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In many ways, Phaver’s mission to achieve social freedom mirrors Nigeria’s journey to independence. Much like Nigeria’s colonial experience where the power lay in foreign hands, today’s social media giants exert immense control over user data, content, and interactions. Platforms like Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) centralize ownership, manipulating content visibility and engagement for profit while users have little control over their own social presence.
Phaver, akin to Nigeria’s nationalists, challenges this imbalance by offering users the chance to own and control their social graphs. With its decentralized model, users can curate content without being subject to arbitrary algorithms or censorship. Phaver empowers users by making them stakeholders in their social identities, rewarding them fairly for their contributions to the platform.
Just as Nigeria moved from being ruled by external forces to self-governance, Phaver’s model promises a similar kind of liberation in the digital space… 0 reply
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