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Right? I still remember your top notch design of the lava for #Delve ! Golden, I'm telling ya!

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As African economies digitise rapidly, cybercrime is evolving just as quickly. Malware that once took skilled programmers weeks or months to build can now be generated in minutes using AI-powered coding tools, enabling cybercriminals to launch cheaper, faster, and large-scale attacks, often targeting businesses and consumers coming online for the first time. The shift is captured in the HP Wolf Security Threat Insights Report, released by the security unit of technology manufacturer HP Inc, which shows attackers shifting from carefully engineered exploits toward a strategy built on speed and volume. By combining AI-assisted coding with modular malware kits, often purchased cheaply on underground forums, cybercriminals can now generate thousands of slightly different malware samples and launch them across the internet within minutes. Rather than investing time in building technically perfect malware, attackers are increasingly relying on large numbers of ‘good enough’ attacks that are inexpensive, automated, and difficult to detect individually. In some cases identified by HP researchers, hackers purchase ready-made malware components for less than $10 and use automated tools to modify them repeatedly. Even if most of these attacks fail, the sheer scale means that a small number of successful infections can still produce significant financial returns. The implications are particularly significant for emerging digital economies. Across Africa, businesses are rapidly adopting cloud services, digital payments, and AI-driven infrastructure. But that rapid digital adoption also expands the region’s cyber-attack surface. According to the HP report, organisations across the continent experience an average of 3,153 cyberattacks weekly—about 60% higher than the global average—suggesting that attackers are actively targeting environments where cybersecurity practices are still maturing. For small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), the economic imbalance behind these automated attacks is especially stark. While cybercriminals can assemble malware campaigns for only a few dollars, the damage from a single successful breach can be devastating. Cybercrime is estimated to cost African economies roughly $10 billion annually, and for smaller businesses, the consequences can be existential. In South Africa, for example, a study shows that around 22% of SMEs hit by ransomware attacks ultimately shut down. In this new era of automated cybercrime, the low cost of launching attacks contrasts sharply with the potentially catastrophic cost of defending against them. ## **The shift from precision to scale** For many years, the most dangerous cyberattacks were often the most technically sophisticated ones. Highly skilled hackers would craft malware capable of quietly infiltrating networks, stealing sensitive data, or spreading across systems undetected. These attacks required time, expertise, and careful testing. Cybercriminals are adopting a software-like approach to attacks, using automated coding tools to generate, test, and deploy new malware variants within minutes. This speed-over-perfection strategy allows them to launch hundreds or thousands of slightly different attacks, increasing the chance some will bypass defenses. In one HP-identified case, attackers hid malware inside a Scalable Vector Graphic (SVG) image—a file type made of lines and shapes rather than pixels—which browsers open automatically and email filters often trust, letting the malicious code slip past initial security checks. In Nigeria, the average organization now faces roughly 4,701 cyberattacks weekly. Most of these are not highly sophisticated, hand-crafted hacks but automated scripts designed to scan systems and exploit a single weak point. ## **AI-assisted coding accelerates malware development** AI-assisted coding tools—often described as “vibe coding”—are becoming a major driver of change in cybercrime. These tools can generate working software code from simple prompts, helping developers build applications faster. But the same capability is now being exploited by cybercriminals to create malicious programs with far less effort than before. In the past, writing malware required advanced technical skills and weeks or months of work to design programs that could infiltrate systems and evade antivirus detection. AI tools have lowered that barrier dramatically. Attackers can now generate key malware components, such as “loaders”—small programs that enter a victim’s computer and download additional malicious software—in just seconds. Even when the AI-generated code is imperfect, attackers can quickly modify it or produce many variations until one works. Each version appears slightly different to security systems, making it harder for traditional antivirus tools that rely on known malware signatures to detect them. This constant variation acts like a digital disguise, allowing some attacks to slip through defenses—something reflected in HP’s findings that 14% of email threats in late 2025 bypassed at least one email security scanner before being stopped. ## **The rise of modular “flat-pack” malware** Another trend highlighted in the HP report is the rise of modular malware kits, sometimes called “flat-pack malware.” Instead of building malicious software entirely from scratch, attackers now assemble it from pre-built components available online. These modules can include loaders, credential-stealing tools, ransomware functions, and command-and-control systems. By combining different pieces, cybercriminals can quickly create customised malware packages for specific campaigns. Automated coding tools make this even easier by generating scripts that connect the modules or help disguise them from security systems. This modular approach lowers the technical barrier to launching cyberattacks. People with limited programming knowledge can assemble working malware using components purchased or downloaded from underground forums. As a result, the number of potential attackers is growing rapidly, making the cybersecurity landscape more complex and unpredictable. ## **Brand mimicry and the rise of digital “evil twins”** While automated coding helps attackers build malware faster, they still rely heavily on deception to persuade victims to install it. One of the most effective techniques highlighted in the HP report involves brand mimicry. Cybercriminals are becoming increasingly adept at creating fake websites that closely resemble legitimate platforms used by millions of people. Services such as Microsoft Teams, Zoom, and Booking.com are common targets because users trust them and frequently download their software. Attackers replicate these sites with remarkable precision. Logos, colors, layouts, and even the wording used on official pages are copied to create convincing “evil twin” versions of the real websites. In the Microsoft Teams “Piggyback” campaign (2025–2026), hackers used SEO poisoning to manipulate search results so that anyone searching for “download Microsoft Teams” was directed to a fake website that looked identical to the official page. When users clicked “Download,” they received a fully functional copy of Teams—but it was secretly bundled with a hidden malware file called OysterLoader, giving attackers access while leaving the main app working as expected. Similarly, the Booking.com “ClickFix” and “I Paid Twice” campaigns in November 2025 relied on psychological trickery targeting hotel staff and travelers. Emails mimicked legitimate guest complaints, directing staff to a fake Booking.com portal claiming their browser was malfunctioning. Following the prompt to “fix” the issue—a tactic known as ClickFix—installed malware such as PureRAT or XWorm, giving attackers covert access to their systems. In Africa, banks are often the main targets of brand-mimicry attacks because they provide direct access to money. In one example known as the “Help Desk” scam in Nigeria and South Africa, criminals create fake social media accounts using the logos and branding of major banks such as United Bank for Africa, Standard Bank, and First Bank of Nigeria. When customers complain online about failed transactions, the fake accounts quickly respond and direct them to a cloned banking website designed to steal their login details. Cybercriminals boost the reach of these fraudulent sites using search-engine poisoning, exploiting algorithm weaknesses to push malicious pages to the top of search results. A user searching for a popular software installer may unknowingly click on one of these fake sites, believing it to be legitimate. Once the victim downloads the installer from the counterfeit page, the attack begins. In many cases, the real software will install and function normally, reinforcing the illusion that the download was legitimate. However, a hidden malicious program may also be installed in the background. One example is a loader known as OysterLoader, which acts as a backdoor into the infected system. While the user continues using the legitimate application, attackers gain remote access to the computer. The rise of AI-assisted malware demonstrates that modern cyberattacks rely as much on deception as on technical sophistication. As these methods continue to spread worldwide, the takeaway is clear: effective cybersecurity needs to go beyond simply detecting threats and instead adopt proactive strategies designed to anticipate and counteract deception at every stage.

Cybercrime costs Africa $10 billion a year. AI is about to make that number bigger. The HP Wolf Security Threat Insights Report, released by the security unit of technology manufacturer HP Inc, sho...

#Delve #into #AI #Artifical #Intelligence #cybercrime #Hackers

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Someone reported a game crash in Delve D: How am I supposed to go to sleep now!

#delve #roguelikedev

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Artificial intelligence (AI) could add as much as $136 billion in productivity gains across Africa, according to Microsoft. Unlocking that value, however, depends on whether countries can enable the secure, seamless flow of data across their borders. “We only have about 1%or 2% of global compute power in Africa,” Akua Gyekye, Government Affairs Director for Microsoft Africa, told TechCabal in an interview on Wednesday.“If we’re serious about diffusing AI across the continent, we need infrastructure. But we also need the right policy environment.” AI systems demand enormous computing power, yet Africa controls less than 1% of global capacity. With limited access to hyperscale infrastructure, researchers, startups, and governments struggle to deploy advanced AI tools at scale. In response, African governments have repeatedly called on global cloud providers such as Microsoft to build local data centres. As of mid-2025, Africa has 223 data centres across 38 countries, less than 0.02% of the world’s total of more than 11,800. Microsoft was the first massive-scale cloud operator to launch local data centres in Africa (2019). These are organised into two primary regions: South Africa North (Johannesburg) and South Africa West (Cape Town). But Gyekye argues that a purely national approach may not be economically viable or strategically sound. “A regional approach often makes more sense,” she said. “If you build a data centre in Nigeria, how can the rest of West Africa benefit? If you build in South Africa, how do neighbouring countries plug in?” Microsoft’s existing South African cloud regions already serve customers across Southern Africa, raising a broader policy question on whether other African countries allow their citizens’ data to reside in neighbouring jurisdictions while still enforcing their own data-protection laws. That is where the conversation shifts from infrastructure to sovereignty. ## **Data sovereignty vs. data silos** Over the past decade, Africa has seen a rapid surge in data-protection regulation. In 2012, only 12 countries had data-protection laws; at least 46 have now enacted legislation or regulatory frameworks, and more than 40 now operate dedicated Data Protection Authorities. The African Union’s Convention on Cyber Security and Personal Data Protection, which came into force in 2023, has helped speed up alignment efforts across regional blocs. Enforcement has also intensified. Regulators in countries such as Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya are issuing record fines and, in some cases, criminal penalties for violations. In July 2024, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), in a landmark joint action with the Nigeria Data Protection Commission, fined Meta $220 million for “intrusive” data practices, unauthorised data sharing, and abusing its market dominance. In late 2023 and again in 2025, Kenya’s Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC) fined several digital lenders between KES 2 million ($15,500) and KES 5 million ($38,760) for “shaming” borrowers by contacting their phone contacts without permission. Yet Gyekye warned that well-intentioned sovereignty policies can create data silos. “Some governments feel data is safest when it is physically within their borders,” she said. “But cybersecurity threats don’t respect borders. In many cases, cloud providers can offer higher levels of protection than local hosting.” The issue, she argued, is not about weakening sovereignty but about modernising it. If a country’s laws can travel with its data, enforced through contractual, technical and regulatory safeguards, then physical location becomes less critical. In Ethiopia, strict localisation requirements mandate that certain data be stored on local servers. While such measures aim to protect citizens, they also complicate regional expansion for banks, fintech startups and e-commerce firms seeking to scale across East Africa. Safaricom’s expansion into Ethiopia illustrates how differing national data rules complicate the “super-app” model. To launch M-Pesa, the company had to comply with Ethiopia’s strict local data-processing requirements, different from the provisions of Kenya’s Data Protection Act of 2019. “Data silos don’t just affect Microsoft,” Gyekye noted. “They impact regional banks, small and medium enterprises, and startups that aim to expand beyond a single market.” The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is designed to promote cross-border collaboration, with the African Union estimating it could boost intra-African trade by over 50%. Yet, digital trade, payments, logistics, e-commerce, and AI-driven services all depend on the seamless movement of data across borders. “Without cross-border data collaboration, the promise of AfCFTA cannot be fully realised,” Gyekye said. She argued that harmonisation does not require identical laws across all 54 countries. Instead, interoperability and mutual recognition frameworks could allow data to flow securely between jurisdictions with comparable standards. “There isn’t a one-size-fits-all model,” she said. “Countries can maintain their sovereignty and self-determination. But there must be pathways for data to move.” ## **The sovereign cloud model** To bridge the gap between sovereignty and scale, Microsoft is advocating a “sovereign cloud” model, which allows data to be hosted outside a country’s physical borders while remaining subject to that country’s laws and regulatory controls. In practice, this often involves encryption safeguards, local key management, strict access controls, and contractual guarantees ensuring that only authorised entities can access sensitive information. For example, a major South African tier-one bank such as Standard Bank or FirstRand may run large-scale data workloads on Microsoft Azure while relying on Thales CipherTrust to manage encryption keys locally. “The question becomes: who holds the keys?” Gyekye explains. “Not Microsoft. The customer or the government.” The approach reflects a broader industry trend toward modular cloud architectures. Sensitive personal data may remain locally stored, while anonymised or aggregated data can be processed regionally or globally for analytics and AI training. Amazon Web Services (AWS) uses a modular approach called AWS Outposts, which brings cloud hardware into the customer’s data centre. In January 2026, AWS announced the expansion of its 2nd-generation Outposts racks to Nigeria, Morocco, and Senegal. For policymakers, the model offers a compromise: maintain legal oversight while accessing larger pools of compute power. Still, Gyekye insists that infrastructure alone will not unlock Africa’s AI dividend. Microsoft’s strategy on the continent also focuses heavily on skills development and connectivity. Through its Airband initiative, a global program aimed at expanding internet access to underserved and rural communities, the tech giant says it has connected more than 117 million Africans to broadband, surpassing its initial targets. It is also investing in AI skilling programmes for students, developers and policymakers. “Technology is just a tool,” she said. “If people don’t know how to use it, or don’t trust it, the economic benefits won’t materialise.” Language accessibility remains a significant barrier to AI adoption. On February 4, 2026, Microsoft unveiled expanded AI capabilities in 39 African languages through Paza—Swahili for “to project” or “to raise your voice.” The initiative aims to close the “AI divide” by ensuring that AI tools are locally relevant and usable. “If AI doesn’t speak your language, you won’t use it,” Gyekye noted. ## **Big Tech and the African agency** Concerns remain that the deep involvement of global technology firms could weaken African digital sovereignty. Much of this worry stems from the power imbalance between trillion-dollar multinational companies and developing digital economies. The U.S. CLOUD Act allows American authorities to compel U.S.-based tech companies to hand over data they control, even if that data is stored abroad. In practice, this means a Nigerian citizen’s information held in a Lagos data centre operated by a U.S. firm could, in theory, be accessed by Washington without the Nigerian government’s approval. Gyekye acknowledges the concern but emphasises multi-stakeholder governance. When Kenya launched its national AI strategy in March 2025 at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre in Nairobi, she said, it invited local startups, researchers, civil society groups and international companies, including Microsoft, to the decision-making process where these groups helped define the six key pillars of the strategy. “You can’t regulate what you don’t understand,” she said. “Governments must lead, but they need input from industry, academia and civil society.” In her view, it is African governments, rather than foreign firms, that must set the direction because they have the deepest understanding of how these decisions affect their people. “It has to be government-led,” she said. “Only governments know the specific priorities of their citizens.” ## **The $136 billion question** If Africa can align infrastructure, governance and skills, Microsoft’s estimate of $136 billion in productivity gains may prove conservative. AI applications in agriculture, healthcare, logistics and education could dramatically improve efficiency and inclusion. Imagine satellite data helping farmers predict crop yields across East Africa. Or AI-powered diagnostics supporting overstretched rural clinics. Or cross-border fintech platforms scaling seamlessly under AfCFTA rules. But if restrictive data localisation rules proliferate without interoperability mechanisms, the continent risks fragmentation. The result could be duplicated infrastructure, higher costs and slower innovation. For Gyekye, success would mean removing unnecessary data silos while respecting national sovereignty. “Data can flow, keeping sovereignty top of mind,” she said. “That’s how we build digital economies that benefit everyone, from small businesses to multinationals, from policymakers to the man on the street.”

Microsoft says AI could add $136 billion to Africa if data can move freely Artificial intelligence (AI) could add as much as $136 billion in productivity gains across Africa, according to Microsoft...

#Delve #into #AI #Africa #AI #Africa #Microsoft

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Screenshot of ascii roguelike game. The player is fighting a gas spore (an 'e' on screen) and a centipede (a 'c' on screen)

Screenshot of ascii roguelike game. The player is fighting a gas spore (an 'e' on screen) and a centipede (a 'c' on screen)

I heard you like roguelikes with fewer bugs and grammar mistakes so I've released delve 0.5.4.

Also: emergency doors

#delve #roguelikedev

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Screenshot of a scene in an ASCII roguelike game where the player character is fighting several blobs, one of which is grappling them. The grappler is shown in a slightly different colour.

Screenshot of a scene in an ASCII roguelike game where the player character is fighting several blobs, one of which is grappling them. The grappler is shown in a slightly different colour.

A little quality of life fix: when you are grappled, you can only melee attack the monster grappling you, but when you are surrounded by several monsters of the same type it was hard to tell which one was grappling you, so now I'm slightly altering its colour:

#delve

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Smart monsters will now seek out teleport traps when they are frightened and trying to flee from danger.

(this was pretty simple -- just a matter of changing the weight for teleport traps for pathfinding)

#delve #roguelikedev

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Art made in A4 for Immortals RPG, Lost Legacies Gaming

Enter a world of sword and sorcery where adventurers try their luck in a grim world superintended by immortals and their followers.

#ImmortalsRPG #ODnD #WhiteBox #delve #dungeon #journey #ttrpg #fantasy #osr #oldschool #dnd #crawlstilho

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Screenshot of game over screen in delve, and ascii roguelike game. A gravestone reads: "RIP Dana killed by: ??? in the Old Ruins on level 3". The ??? indicates the player did not know what monster killed them.

Screenshot of game over screen in delve, and ascii roguelike game. A gravestone reads: "RIP Dana killed by: ??? in the Old Ruins on level 3". The ??? indicates the player did not know what monster killed them.

:| :| :|

#delve

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Wrote up my somewhat nebulous thoughts for delve 0.6.0

#delve #roguelikedev

www.danarama.ca/posts/2026/p...

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Published delve 0.5.3, which squashes a few bugs and adds a bit of polish here and there!

Now onward and upward to ver 0.6, which will hopefully only take a month or two.......

danarama.itch.io/delve

#delve #roguelikedev

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Delve 0.5.2 is up! I fixed a couple of bugs but the main reason for this release is the ability to remap keybindings for players without the refined taste to appreciate vi-style movement keys...

#delve #roguelike #roguelikedev

danarama.itch.io/delve/devlog...

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Note for both Delve players!

Pushed a little update for Delve to fix a few bugs. The numpad now works on linux and the game was hanging when you tried to view messages on the Game Over screen 😬

#delve #roguelike #roguelikedev

danarama.itch.io/delve

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Delve - A Roguelike CRPG by Dana A roguelike rpg in classical style

Delve 0.5.0 is up at danarama.itch.io/delve

My silly little hobby project got some cool new stuff. There are new dungeons and you can actually win it!

This is still an early and incomplete game but I'm content with my progress so far!

Avaiable for mac, win, linux!

#delve #roguelike #roguelikedev

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Tomorrow...

#delve #roguelikedev

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I cannot remember offhand how I coded it: will the $$s be on the dungeon floor or in the belly of the toad. I /think/ in the belly of the toad and if not I'll fix it so that it is.

But these sorts of silly situations are what I want the game to encourage/create more and more

#roguelikedev #delve

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Testing Delve and I ended up having to run away from a mini-boss only to be swallowed whole by a giant toad as I was trying to get away. My character was almost dead so I read a Scroll of Escape, which takes you out of the dungeon but leaves your gold behind.

#roguelikedev #delve

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Blood DK vs. Nexus-Princess Ky'veza (?? Difficulty) - Achiev: Let Me Solo Her
Blood DK vs. Nexus-Princess Ky'veza (?? Difficulty) - Achiev: Let Me Solo Her YouTube video by MVP

Finally took down Nexus-Princess Ky'veza on ?? Difficulty (Nemesis) after 37 tries as Blood DK just in time!

www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGkm...

#WorldOfWarcraft #WoW #Warcraft #TheWarWithin #Delve #Season3 #BloodDK #WoWDelves #Kyveza #MMO #Gaming #Guide #Guides #Video #Midnight #WoWSolo

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Vibe coding, an AI-powered model where software developers—or anyone—use natural language prompts instead of writing code, is no longer a Silicon Valley meme. By late 2025, it had become one of the fastest ways to build software, slashing costs and accelerating development. Coined by ex-OpenAI researcher Andrej Karpathy in February 2025, the term describes a high-level approach where AI generates entire applications from simple prompts. It slashed early startup burn rates by as much as 85–95%, enabled weekend-built Micro-SaaS tools to reach paying customers within days, and made the idea of the $1 million solo founder feel attainable rather than mythical. Across Africa, where access to capital and engineering talent has historically constrained innovation, the appeal is obvious: ideas can now move from concept to product at unprecedented speed. But speed has a cost. And that cost is increasingly showing up in the form of fragile systems, leaked data, and broken trust. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI startup positioning itself as the “Cloudflare for AI,” says it wants to address. ## **From AI optimism to infrastructure reality** Cencori began in June 2025 not as a business idea, but as a concern. Co-founder and CEO, Bola Roy Banjo, traces its origins to his early work as Design Manager at FohnAI, a digital security platform, working at the intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity in 2024. “The evolution of AI is fast, and we can’t just trust its decisions blindly,” Banjo says. “I was trying to infuse cybersecurity directly into AI systems, to secure the entire landscape. That led to Cencori.” What emerged was a thesis: as AI products proliferate, they will need an infrastructure layer like the internet needed Amazon Web Services and Cloudflare. In Banjo’s view, future AI applications should ship with ethics, security, and reliability built in by default, not bolted on after something breaks. “AI products are going to come with other problems, ethics, security, and data leaks,” he explains. “With Cencori, those things are in-built. You don’t have to worry about your AI leaking sensitive data or exposing user information.” ## Get The Best African Tech Newsletters In Your Inbox Select your country Nigeria Ghana Kenya South Africa Egypt Morocco Tunisia Algeria Libya Sudan Ethiopia Somalia Djibouti Eritrea Uganda Tanzania Rwanda Burundi Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Central African Republic Chad Cameroon Gabon Equatorial Guinea São Tomé and Príncipe Angola Zambia Zimbabwe Botswana Namibia Lesotho Eswatini Mozambique Madagascar Mauritius Seychelles Comoros Cape Verde Guinea-Bissau Senegal The Gambia Guinea Sierra Leone Liberia Côte d'Ivoire Burkina Faso Mali Niger Benin Togo Other Select your gender Male Female Others TC Daily TC Events TC Scoop Subscribe ## **The hidden risks of vibe coding** Vibe coding, Banjo argues, is powerful but dangerous. Unlike no-code tools, which rely on visual editors and constrained workflows, vibe coding allows AI to generate entire codebases from prompts. Developers often accept outputs wholesale, pushing them directly into production. That speed has consequences. “There are many AI products out there right now, built this way,” Banjo says. “And we’ve already seen cases where vibe-coded apps exposed locations, phone numbers, and addresses to the public internet.” These aren’t theoretical risks. Data leaks involving large language models happen constantly, as models inadvertently surface private or sensitive information embedded in prompts, logs, or training data. A notable example is the DeepSeek Database Exposure (January 2025), in which over one million lines of log data were leaked and the EchoLeak 0-Click Attack (December 2025), which allowed an attacker to send a specially crafted email with a “hidden prompt”. Even OpenAI warns users not to share personal information, acknowledging that Large Language Models (LLMs) can leak data. Cencori’s approach is pragmatic rather than philosophical. Instead of trying to “solve AI ethics” in the abstract, the platform focuses on known failure modes. Developers configure what data must be protected, including emails, phone numbers, internal records, and Cencori enforces those constraints at the infrastructure level. “We already know the kinds of data LLMs leak,” Banjo says. “So we built tools to stop that, based on real use cases.” ## **The Cloudflare for AI production** If Banjo provides the technical vision, co-founder and Chief Operating Officer, Oreofe Ojurereoluwa Daniel supplies the framing. He describes Cencori as “the Cloudflare for AI production.” Just as Cloudflare sits between websites and the Internet, handling security, reliability, and traffic routing, Cencori positions itself between AI applications and the models they depend on. “Most AI builders are focused on getting something working,” Daniel says. “But what happens when users start paying? How do you guarantee uptime, security, and reliability?” Cencori answers that by acting as a middleware layer. One of its core features is automatic failover across major AI providers. If OpenAI experiences downtime, requests are rerouted to Anthropic or Gemini without developers’ intervention. “It’s like a power switch,” Daniel explains. “If electricity from the grid goes off, you switch to the generator. Our system does that automatically for AI.” This redundancy enables what Cencori claims is 99.9% uptime for applications built on its platform, an essential requirement as AI products move from experiments to businesses. ## **Early traction, real stakes** Though still largely operating in stealth, Cencori is already gaining traction. Its platform is embedded in the codebases of three Y Combinator–backed startups: Sonarly, an AI-powered bug detection platform; 1uI, a generative UI platform for building AI-native interfaces; and Laurence, an AI “digital brain” for advertising that uses quantitative models to automate Amazon ad spend. Collectively, Daniel claims these deployments process more than 20,000 requests each week. In addition, around ten solo developers use Cencori for side projects, some of which the founders hope will grow into full-scale companies. The stakes are high. As Daniel points out, poorly secured AI platforms can cause irreversible harm. He cites cases where private images and personal data escaped into mainstream media, situations that could have been prevented with proper infrastructure controls. “With vibe coding, these incidents will only increase,” he says. “We built Cencori to plug those holes before they become disasters.” ## **Building for Africa, competing globally** “We understand the African landscape,” Daniel says. “Cost matters. Complexity matters. We built Cencori with that in mind.” By consolidating security, observability, reliability, and cost management into a single platform, Cencori aims to reduce both financial and cognitive overhead for builders. Integration takes under 20 minutes, according to the co-founders, an important detail in a world where speed defines adoption. The company is currently bootstrapped, funded by personal savings and support from friends and family, but is in conversations with investors to expand its infrastructure roadmap. Cencori is betting that the next phase of AI innovation won’t be won by those who move fastest alone, but by those who make speed safe. In a world awash with AI-generated code, the companies that endure may be the ones built not just on vibes but on solid foundations beneath them.

Vibe coding is exploding. This Nigerian startup wants to make it safe Across Africa the appeal to vibe coding is obvious, but speed has a cost. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI sta...

#Delve #into #AI #AI #cencori #Nigeria

Origin | Interest | Match

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Vibe coding, an AI-powered model where software developers—or anyone—use natural language prompts instead of writing code, is no longer a Silicon Valley meme. By late 2025, it had become one of the fastest ways to build software, slashing costs and accelerating development. Coined by ex-OpenAI researcher Andrej Karpathy in February 2025, the term describes a high-level approach where AI generates entire applications from simple prompts. It slashed early startup burn rates by as much as 85–95%, enabled weekend-built Micro-SaaS tools to reach paying customers within days, and made the idea of the $1 million solo founder feel attainable rather than mythical. Across Africa, where access to capital and engineering talent has historically constrained innovation, the appeal is obvious: ideas can now move from concept to product at unprecedented speed. But speed has a cost. And that cost is increasingly showing up in the form of fragile systems, leaked data, and broken trust. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI startup positioning itself as the “Cloudflare for AI,” says it wants to address. ## **From AI optimism to infrastructure reality** Cencori began in June 2025 not as a business idea, but as a concern. Co-founder and CEO, Bola Roy Banjo, traces its origins to his early work as Design Manager at FohnAI, a digital security platform, working at the intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity in 2024. “The evolution of AI is fast, and we can’t just trust its decisions blindly,” Banjo says. “I was trying to infuse cybersecurity directly into AI systems, to secure the entire landscape. That led to Cencori.” What emerged was a thesis: as AI products proliferate, they will need an infrastructure layer like the internet needed Amazon Web Services and Cloudflare. In Banjo’s view, future AI applications should ship with ethics, security, and reliability built in by default, not bolted on after something breaks. “AI products are going to come with other problems, ethics, security, and data leaks,” he explains. “With Cencori, those things are in-built. You don’t have to worry about your AI leaking sensitive data or exposing user information.” ## Get The Best African Tech Newsletters In Your Inbox Select your country Nigeria Ghana Kenya South Africa Egypt Morocco Tunisia Algeria Libya Sudan Ethiopia Somalia Djibouti Eritrea Uganda Tanzania Rwanda Burundi Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Central African Republic Chad Cameroon Gabon Equatorial Guinea São Tomé and Príncipe Angola Zambia Zimbabwe Botswana Namibia Lesotho Eswatini Mozambique Madagascar Mauritius Seychelles Comoros Cape Verde Guinea-Bissau Senegal The Gambia Guinea Sierra Leone Liberia Côte d'Ivoire Burkina Faso Mali Niger Benin Togo Other Select your gender Male Female Others TC Daily TC Events TC Scoop Subscribe ## **The hidden risks of vibe coding** Vibe coding, Banjo argues, is powerful but dangerous. Unlike no-code tools, which rely on visual editors and constrained workflows, vibe coding allows AI to generate entire codebases from prompts. Developers often accept outputs wholesale, pushing them directly into production. That speed has consequences. “There are many AI products out there right now, built this way,” Banjo says. “And we’ve already seen cases where vibe-coded apps exposed locations, phone numbers, and addresses to the public internet.” These aren’t theoretical risks. Data leaks involving large language models happen constantly, as models inadvertently surface private or sensitive information embedded in prompts, logs, or training data. A notable example is the DeepSeek Database Exposure (January 2025), in which over one million lines of log data were leaked and the EchoLeak 0-Click Attack (December 2025), which allowed an attacker to send a specially crafted email with a “hidden prompt”. Even OpenAI warns users not to share personal information, acknowledging that Large Language Models (LLMs) can leak data. Cencori’s approach is pragmatic rather than philosophical. Instead of trying to “solve AI ethics” in the abstract, the platform focuses on known failure modes. Developers configure what data must be protected, including emails, phone numbers, internal records, and Cencori enforces those constraints at the infrastructure level. “We already know the kinds of data LLMs leak,” Banjo says. “So we built tools to stop that, based on real use cases.” ## **The Cloudflare for AI production** If Banjo provides the technical vision, co-founder and Chief Operating Officer, Oreofe Ojurereoluwa Daniel supplies the framing. He describes Cencori as “the Cloudflare for AI production.” Just as Cloudflare sits between websites and the Internet, handling security, reliability, and traffic routing, Cencori positions itself between AI applications and the models they depend on. “Most AI builders are focused on getting something working,” Daniel says. “But what happens when users start paying? How do you guarantee uptime, security, and reliability?” Cencori answers that by acting as a middleware layer. One of its core features is automatic failover across major AI providers. If OpenAI experiences downtime, requests are rerouted to Anthropic or Gemini without developers’ intervention. “It’s like a power switch,” Daniel explains. “If electricity from the grid goes off, you switch to the generator. Our system does that automatically for AI.” This redundancy enables what Cencori claims is 99.9% uptime for applications built on its platform, an essential requirement as AI products move from experiments to businesses. ## **Early traction, real stakes** Though still largely operating in stealth, Cencori is already gaining traction. Its platform is embedded in the codebases of three Y Combinator–backed startups: Sonarly, an AI-powered bug detection platform; 1uI, a generative UI platform for building AI-native interfaces; and Laurence, an AI “digital brain” for advertising that uses quantitative models to automate Amazon ad spend. Collectively, Daniel claims these deployments process more than 20,000 requests each week. In addition, around ten solo developers use Cencori for side projects, some of which the founders hope will grow into full-scale companies. The stakes are high. As Daniel points out, poorly secured AI platforms can cause irreversible harm. He cites cases where private images and personal data escaped into mainstream media, situations that could have been prevented with proper infrastructure controls. “With vibe coding, these incidents will only increase,” he says. “We built Cencori to plug those holes before they become disasters.” ## **Building for Africa, competing globally** “We understand the African landscape,” Daniel says. “Cost matters. Complexity matters. We built Cencori with that in mind.” By consolidating security, observability, reliability, and cost management into a single platform, Cencori aims to reduce both financial and cognitive overhead for builders. Integration takes under 20 minutes, according to the co-founders, an important detail in a world where speed defines adoption. The company is currently bootstrapped, funded by personal savings and support from friends and family, but is in conversations with investors to expand its infrastructure roadmap. Cencori is betting that the next phase of AI innovation won’t be won by those who move fastest alone, but by those who make speed safe. In a world awash with AI-generated code, the companies that endure may be the ones built not just on vibes but on solid foundations beneath them.

Vibe coding is exploding. This Nigerian startup wants to make it safe Across Africa the appeal to vibe coding is obvious, but speed has a cost. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI sta...

#Delve #into #AI #AI #cencori #Nigeria

Origin | Interest | Match

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Vibe coding, an AI-powered model where software developers—or anyone—use natural language prompts instead of writing code, is no longer a Silicon Valley meme. By late 2025, it had become one of the fastest ways to build software, slashing costs and accelerating development. Coined by ex-OpenAI researcher Andrej Karpathy in February 2025, the term describes a high-level approach where AI generates entire applications from simple prompts. It slashed early startup burn rates by as much as 85–95%, enabled weekend-built Micro-SaaS tools to reach paying customers within days, and made the idea of the $1 million solo founder feel attainable rather than mythical. Across Africa, where access to capital and engineering talent has historically constrained innovation, the appeal is obvious: ideas can now move from concept to product at unprecedented speed. But speed has a cost. And that cost is increasingly showing up in the form of fragile systems, leaked data, and broken trust. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI startup positioning itself as the “Cloudflare for AI,” says it wants to address. ## **From AI optimism to infrastructure reality** Cencori began in June 2025 not as a business idea, but as a concern. Co-founder and CEO, Bola Roy Banjo, traces its origins to his early work as Design Manager at FohnAI, a digital security platform, working at the intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity in 2024. “The evolution of AI is fast, and we can’t just trust its decisions blindly,” Banjo says. “I was trying to infuse cybersecurity directly into AI systems, to secure the entire landscape. That led to Cencori.” What emerged was a thesis: as AI products proliferate, they will need an infrastructure layer like the internet needed Amazon Web Services and Cloudflare. In Banjo’s view, future AI applications should ship with ethics, security, and reliability built in by default, not bolted on after something breaks. “AI products are going to come with other problems, ethics, security, and data leaks,” he explains. “With Cencori, those things are in-built. You don’t have to worry about your AI leaking sensitive data or exposing user information.” ## Get The Best African Tech Newsletters In Your Inbox Select your country Nigeria Ghana Kenya South Africa Egypt Morocco Tunisia Algeria Libya Sudan Ethiopia Somalia Djibouti Eritrea Uganda Tanzania Rwanda Burundi Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Central African Republic Chad Cameroon Gabon Equatorial Guinea São Tomé and Príncipe Angola Zambia Zimbabwe Botswana Namibia Lesotho Eswatini Mozambique Madagascar Mauritius Seychelles Comoros Cape Verde Guinea-Bissau Senegal The Gambia Guinea Sierra Leone Liberia Côte d'Ivoire Burkina Faso Mali Niger Benin Togo Other Select your gender Male Female Others TC Daily TC Events TC Scoop Subscribe ## **The hidden risks of vibe coding** Vibe coding, Banjo argues, is powerful but dangerous. Unlike no-code tools, which rely on visual editors and constrained workflows, vibe coding allows AI to generate entire codebases from prompts. Developers often accept outputs wholesale, pushing them directly into production. That speed has consequences. “There are many AI products out there right now, built this way,” Banjo says. “And we’ve already seen cases where vibe-coded apps exposed locations, phone numbers, and addresses to the public internet.” These aren’t theoretical risks. Data leaks involving large language models happen constantly, as models inadvertently surface private or sensitive information embedded in prompts, logs, or training data. A notable example is the DeepSeek Database Exposure (January 2025), in which over one million lines of log data were leaked and the EchoLeak 0-Click Attack (December 2025), which allowed an attacker to send a specially crafted email with a “hidden prompt”. Even OpenAI warns users not to share personal information, acknowledging that Large Language Models (LLMs) can leak data. Cencori’s approach is pragmatic rather than philosophical. Instead of trying to “solve AI ethics” in the abstract, the platform focuses on known failure modes. Developers configure what data must be protected, including emails, phone numbers, internal records, and Cencori enforces those constraints at the infrastructure level. “We already know the kinds of data LLMs leak,” Banjo says. “So we built tools to stop that, based on real use cases.” ## **The Cloudflare for AI production** If Banjo provides the technical vision, co-founder and Chief Operating Officer, Oreofe Ojurereoluwa Daniel supplies the framing. He describes Cencori as “the Cloudflare for AI production.” Just as Cloudflare sits between websites and the Internet, handling security, reliability, and traffic routing, Cencori positions itself between AI applications and the models they depend on. “Most AI builders are focused on getting something working,” Daniel says. “But what happens when users start paying? How do you guarantee uptime, security, and reliability?” Cencori answers that by acting as a middleware layer. One of its core features is automatic failover across major AI providers. If OpenAI experiences downtime, requests are rerouted to Anthropic or Gemini without developers’ intervention. “It’s like a power switch,” Daniel explains. “If electricity from the grid goes off, you switch to the generator. Our system does that automatically for AI.” This redundancy enables what Cencori claims is 99.9% uptime for applications built on its platform, an essential requirement as AI products move from experiments to businesses. ## **Early traction, real stakes** Though still largely operating in stealth, Cencori is already gaining traction. Its platform is embedded in the codebases of three Y Combinator–backed startups: Sonarly, an AI-powered bug detection platform; 1uI, a generative UI platform for building AI-native interfaces; and Laurence, an AI “digital brain” for advertising that uses quantitative models to automate Amazon ad spend. Collectively, Daniel claims these deployments process more than 20,000 requests each week. In addition, around ten solo developers use Cencori for side projects, some of which the founders hope will grow into full-scale companies. The stakes are high. As Daniel points out, poorly secured AI platforms can cause irreversible harm. He cites cases where private images and personal data escaped into mainstream media, situations that could have been prevented with proper infrastructure controls. “With vibe coding, these incidents will only increase,” he says. “We built Cencori to plug those holes before they become disasters.” ## **Building for Africa, competing globally** “We understand the African landscape,” Daniel says. “Cost matters. Complexity matters. We built Cencori with that in mind.” By consolidating security, observability, reliability, and cost management into a single platform, Cencori aims to reduce both financial and cognitive overhead for builders. Integration takes under 20 minutes, according to the co-founders, an important detail in a world where speed defines adoption. The company is currently bootstrapped, funded by personal savings and support from friends and family, but is in conversations with investors to expand its infrastructure roadmap. Cencori is betting that the next phase of AI innovation won’t be won by those who move fastest alone, but by those who make speed safe. In a world awash with AI-generated code, the companies that endure may be the ones built not just on vibes but on solid foundations beneath them.

Vibe coding is exploding. This Nigerian startup wants to make it safe Across Africa the appeal to vibe coding is obvious, but speed has a cost. This is the challenge that Cencori, a Nigerian AI sta...

#Delve #into #AI #AI #cencori #Nigeria

Origin | Interest | Match

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I'm going to give myself two more weeks to add content and a bit of polish before releasing 0.5.0 on January 31st!

big new features include:
* it is now winnable
* undead turtles
* a mysterious foggy level
* slightly fewer crashes
* more magic items

#roguelikedev #delve

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I have added a new, annoying monster

#delve #roguelikedev

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I've been playing some Angband lately and like how it does magic mapping. The floor tiles aren't "remembered" so it's easier to track where you have and haven't been on the level. Yoinked the idea for delve

#delve #roguelikedev

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Orkney and Shetland performers take over Aberdeen during Feb in #Delve - a wee festival curated by @ChrisStoutMusic at the Lemon Tree. Great chance to sample brilliant artists normally a Pentland Firth away. www.aberdeenperformingarts.com/delve/

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Nigeria’s push to position itself as a serious player in the global digital economy is increasingly converging on a single piece of infrastructure: data centres. As artificial intelligence workloads begin to reshape computing demand worldwide, the question is no longer whether Nigeria will build more data centres, but whether it is ready to host facilities capable of supporting AI at scale. Based on current projects, investment timelines, and technical constraints, the data suggests that Nigeria is closer than ever to commissioning its first true AI-focused data centre by 2026—but with important caveats. Nigeria already hosts 17 operational data centres, with at least nine more either under construction or at advanced planning stages. One of the next additions is Equinix’s LG3 carrier-neutral facility on Victoria Island, Lagos, a 1-megawatt site scheduled for commissioning in the first quarter of 2026. This rapid build-out places Nigeria among Africa’s fastest-growing data infrastructure markets, driven by rising demand from cloud service providers, financial institutions, telecom operators, and digital-native businesses. While installed capacity currently stands between 65 and 86 megawatts, industry projections suggest it could climb beyond 400 megawatts within the next three to five years as new facilities are completed. That build-out is anchored in a compelling investment story. Nigeria’s data centre market was valued at about $1.4 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow to $2.7 billion by 2035, representing an estimated compound annual growth rate of 7%, according to a Verraki report published in December 2025. Rising enterprise digitalisation, increased cloud adoption, the growth of fintech and e-commerce, and the emergence of AI-driven workloads are all fuelling demand. Consequently, local and international investors view Nigeria not only as a large domestic market but also as a strategic entry point into the wider West African digital economy. ## **Why AI changes the equation** Traditional enterprise data centres are designed around relatively modest rack densities, typically between 10 and 15 kilowatts per rack. AI workloads, particularly those involving large language models and GPU clusters, demand far more power, cooling, and network performance. At scale, AI-focused racks can require anywhere from 60 to 100 kilowatts per rack, often relying on liquid cooling and highly resilient power infrastructure. Krish Ranganath, Regional Executive for West Africa at Africa Data Centres—a subsidiary of Cassava Technologies—explains that their Eko Atlantic City, Lagos facility currently operates at 1.2 MW of a planned 10 MW, with designs to scale up to 20.65 MW to meet rising AI and cloud service demand. “An AI data centre is fundamentally about high rack density.” While supporting technologies such as cooling, networking, and power redundancy can be engineered over time, density is the defining constraint. Under current conditions, Ranganath notes that a 25-kilowatt rack can support entry-level AI workloads if the facility is designed to scale. However, truly AI-native deployments require expandability and long-term power certainty. The challenge is that data centres, whether conventional or high-density, take time to build. Typical construction timelines range from 16 to 20 months, even before accounting for power connections, imported equipment, and commissioning. While prefabricated solutions can shorten deployment cycles, they are difficult to deploy at hyperscale and often come with technical limitations. ## **Economic impact strengthens the case** Beyond digital capability, the economic impact of data centres strengthens the argument for accelerated investment. Modelling by Verraki shows that a $10 million, 1-megawatt Tier III data centre generates approximately $17 million in economic output during the construction phase alone. When operational expenditure and refresh capital expenditure are included, cumulative economic output exceeds $39 million over ten years. Employment effects are equally significant. A single 1-megawatt facility supports roughly 700 construction jobs and 20 to 30 operational roles annually, resulting in more than 1,600 cumulative jobs over a decade. These roles span engineering, power management, cooling, cybersecurity, and facilities operations, aligning closely with Nigeria’s push for skilled technical employment. At an industry level, costs remain high. Modern Tier III data centres typically require between $10 million and $15 million per megawatt to build. Open Access Data Centres’ 24-megawatt Lagos facility, for instance, carries a reported cost of $240 million. Yet the multiplier effects—job creation, tax revenue, and demand for energy and ICT services—continue to attract capital. ## **Big players are already committing** Global and regional operators are no longer treating Nigeria as a speculative market. Open Access Data Centres announced a $500 million investment across Africa in 2021 and has since established operational facilities in Lagos and South Africa. In 2024, Equinix committed $390 million to the continent over five years. MTN Nigeria is building a 1,500-rack Tier IV facility, while Airtel Africa’s Nxtra project in Nigeria is expected to go live by the first quarter of 2026 as part of a broader hyperscale strategy. Airtel’s Lagos facility is notable because it is being designed specifically for AI compute rather than traditional cloud storage. The project represents a $120 million investment, with early shipments of high-performance GPUs already delivered in late 2025. This marks a shift from “AI-ready” marketing toward explicit AI workload support. ## **Kasi Cloud and the strongest AI signal yet** The strongest signal that Nigeria could host its first true AI data centre by 2026 is Kasi Cloud’s flagship campus in Lekki, Lagos. As of January 2026, the LOS1 facility is in its final stages of completion, with some parts of the facility already in use, and is widely regarded as one of the most ambitious hyperscale developments on the continent. Backed by a $250 million investment and supported by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, the project was conceived to handle the extreme power densities and cooling demands associated with AI and advanced cloud workloads. Built on a 4.2-hectare site with roughly 172,000 square feet of white space, the campus is designed to scale significantly. At full build-out, it can host between 3,000 and 4,000 racks across multiple data halls. Power infrastructure is a defining feature: the site is anchored by the largest dedicated data centre substation in Africa, with a total capacity of up to 100 megawatts. The first phase is designed to deliver between 32 and 44.4 megawatts of critical IT load, supporting rack densities that range from conventional 8 kilowatts to peaks of 100 kilowatts per rack, a threshold typically associated with liquid-cooled AI systems. Location and resilience further strengthen the case. The campus is situated along the Lekki corridor, adjacent to several submarine cable landing stations, providing low-latency connectivity to global networks. It is engineered to Tier IV reliability standards and is targeting up to 95% renewable and carbon-free energy usage. According to Alex Tsado, co-founder and COO of Ahura AI and a founding member of the Alliance for Africa’s Intelligence (Alliance4AI), the facility has already opened its doors. He said Kasi Cloud is optimised for AI GPUs and is working in partnership with UduTech, a GPU cloud platform that accelerates AI innovation across Africa, founded by Tsado, to provide GPU cloud services tailored to regional AI demand. “UduTech plans to partner with them and MSI to link the GPUs to its cloud platform,” Tsado told TechCabal. “When the GPUs aren’t being used for gaming, others can rent them to run AI workloads at low cost, generating revenue for the GPU owners as well. Essentially, it’s a model where distributed GPUs earn money for everyone involved.” ## **GPUs, power, and the remaining constraints** While infrastructure readiness is improving, constraints remain. Almost all specialised equipment, from GPUs to cooling systems, is imported, exposing projects to currency volatility and supply chain delays, according to Ranganath. High-quality, reliable power remains the single most critical factor, alongside dense network connectivity capable of handling large data flows. There are also transitional models emerging. Rack Centre’s 12-megawatt LGS2 facility, launched in 2025, is marketed as AI-ready, while partnerships such as NVIDIA and Cassava Technologies’ $700 million pan-African initiative aim to deploy thousands of GPUs across Africa Data Centres facilities, including in Nigeria. These deployments are designed to close the computing gap for startups that previously depended on expensive foreign cloud credits. “There are probably other AI-ready data centres or GPU system operators that I’m not aware of, but I believe Rack Centre is AI-ready,” Tsado said. The evidence suggests that Nigeria is unlikely to flip a switch overnight into full hyperscale AI dominance. However, at least one AI-focused facility is likely to go live by late 2026, particularly as projects like Kasi Cloud and Airtel Nxtra move from construction to commissioning. As Ranganath cautions, many projects remain in redesign stages, and timelines are sensitive to power availability and execution risk.

Will Nigeria get its first AI data centre in 2026? The data says it is likely Evidence suggests that Nigeria is unlikely to flip a switch overnight into full hyperscale AI dominance. However, at le...

#Delve #into #AI #Data #Centre #Nigeria

Origin | Interest | Match

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Drill and Delve Announced - Family Friendly Gaming

@noOneStudio

Drill and Delve Announced

www.familyfriendlygaming.com/News/2026/Dr...

#ffg #news #gaming #media #drill #delve #videogames #family #friendly

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Today would be much better if I could just sit around and play #delve by @danarama.bsky.social but nooooo I have to adult ungh.

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A big milestone today! Delve now has a win condition and a victory screen! I'm not quite where I want to be in order to release 0.5.0 but this is a big step! Hopefully 0.5.0 comes in the next couple of weeks.

(Arguably there are spoilers in the video...)

#delve #roguelikedev

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Major Delve spoilers blurred out...

#delve #roguelikedev

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