๐๐ค๐ข๐๐ฉ๐๐๐ฃ๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐จ ๐๐ค๐ข๐๐ฃ๐ ๐ฅ
๐พ๐ ๐๐๐จ ๐๐๐๐ฃ ๐ฉ๐ค๐ค ๐ฆ๐ช๐๐๐ฉ ๐๐ฃ๐ ๐๐ข ๐๐ง๐๐ฃ๐๐๐ฃ๐ ๐ฉ๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ฉ ๐ฉ๐ค ๐ฎ๐ค๐ช๐ง ๐๐!
What?
When?
Where?
Stick around and find out ๐ค
You don't want to miss out on this!!
Few days ago, I made a post about how recycled phone numbers are destroying innocent lives in Nigeria,
but didnโt really go in depth on how @pevraHQ actually solves that.
The foundation is one simple but powerful idea.
Pevraโs core principle: โIdentity follows the person. History follows the number.โ
Your verified identity stays with you forever, no matter how many times you change numbers.
The complete ownership history of any phone number stays on-chain forever, even after it gets recycled.
This distinction changes everything
Now when you buy a recycled number, you can now see its full history on-chain.
If that number was involved in crime before you got it, the record clearly shows you were not the owner at that time. You now have proof.
@pevraHQ turns phone numbers into immutable on-chain assets on the @base blockchain. Every number is permanently linked to the userโs National Identification Number (NIN) at the moment itโs minted.
This record cannot be erased, changed, or hidden. @pevraHQ is not just a blockchain project. Itโs a full consumer platform.
Through one mobile app, users get:
Permanent on-chain identity
eSIM connectivity
Internet-based voice calls
Encrypted messaging
Data plans
All powered by the Base chain.
Every number on @pevraHQ follows a clear, transparent lifecycle:
Provisioning โ Minting on-chain
Active use
Dormancy period (up to 24 months)
Reclaim (original owner can take it back)
Recycling (only after 24 months of zero activity)
The full history always remains visible to the next owner.
Pevra also has โCall Shieldโ a real-time safety feature. When someone calls you,
You instantly see:
Green = Pevra Verified (clean history + verified identity)
Yellow = Regular carrier number
Red = Officially flagged for criminal activity
This adds a powerful layer of trust and protection.
The goal is simple: Make phone number ownership transparent and verifiable for the first time.
So innocent people are no longer punished for crimes committed by previous owners of their number.
https://t.co/73JncygemL
Few days ago, I made a post about how recycled phone numbers are destroying innocent lives in Nigeria,
but didnโt really go in depth on how @pevraHQ actually solves that.
The foundation is one simple but powerful idea.
Pevraโs core principle: โIdentity follows the person. History follows the number.โ
Your verified identity stays with you forever, no matter how many times you change numbers.
The complete ownership history of any phone number stays on-chain forever, even after it gets recycled.
This distinction changes everything
Now when you buy a recycled number, you can now see its full history on-chain.
If that number was involved in crime before you got it, the record clearly shows you were not the owner at that time. You now have proof.
@pevraHQ turns phone numbers into immutable on-chain assets on the @base blockchain. Every number is permanently linked to the userโs National Identification Number (NIN) at the moment itโs minted.
This record cannot be erased, changed, or hidden. @pevraHQ is not just a blockchain project. Itโs a full consumer platform.
Through one mobile app, users get:
Permanent on-chain identity
eSIM connectivity
Internet-based voice calls
Encrypted messaging
Data plans
All powered by the Base chain.
Every number on @pevraHQ follows a clear, transparent lifecycle:
Provisioning โ Minting on-chain
Active use
Dormancy period (up to 24 months)
Reclaim (original owner can take it back)
Recycling (only after 24 months of zero activity)
The full history always remains visible to the next owner.
Pevra also has โCall Shieldโ a real-time safety feature. When someone calls you,
You instantly see:
Green = Pevra Verified (clean history + verified identity)
Yellow = Regular carrier number
Red = Officially flagged for criminal activity
This adds a powerful layer of trust and protection.
The goal is simple: Make phone number ownership transparent and verifiable for the first time.
So innocent people are no longer punished for crimes committed by previous owners of their number.
https://t.co/73JncygemL
You will be arrested for FRAUD and KIDNAPPING!
Yes! You donโt realize this yet but in Nigeria, getting a recycled phone number can literally destroy your life.
This isnโt exaggeration. Itโs a real and recurring problem.
Phone numbers are not owned. They are leased meaning when you stop using a number for long it goes back into the pool and gets re-issued to someone else.
What does that have to do with you?
The new owner has zero visibility into what that number was used for before. In countries like the UK and USA, there are minimum dormancy periods and some record-keeping rules whilst in Nigeria, these protections are weak or poorly enforced.
When a number is recycled, its entire criminal history disappears from public view, this becomes extremely dangerous because of how fraud, kidnapping and ransom work in Nigeria.
Criminals heavily rely on mobile phones to communicate ransom demands. When police โChoose toโ trace a number involved in crime and discover it has since been given to an innocent personโฆ that innocent person often gets arrested, and its something we have all seen and heard of.
Now imagine a scenario whereby you get a recycled number, previously used by a fraudster unknown to you, that number was used for ransom calls and fraudulent activities and few months later the EFCC or Police trace it, you get detained.
You have no way to independently prove you are not the owner at the time of the crime, mind you carrier records are private. Thereโs no public audit trail.
Carrier KYC only shows who owns the number today, not in the past.
Itโs controlled by private companies and can be manipulated or denied.
Police investigations depend on carrier cooperation (which isnโt guaranteed).
Court orders are slow and come too late for people already detained.
Sounds fascinating right? But this isnโt a rare edge case. Nigeria has over 220 million mobile subscribers. Many people use multiple sims.
The NCC has had to suspend registrations multiple times because the current identity system is unreliable.
The problem is structural!
The core failure is simple:
There is no permanent, public, and tamper-proof record of who owned a phone number at any specific point in time.
Without that, innocent people cannot defend themselves when numbers are recycled.
This is the exact problem @pevraHQ was created to solve. Not by disrupting telecomโฆ
But by adding the one thing traditional telecom systems cannot provide:
Immutable on-chain ownership history.
So yes, there is a possibility of you getting arrested even if youโre innocent. Stay on the brighter side, use @pevraHQ
You will be arrested for FRAUD and KIDNAPPING!
Yes! You donโt realize this yet but in Nigeria, getting a recycled phone number can literally destroy your life.
This isnโt exaggeration. Itโs a real and recurring problem.
Phone numbers are not owned. They are leased meaning when you stop using a number for long it goes back into the pool and gets re-issued to someone else.
What does that have to do with you?
The new owner has zero visibility into what that number was used for before. In countries like the UK and USA, there are minimum dormancy periods and some record-keeping rules whilst in Nigeria, these protections are weak or poorly enforced.
When a number is recycled, its entire criminal history disappears from public view, this becomes extremely dangerous because of how fraud, kidnapping and ransom work in Nigeria.
Criminals heavily rely on mobile phones to communicate ransom demands. When police โChoose toโ trace a number involved in crime and discover it has since been given to an innocent personโฆ that innocent person often gets arrested, and its something we have all seen and heard of.
Now imagine a scenario whereby you get a recycled number, previously used by a fraudster unknown to you, that number was used for ransom calls and fraudulent activities and few months later the EFCC or Police trace it, you get detained.
You have no way to independently prove you are not the owner at the time of the crime, mind you carrier records are private. Thereโs no public audit trail.
Carrier KYC only shows who owns the number today, not in the past.
Itโs controlled by private companies and can be manipulated or denied.
Police investigations depend on carrier cooperation (which isnโt guaranteed).
Court orders are slow and come too late for people already detained.
Sounds fascinating right? But this isnโt a rare edge case. Nigeria has over 220 million mobile subscribers. Many people use multiple sims.
The NCC has had to suspend registrations multiple times because the current identity system is unreliable.
The problem is structural!
The core failure is simple:
There is no permanent, public, and tamper-proof record of who owned a phone number at any specific point in time.
Without that, innocent people cannot defend themselves when numbers are recycled.
This is the exact problem @pevraHQ was created to solve. Not by disrupting telecomโฆ
But by adding the one thing traditional telecom systems cannot provide:
Immutable on-chain ownership history.
So yes, there is a possibility of you getting arrested even if youโre innocent. Stay on the brighter side, use @pevraHQ
Number recycling is a security gap everyone is sleeping on.
In fact, it is a silent risk most people are completely ignoring.
Most times, we laugh it off when we get a random call or message meant for someone else.
But this goes way deeper than mild inconvenience.
Let me take you down memory lane.
That one phone number you have does more than you think.
โ Your bank sends OTPs to it.
โ You use it to recover your email.
โ Your WhatsApp lives on it.
โ Government platforms use it for verification.
โ Even your work, your doctor, and your contacts are all connected to that one line.
Now imagine you stop using that SIM.
And six months later, that same number is reassigned to a complete stranger.
There was no hacking or drama, and no one was trying to take your data.
Your bank alerts could start landing on a strangerโs phone.
OTPs that were meant for you and password resets you forgot might be tied to that line.
It doesnโt feel like a breachโฆ until it is.
And nothing really stops someone from acting on that access once they have it.
Your identity may not move with the number, but the access does.
Thatโs the risky gap weโve all gotten used to without questioning it.
And it doesnโt have to stay this way.
Pevra is working to fix this gap with permanent ownership, clean history, and real accountability.
Sometime in last year I purchased a sim card and registered it as they said, but reaching home to find out it still has information of the previous user including the initial name. Now what if this was just to fall in the wrings hands??
More crazy when you realize it's not the first time something like this is happening.
It's high time we see the need for a new system, that's why am sticking to the solution pevra us building
Stop Recycling your IDENTITY!!!
Its 2026 and yet Telecoms systems still recycle numbers,
this simply means if you leave your number dormant it will get reused by someone else.
Now some might say โIts just a sim cardโ but is it?
Your simcard is not just a number, its your you key to access the Digital space, banking, Identity verification, account recovery and so much more.
Yet you say โits just a simโ just because you donโt have the in depth knowledge of the amount of data it contains and usage doesnโt mean you should treat it petty.
Your Identity should be owned and controlled by you not the system.
And thatโs why @pevraHQ was built.
The goal is to build a system where;
You permanently own your number
You donโt have to worry about diversity of ownership
You can verify number history
No reassignment of number
Your identity shouldnโt be saleable but owned by you.
The phone number you use is a critical piece of identity infrastructure. But today, itโs still treated like disposable inventory.
Telecom systems still recycle numbers, meaning that you donโt own your number, you lease them. When you leave it dormant for a period of time, your number can be reassigned to someone else.
That might have worked when numbers were just for calls, but right now, it's risky.
Today, your phone number is the primary key to your digital life; banking, authentication, account recovery, identity verification, but the system behind it has not evolved.
This creates a silent but massive risk layer across finance, security, and digital identity.
Now, the real question is; why is one of the most sensitive identity anchors in the world still reusable?
This question is what drives Pevra and the goal is to bring solutions like:
โ Permanent numbers.
โ Single ownership.
โ Verifiable history and no reassignment.
Identity should not run on temporary primitives.
Join the shift to permanent ownership today by hitting the follow button. ๐งก