Did you know that in Ghana, investigators can legally read your messages, listen to your calls and access your data without telling you?
Itโs in the Cybersecurity Act, passed in 2020 and hereโs how it works:
They go to the High Court quietly, without you present and without informing you. If the court approves, your network provider is legally required to hand over your information and stay silent about it.
There are three levels:
Your account details. Who you are, your address, your billing info.
Your traffic data. Who you called, when, for how long, from where.
Your actual messages and calls. The full content of what you said.
For the first two, they just need to show the court โreasonable groundsโ to suspect you.
For the third, your actual conversations, they need a slightly stronger reason. National security. A serious crime. Economic interests of the state.
Thatโs it. No warning. No notification. Your provider canโt even tell you it happened.
This is not a rumour. It is Sections 69 to 74 of Act 1038, a law most Ghanaians have never read.
Now you know ๐๐พ
@trackstar67@OGrich74@KojoForex@ManuelFxGod The truth is most people will probably loose their first funds anyway. So if you feel someone more experienced can shorten your journey, there's no sense in calling it a scam. Finding the right person is the problem however.
@OGrich74@trackstar67@KojoForex@ManuelFxGod Leaning to insults when you're not making sense, classic. We're not talking about the amount but the idea. But even addressing that with the school analogy, you can opt for a cheap school or an expensive school. No one forces you to choose the expensive one. Be guided !
@OGrich74@trackstar67@KojoForex@ManuelFxGod You pay school fees don't you. Even if the school owner is a billionaire would you feel entitled to going to his school for free ? He's providing a service and you have the option to opt in and pay or be home schooled. How is this difficult to understand?
Dear Sir @elonmusk,
I write with utmost respect and a deep sense of purpose to kindly appeal for your consideration toward universities in developing countries, particularly in West Africa.
Access to reliable and affordable internet connectivity remains one of the most critical barriers to academic research, innovation, and global competitiveness within our universities. As such, we humbly request that @Starlink consider offering free or significantly subsidised connectivity, or at least a 50% reduction in subscription costs, to universities in developing nations for a few years.
#FARPolicy #Internet
#TheNtimFraternity
#The63RDEffect
#ElonMusk
@TheDumbTechGuy@kwekutech Great analogy, but accessibility is a big factor. If more people with phones had high grade cameras, the pros would not be in high demand. What do you think?