The recent measures announced by @bankofmaldives are intended to ensure fair and equitable access to foreign currency for legitimate personal use and essential public needs. Specifically, the Bank has enhanced its processes to:
- Prevent misuse of foreign spending limits on cards by ensuring that international card-present transactions are conducted only when the cardholder is physically abroad.
- Address the issue of large volumes of US dollars being sold to a small number of parties who were using personal foreign spend limits for business transactions on certain online shopping platforms. A daily allocation budget has now been introduced to ensure that available foreign currency is distributed more equitably, allowing a wider population to access funds for legitimate personal use.
- Streamline the sale of USD for SMEs and businesses making outward payments, enabling access for a broader range of businesses. The Bank has also reiterated that attempts to obtain large amounts of USD by splitting telegraphic transfer (TT) transactions will be detected, and all sales will remain within the imposed limits.
- Maintain support for students, who can continue to benefit from a higher foreign spending limit of USD 1,200 per month. Students currently using their parents’ cards will be allowed to do so for period of three months, during which time dedicated student cards with the higher limit will be issued.
- For USD denominated debit and credit cards, there are no restrictions in usage for both personal and businesses purposes.
- The increased POS foreign spend limits on debit cards up to USD 1,000 per month remains unchanged and further, customers can enjoy up to USD3,000 per month for travel and medical purposes.
Locked out of Claude Opus 4.6 on Antigravity for 2 days now.
If LLMs are part of your actual build pipeline (not just occasional assistants), this kind of availability risk becomes a real blocker.
Hard to justify $$ when reliability isn’t predictable. @antigravity
With projects like Ocean Connect, Maldives could've added a third major export sector by now:
low-latency digital infrastructure from the Indian Ocean 🌊☁️
Digital infrastructure could become the next frontier for small island economies like ours.
Global data centre demand is projected to grow from 62 GW → 110 GW by 2028 ⚡
Some countries are exporting compute.
Maldives still exports mostly sunsets, fish & coconuts 🌅🐟🥥
There’s a real opportunity here we shouldn’t ignore.
Your codebase already has architecture.
But very few tools enforce it automatically.
I open-sourced Arch-Engine — a CLI that extracts structural relationships from source code and detects boundary violations and dependency drift early.
https://t.co/Z7oHjoFHJ8
The frequent “servers experiencing high traffic” interruptions every couple of minutes are breaking flow during long sessions. This needs to be fixed. @antigravity