Introducing #MyBybitCardThread for @BybitAfrica
What if I told you that your cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, USDC, Tether (USDT), and even other supported coins like Ether, BNB, XRP, Toncoin, and Mantle... could be used as easily as cash in your daily life?
We’ve seen crypto revolutionize the financial world, from decentralized finance (DeFi) to NFTs and innovative blockchain applications across industries. Yet, one massive gap has prevented crypto from fully integrating into our daily transactions: the ability to spend it directly in the real world without going through complicated exchanges, slow bank transfers, or hidden fees.
Traditional debit cards tied to fiat currencies USD, EUR, NGN, and others have been our go-to tools for decades. They allow us to pay for groceries, book flights, shop online, or withdraw cash from ATMs.
They are simple, reliable, and familiar. But these cards have no relationship to your crypto holdings. If you want to spend Bitcoin or USDT today, you must first convert it into fiat via an exchange, wait for the transaction to settle, and then make your purchase. That extra step adds time, complexity, and often additional costs.
Until now. 🌍💳
Enter the Bybit Card.
This card, available inside the Bybit app in both virtual and physical versions, allows you to spend your crypto directly, at millions of merchants globally that accept Mastercard. You can top it up either by depositing crypto into your Bybit account or by purchasing crypto directly via P2P with local currency, like Naira, Euros, or USD, on the Bybit platform. This means your crypto becomes instantly spendable as fiat, making it fluid, convenient, and practical for everyday use.
Now, you may ask:
-> How does the Bybit Card actually work?
-> How does it compare to traditional debit cards?
-> What about fees, charges, cashback, and global acceptance?
This thread will break everything down, step by step, so you can understand why the Bybit Card is changing how we spend crypto in our daily lives.
Ready to dive in?
Let's go 🧵🚀
@BybitAfrica
#MyBybitCardThread
@FundiProtocol $736 lost before help even arrives is a problem worth fixing.
The mission should be delivering impact, not feeding inefficiencies.
Transparency isn't optional. It's essential.
And here is the number that should make every impact organisation stop scrolling.
$736.
That is how much disappears from a $10,000 campaign before a single beneficiary receives anything.
Platform fees, wire transfer costs, & admin overhead.
All of it quietly extracted by a system that was never designed to protect the mission.
Not in one dramatic moment. In small, invisible cuts that nobody talks about because everybody assumed this was how fundraising works.
This isn't how it needs to work.
The family in Uganda waiting for flood relief is not concerned with correspondent banks or quarterly reconciliation cycles.
They care whether the money arrived when it arrived. And whether anyone can prove it did.
That is the only metric that matters.
Everything we are building at Fundi Labs starts and ends there.
@He_Is_Paw@CodeXero_xyz@ClusterProtocol@earnfirstdollar The future belongs to builders, and tools like CodeXero_xyz are lowering the barrier every day.
Turning an idea into a working dApp with a simple prompt is wild.
I'm excited to see what more people create with this. 🚀
@wfa_project Clean water access is one of the most important global challenges.
I am excited to see a community rally around a vision that aims to make a difference.
WFA IS NOW LIVE!💧
The mission is simple: build a future where clean water is accessible to everyone.
CA:
9mcYrmxFui9RGDmaWxEXUSqin3Ef2RxHG21hrKbNpump
One Mission.
One Community.
One Future.
#memecoin#solana
Moving money is easy.
Proving impact is the hard part.
Funds for Humanity brings transparency onchain, so visibility comes built in, not through endless reports and follow-ups.
Less time tracking funds.
More time creating impact.
This is exactly the problem Funds for Humanity was designed to solve.
Not the moving part, but the knowing part.
Think about what happens today when an NGO distributes funds across 50 beneficiaries in 3 countries.
The money leaves, and then the work begins.
~ Emails to field teams asking for confirmation.
~ Spreadsheets are being updated manually.
~ Finance managers cross-referencing bank statements with campaign records.
~ Leadership is waiting on a report that won't be ready until next week.
The team is working hard.
The system wasn't designed to provide clarity without effort.
So clarity becomes a deliverable, something you produce - through checking, confirming, following up... instead of something the system gives you automatically.
On Funds for Humanity, every distribution is recorded onchain the moment it happens.
No one has to ask what was sent, no one has to confirm what arrived, no one has to reconcile what was supposed to happen with what actually did.
The system carries that visibility by default.
Because at scale, an impact organisation shouldn't spend its energy tracking capital.
It should be spending it on the reason it raised the capital in the first place.
learn more about us here - https://t.co/8LwTP2TKEJ
This is exactly the problem Funds for Humanity was designed to solve.
Not the moving part, but the knowing part.
Think about what happens today when an NGO distributes funds across 50 beneficiaries in 3 countries.
The money leaves, and then the work begins.
~ Emails to field teams asking for confirmation.
~ Spreadsheets are being updated manually.
~ Finance managers cross-referencing bank statements with campaign records.
~ Leadership is waiting on a report that won't be ready until next week.
The team is working hard.
The system wasn't designed to provide clarity without effort.
So clarity becomes a deliverable, something you produce - through checking, confirming, following up... instead of something the system gives you automatically.
On Funds for Humanity, every distribution is recorded onchain the moment it happens.
No one has to ask what was sent, no one has to confirm what arrived, no one has to reconcile what was supposed to happen with what actually did.
The system carries that visibility by default.
Because at scale, an impact organisation shouldn't spend its energy tracking capital.
It should be spending it on the reason it raised the capital in the first place.
learn more about us here - https://t.co/8LwTP2TKEJ
Fundraising platforms automate payments.
Very few automate trust.
Donations move, then everything slows down. Manual reporting. Delayed updates. Unclear outcomes.
That’s the gap @FundiProtocol is solving.
Not just faster money movement, but a connected system for funding, verification, and accountability.
When everything is connected, impact becomes easier to prove.
And here's what that looks like in practice.
Most fundraising platforms automate the transaction.
Money moves from the donor to the platform to the organisation. That part works.
What doesn't work is everything around it.
The reconciliation still happens manually.
The wire transfer still takes 7 days, the donor still has no idea if their money arrived, and the organisation still spends 3 weeks preparing a report that should generate itself.
The transaction was automated, but coordination wasn't.
That's the gap Funds for Humanity is built to close.
Not just a faster way to collect donations, but a system where execution, verification, and accountability happen together, automatically, as part of the same logic.
The money moves, proof is generated, the report writes itself, & the beneficiary receives... All connected, all onchain.
That's what programmable coordination means for impact organisations.
And that's exactly what we're building.