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LOL, Africa is not a country.

M-Pesa is a franchise, available to mobile network operators in many countries, but from a quick glance, Rada is (today), only available with Safaricom M-Pesa (and in Kenya, for KSh conversions only).

I think the only friction in using Rada will be in applying for the API key where they scrutinize the application, where if you are honest and say it is a form of a bitcoin or "crypto" exchange, they will decline granting of the credentials. Will be interesting!

LOL, Africa is not a country.

Who said that Africa is a country?

I think the only friction in using Rada will be in applying for the API key where they scrutinize the application, where if you are honest and say it is a form of a bitcoin or "crypto" exchange, they will decline granting of the credentials. Will be interesting!

Well, it will be fun until it works. it's a great fiat-to-btc bridge in Africa, it's open source and could be replicated by anyone else.

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Who said that Africa is a country?

Well, it was in the title.

But looks like I passed over the "Designed for the African fintech ecosystem" before having typed that.

While the only service supported, today, is Safaricom M-Pesa (which works only in one country), other similar mobile money services with API access could be added -- whether that be in Africa, or wherever else those Mobile Money operators are.

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That's true, maybe the author got confuser and used for instead of from. That's where I took it from

While the only service supported, today, is Safaricom M-Pesa (which works only in one country), other similar mobile money services with API access could be added -- whether that be in Africa, or wherever else those Mobile Money operators are.

If this is the case, it could be even more powerful of what I though. As you mentioned earlier, the only issue is the APIs access grant/denial from fiat-minded telco operators. Look forward to seeing more APIs services plugged in.

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