@acububad@042Mazi@grok life hit people differently some live in building like this, some are under bridge and some live in palace and mansion... all fingers are not equal
@omed487327102@paulhn92@EleluAyoola Some doesn't want to know about how true islam is..... Not their fault actually because the so called Terrorist also call on the Creator whenever they do their bad things..... The only thing is to eliminate those Terrorists from the Nigeria
The Terrorists are not Muslims
Spent some time checking out Nyxly today, and one thing became clear pretty quickly:
Nyxly isn't trying to compete by adding another feature.
It's rethinking who actually owns the creator economy.
And honestly, that's what caught my attention.
For years, creators have built audiences on platforms they don't really control.
The platform owns the distribution.
The platform controls the rules.
The platform takes a cut.
Nyxly seems to be approaching things differently by putting ownership back in creators' hands.
One feature I found particularly interesting is instant settlements.
Most creators are used to waiting weeks—or even months—to get paid.
With smart contracts handling distribution automatically, revenue can move in real time.
Create. Earn. Get paid.
The token-gated community model is another thing that stood out.
Instead of relying on multiple tools to reward supporters, creators can build exclusive experiences directly around their community.
Your biggest supporters get access.
You decide the rules.
I also like that privacy is built into the conversation.
End-to-end encrypted messaging means creators can interact with their audience more securely, whether that's offering consultations, exclusive access, or private discussions.
Trust matters online.
A lot of creator platforms push people toward a single monetization path.
Nyxly appears to offer more flexibility:
• Subscriptions
• Direct tips
• Pay-per-view content
• Revenue sharing
Different creators earn in different ways.
One underrated feature is automated revenue splits.
Anyone who's collaborated with editors, designers, musicians, or co-hosts knows how messy payouts can become.
Smart contracts handling distributions automatically feels like a genuinely useful solution.
What Nyxly seems to be challenging is the old creator economy playbook:
❌ High platform fees
❌ Delayed payouts
❌ Platform dependency
❌ Limited ownership
The goal appears to be giving creators more control over both their audience and income.
The creator economy is evolving.
More creators are starting to think beyond followers and views.
They're thinking about ownership, community, transparency, and sustainable income.
That's the direction projects like Nyxly are exploring.
My biggest takeaway?
The future might belong to creators who own their relationships instead of renting access to them.
Curious to hear your thoughts:
What's more important to you as a creator—ownership, monetization, privacy, or community?
@dada_layo@Prince_dc21_ Actually, Muhammad did not encourage harming children or forcing marriages on those who are not physically and mentally mature. In Islam, marriage carries responsibilities, consent, maturity, and protection from harm.