver-colored spherical gizmo the size of a basketball” — with volunteers in various cities in exchange for other types of digital coins like Bitcoin until the new cryptocurrency is ready. Leading the company is Alexander Blania, 27, a former student of theoretical physics at the California Institute of Technology. He told Bloomberg that the orb costs about $5,000 to make, though the price should decline as the company refines the process.

This one is special because unlike Bitcoin, the creators want us to know them. This creates the biggest challenge in the cryptocurrency world: what is the stable state of the best coin? Yes, Naira is naira, dollar is dollar, at least. But the “dog coin” is not the same as the “bit coin” and when you extrapolate, what happens in 25 years?

I remain optimistic that one person will create PeaceCoin. Yes, when you buy it, you will magically have peace unbounded! Now, get ready to use your iris to do coin!

Updated 7/24/2023: This coin is now launched

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has pushed forward with Monday’s international launch of his cryptocurrency project, dubbed Worldcoin, despite regulatory tensions in the U.S. The digital asset’s centerpiece is a “digital passport” called a World ID that confirms a crypto holder’s identity through an in-person eye scan with a Worldcoin “orb.” Worldcoin already has 2 million users through beta testing, and Monday’s launch scales it across 35 cities in 20 countries. Because of the post-“crypto winter” U.S. regulatory crackdown, Worldcoin tokens won’t be available in the U.S. for the time being. Worldcoin more than doubled its initial $1.70 price before settling at about $2.13 by 7 p.m. EST, according to CoinMarketCap.

Join Tekedia Mini-MBA and Accelerate Your Leadership Ascent

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Court orders liquidation of Brickwall Investment Ltd accused of land scam

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As Nigeria’s housing deficit increases, compounding the poor state of affordable housing in the country, it also opens opportunities for a real estate boom. As with every developing nation, the common goal among Nigerians is to own a house and totally escape the hassles that stem from rising cost of accommodation.

While the situation is peculiar in many states of the nation, the individual push to own a house is higher in Lagos than any other state in Nigeria. The reason can be traced to its bloated population and limited land size ­­­ – Lagos is the smallest state in Nigeria by land size. Nigeria has more than 17 million housing deficit, of which Lagos has the lion share.

Against this backdrop, the individual push for house ownership in Lagos has leaped significantly since the last ten years. But as people strive to build or buy their own houses, they’re increasingly being confronted with fraudulent property vendors.

Last year, a group of buyers accused a real estate company, Brickwall Global Investment Ltd, of defrauding them in the guise of selling plots of land. It was a notorious scandal that splashed a dent on the young Nigeria’s real estate sector that has provided property buyers, a safer way of property acquisition devoid of scam.

Though Brickwall Global Investment Ltd denied any wrongdoing, evidence presented by the buyers proved that the company has fallen short in its obligation, prompting the buyers to take the matter to court.

Earlier this month, a Federal High court sitting in Lagos ordered the wound up of Brickwall Global Investments Ltd.

Justice Olayinka Faji of the Federal High in Lagos on June 17 granted the winding-up petition filed against Brickwall by the five aggrieved customers (who have now been joined by three others) to be advertised.

The judge also ordered that the company be restrained from dissipating its accounts until the determination of the Petition which has now been adjourned to October,12.

The court further restrained the directors, staffer, management, employees, officers, agents, privies, servants, or any persons from alienating, disposing of, dealing tampering, or interfering with the assets and properties of the Brickwall Global Investment Limited including tangible and intangible assets, movable and immovable assets.

The court also directed that any creditor of the company desirous of supporting or opposing the winding up of the company to appear at the time of hearing of the matter either in person or by their counsel.

The aggrieved customers had last year, petitioned the Federal High Court in Lagos to wind up the business so as to liquidate the company’s assets and retrieve over N5.7million spent on purchasing pieces of land in the company’s Mayflower Estate, at Ikorodu.

The petitioners had said that five years after they paid for the company’s advertised new development, Brickwall had without cause or justification refused to give the petitioners possession of the respective parcel of land purchased or returned their money.

The petitioners include Lawrence and Saffron Imolode, Ebuka Ezeocha, Zephaniah Nwokeji, and Chuka Nwadialo. But apart from them, investigations show that over a dozen other people have also been sold excuses rather than real estate they paid for in what appeared to them like an elaborate scam.

The Court agreed with the petitioners that the company is insolvent and is unable to meet up its obligations with its creditors and found that the Respondent failed to demonstrate that it is able to meet up its obligations as provided in the Company and Allied Matters Act.

Emmanuel Ijakpa, chief operating officer of Brickwall Global Investments had told BusinessDay that the delay in allocating the land to the buyers was due to a massive gully, almost the size of an acre, on the property which resulted in losses and needed resolution with the family that sold the land. The customers say this is not true,

The land in dispute is over 3,200 square meters lying in Mowo Nla village, Ikorodu, in Ikorodu local government area of Lagos state which belonged to the Ifegbuwa Chieftaincy Family.

Meanwhile, the Lagos State Estate Regulatory Authority has directed the State Criminal Investigation Department, Panti, Yaba, Lagos State to investigate the complicity or otherwise of the company, its directors, and senior officials on the allegation of using the company to defraud residents after several complaints to the Lagos State Government through their office.

However, findings show that the police is yet to fully implement this directive, a development that has caused grief to no end to the victims.

Brickwall Investments Ltd, owned by one Uche Ahubelem, a real estate practitioner and motivational speaker, continues to sell and advertise new developments in other parts of Lagos even as the court case progressed.

The intervention of the Lagos State Estate Regulatory Authority is to protect the sector from embarrassment and repercussions of fraud. The Nigeria’ real estate sector grew 1.8% in the first quarter, 2021, stymied by covid-19 pandemic strains. As forecasts predict a bright outlook for the sector, experts are concerned that the news of fraud by players in the real estate sector may mar its growth.

The Episode in Cars45: “losers left | thieves left | company rocked”, says new CEO

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Good People, you know I have stopped writing analytical posts for months now. Yes, those “The Andela Problem”, “Konga Should Sell Itself” , etc. But somehow, I nearly returned to it with the Cars45 piece. Africa is a place where critical analysis is viewed from a negative angle and that is why no one actually offers one. In politics, you are seen as an opposition. In business, you are seen as a demoralizer-in-chief. So, what happens? You simply have to praise companies for raising money, opening new offices, etc but if they do anything wrong, you are not to challenge them.

Some of us have made mistakes in business; we started things which failed. My TED Fellowship roommate was the founder of Kickstarter. I took his idea and built StartCrunch, the first crowdfunding site in Africa, circa 2012. Unfortunately, we could not control the scamming and we shut it down. So, when we write here, it is not because we know everything: all of us are learning. But what happens is evident – with access to more information,  we get better.

Back to Cars45, there is a new revelation from the CEO in his comment on this post and that revelation confirms all. He wrote “A brainless piece by a man who doesn’t understand this segment Cars45 Cars45 Ghana Cars45KE losers left | thieves left | company rocked | “. Now, his comment even strengthened my piece: the CEO and the 11 executives were thieves and the company kicked them out, he alleges. And after they left, the company rocked to the bottom. Not sure I wrote anything different.

While he felt evidently unhappy that many of us predicted that the company would struggle after losing its founding team, he summarized my piece when he said “thieves left” and “company rocked”. To my knowledge, I did not know the founding team members were criminals (he just provided an update on what happened and I hope he has data to back that up), but what is evident is this: the company indeed rocked when they did leave.

I am not sure what is brainless in my piece since both of us came to the same conclusion: the visionaries left and the company rocked to the bottom – and was sold! (I am not using the other meaning of rock since the firm is sold, not rising to the mountaintop).

But there is one group I have to send a message: To young people in Cars45, please I am not demoralizing you. See this as a case study for academic purposes. With Jiji the new home, I am confident that Cars45 will blossom. It was a pioneering innovator and will continue to serve.

Facebook Crosses the $1 Trillion Market Cap for the First Time

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Facebook closed above $1 trillion in market capitalization for the first time on Monday, adding to the number of tech companies breaking thresholds despite the pandemic.

The social media giant had had to contend with lingering antitrust cases, compounded by Apple’s new privacy policy that poses a great threat to its ad revenue. However, it has recorded defiant numbers that put it in the zone of trillion dollars US tech companies.

Facebook has thus become the fifth U.S. company to hit the milestone, joining Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Google-parent company Alphabet. Per CNBC, the company’s shares closed up 4.2% at $355.64 after a favorable legal ruling that dismissed an antitrust complaint brought by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and a coalition of state attorneys general. The move pushed Facebook shares up nearly 5%.

Facebook derives nearly all of its revenue from personalized advertisements that are shown to users of the Facebook and Instagram social networks. The company also has a burgeoning hardware business where it is building products like the Portal video-calling device, Oculus virtual-reality headsets and smart glasses, which are set to be released sometime in 2021.

Facebook held its initial public offering in May 2012, debuting with a market cap of $104 billion.

The company suffered a colossal 19% drop in 2018 after posting disappointing revenue and user figures for the second quarter of that year. That drop came amid a number of scandals that year, including data leaks, fake news and, most notably, the Cambridge Analytica scandal — in which a data firm improperly accessed the data of 87 million Facebook users and used it to target ads for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election.

Despite the scandals, Facebook was able to bounce back and has continued to grow its user base and steadily increase its average revenue per user. The stock price is now up more than 90% since July 27, 2018.

The company is still working on so many ideas across its platforms, and they’re believed to have the potential to accelerate further growth. CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced last week the launch of new commerce features to support businesses and make shopping easier. They include Shops on WhatsApp and Marketplace, Instagram Visual Search and Shops Ads; Instagram Visual Search that helps buyers discover products based on images.

Cowen analysts had predicted in August, when its stock rose to $280.82, that the company would be the next to cross the $1 trillion milestone, given how its stocks were moving despite the pandemic.