Nigerian fintech, Risevest wins court order to unfreeze its bank accounts
About the bank transfer, like Cashlink, they are also peer-to-peer, not that Cashlink is directly involved in crypto payment, or are they? If not directly involved in crypto payment, it is peer-to-peer. Not that different from other peer-to-peer.
Binance get sense and I no believe dem get license yet to operate for Nigeria so anytime wey you dey see anything wey relate to Nigeria for that platform na backyard door wey dem dey use. This Cash link na P2P service providers and Binance no dey work with banks directly as Charles-Tim talk. Just browse am and you go get all the answers to understand wetin dey sup. The best wey to benefit from this industry as a Nigerian na to built your own P2P service providers app and watch as companies go dey knock for ur door.
Well understood and thanks for shedding more light. Yet, my plight was not when the ban was still hot, but now that it looks cold. The "Risevest" you made mentioned had the money to challenge them in court, can the poor do the same? My question was figurative, which was why I was kinda neutral about my disposition while asking it. The whole scenario now where the big guys are back in the crypto business directly with the bank is alarming, while the poor are getting scared to unmask themselves.
And yes, Cashlink might be guiltless of the CBN ban on second thought, I just read more about them, it's more or less a P2P settlement, another way to use other people to make money as the rich people do since they have the resources. Nonetheless, I don't think "Paybis" which is my second example can be guiltless of the ban as they handle the payment all by themselves, and it's just one out of many others.