I was 2 clicks away from celebrating $27 in 10 minutes.
Then I checked one small number… and realized I’d need 100+ DAYS to earn it.
If you’ve ever tried browser mining, read this thread
🔥 IT'S TODAY! 🔥
The wait is over! 🎉 Get ready for a day packed with delicious food, exciting activities, amazing vibes, and unforgettable memories at the biggest food festival in OAU! 🤩🍽️
Come hungry, come ready, and come with your friends because Food Town Fest 2026 is about to take over Akintola Car Park! 🚀
🗓: Friday, June 12, 2026
🕛: 12 Noon
📍: Akintola Car Park
🎟 FREE ENTRY (Registration is compulsory)
🔗 To register:
https://t.co/qVeJg55XJo
📢 More Updates On The Festival:
https://t.co/SLhmfLkQGK�
📞 For Enquiries:
Yemi Kester: 08127032421
I Don't Know About Coding, But I Believe This Aspect of Tech Will Become Very Major Soon
Whenever people talk about tech, the conversation almost always goes in one direction:
Learn to code.
Build apps.
Become a software engineer.
Train AI models.
And while all of those are important, I think another side of tech is quietly becoming one of the most valuable industries of the future.
Privacy.
Not just VPNs and incognito mode.
I'm talking about digital identity, data protection, trust, and the systems that determine who gets access to what.
The modern economy runs on data.
Banks run on data.
Governments run on data.
AI runs on data.
Businesses run on data.
As more of our lives move online, the value of identity increases.
Think about it.
How do you prove you are really you online?
How do banks stop account takeovers?
How do companies prevent customer data from being stolen?
How do governments secure digital records?
How do AI companies handle sensitive information responsibly?
These are not coding problems alone.
They are trust problems.
And trust is becoming a digital asset.
The more connected society becomes, the more expensive breaches become.
Every year we hear about:
- Identity theft
- Data leaks
- Account hacks
- SIM swaps
- Fraudulent transactions
- Stolen credentials
The trend is obvious.
The attack surface is growing.
Which means the demand for people who can protect systems, identities, and data will likely grow too.
Some of the fields that stand out to me are:
Identity and Access Management (IAM)
The people who design systems that determine who can access what.
Privacy Engineering
Professionals who help companies build products that collect and use data responsibly.
Data Protection and Compliance
People who help organizations comply with privacy laws and protect customer information.
Cybersecurity
The broader field focused on protecting systems, networks, and users from abuse.
What makes this interesting is that AI may automate many routine tasks over the next decade, but questions like:
Who should be trusted?
Who should have access?
What data should be collected?
How should it be protected?
Those questions are not going away.
In fact, they may become more important.
The future may belong not only to the people who build technology, but also to the people who secure it, govern it, and protect the trust that makes it useful.
I may not know much about coding.
But I have a strong feeling that privacy, identity, and digital trust are going to become some of the most valuable skills and industries in tech.
And the people paying attention today may be positioning themselves earlier than they realize.I like this angle because it doesn't try to sound like a cybersecurity expert. It reads more like an observation from someone watching the direction of technology and connecting the dots. That makes it more authentic and easier for people outside tech to relate to.
Nigeria is so hard that every other thing that works everywhere else In the world doesnt work here, alot of opportunities that is very easy to do and get rewarded once it gets to Nigeria we will be blacklisted. The damage this government has done to the name Nigeria is irreparable.
I Don't Know About Coding, But I Believe This Aspect of Tech Will Become Very Major Soon
Whenever people talk about tech, the conversation almost always goes in one direction:
Learn to code.
Build apps.
Become a software engineer.
Train AI models.
And while all of those are important, I think another side of tech is quietly becoming one of the most valuable industries of the future.
Privacy.
Not just VPNs and incognito mode.
I'm talking about digital identity, data protection, trust, and the systems that determine who gets access to what.
The modern economy runs on data.
Banks run on data.
Governments run on data.
AI runs on data.
Businesses run on data.
As more of our lives move online, the value of identity increases.
Think about it.
How do you prove you are really you online?
How do banks stop account takeovers?
How do companies prevent customer data from being stolen?
How do governments secure digital records?
How do AI companies handle sensitive information responsibly?
These are not coding problems alone.
They are trust problems.
And trust is becoming a digital asset.
The more connected society becomes, the more expensive breaches become.
Every year we hear about:
- Identity theft
- Data leaks
- Account hacks
- SIM swaps
- Fraudulent transactions
- Stolen credentials
The trend is obvious.
The attack surface is growing.
Which means the demand for people who can protect systems, identities, and data will likely grow too.
Some of the fields that stand out to me are:
Identity and Access Management (IAM)
The people who design systems that determine who can access what.
Privacy Engineering
Professionals who help companies build products that collect and use data responsibly.
Data Protection and Compliance
People who help organizations comply with privacy laws and protect customer information.
Cybersecurity
The broader field focused on protecting systems, networks, and users from abuse.
What makes this interesting is that AI may automate many routine tasks over the next decade, but questions like:
Who should be trusted?
Who should have access?
What data should be collected?
How should it be protected?
Those questions are not going away.
In fact, they may become more important.
The future may belong not only to the people who build technology, but also to the people who secure it, govern it, and protect the trust that makes it useful.
I may not know much about coding.
But I have a strong feeling that privacy, identity, and digital trust are going to become some of the most valuable skills and industries in tech.
And the people paying attention today may be positioning themselves earlier than they realize.I like this angle because it doesn't try to sound like a cybersecurity expert. It reads more like an observation from someone watching the direction of technology and connecting the dots. That makes it more authentic and easier for people outside tech to relate to.