Category: Technology

  • Fintech boss pushes for law to regulate AI usage, tackle digital age challenges

    Fintech boss pushes for law to regulate AI usage, tackle digital age challenges

    The co-founder of a United States Financial Technology hub and migration infrastructure company, Vesti, Abimbola Amusan, has advocated for urgent legislative reforms to regulate the use of artificial intelligence and address emerging digital-age challenges.

    Amusan, speaking at a legislative summit tagged ‘Digital Democracy: Youth, Technology, and Modern Legislation’ in three local government areas, including Ayedaade, Irewole, and Isokan of Osun State, at the weekend, warned that Nigeria’s current legal frameworks are outdated and inadequate for today’s technology-driven economy.

    He recalled that Vesti tapped into the digital age opportunities, hence it launched an AI assistant for migrants and provided over N1billion travelling loans.

    According to him, “Modern challenges demand modern laws, there should be urgency to deliver modern legislation. We must rethink legislation around Data privacy, Cybersecurity, Digital identity, AI ethics and governance, online civic rights, Digital inclusion, and Technology-driven economic participation.

    “Lawmakers must now act with the agility of technologists, while still maintaining the prudence of public servants. The future of governance is hybrid, a collaboration between policymakers, technologists, the private sector, and young innovators.”

    He asserted that taking the step will create a blueprint for the future where governance becomes participatory, legislation becomes adaptive, and young people become co-architects of national development.

    He also pushed for a shift from traditional power to digital participation, saying, “For decades, democratic participation was shaped by physical town halls, ballot boxes, and long bureaucratic processes. But today, the digital space has become the new civic arena.

    “Social media is now the largest public square. Algorithms influence public opinion faster than television ever did. Young people participate in governance not through hierarchy, but through networks.”

    He added that “Technology is no longer just a tool; it is a democratic force. So, the question before us is not whether digital democracy is coming. It is how prepared we are to shape it.”

    Amusan tasked youths and the government to take advantage of the immense advantage of the digital space, saying “AI can be used for policy modeling and public service automation; Blockchain for transparent elections and public spending; Data analytics for real-time citizen feedback and Civic tech platforms that enable more direct public participation.”

  • Babcock hosts Okegbenle for landmark keynote on future of AI

    Babcock hosts Okegbenle for landmark keynote on future of AI

    Babcock University yesterday hosted PressOne Africa Chief Executive Officer, Mayowa Okegbenle, to a landmark keynote on the future of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as the institution’s School of Computing marked its 25th anniversary in Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State.

    Delivering the keynote titled “The Past, The Present, and The Future of Artificial Intelligence” at the BUTH 600-Seater Auditorium, Okegbenle examined the evolution of AI and its increasing influence on business, work and society. 

    Faculty members, students and industry stakeholders attended the event, described by the Department of Computer Science as a highlight of its Silver Jubilee celebration.

    Okegbenle, invited for his industry-grounded perspective, shared lessons from PressOne Africa’s transition from labour-intensive customer operations to AI-driven processes. 

    He recalled that the company initially depended on a large team of human customer service agents before discovering the limits of that model.

    “We realised only long-serving staff, those with over 12 months’ experience, could consistently deliver the results we wanted,” he said. “But we had already committed to annual targets. We couldn’t pause to train 100 new hires. We had to ask ourselves: Can AI do this work? Can AI talk to customers, onboard them, and deliver value at scale?”

    This question led to the creation of Juliet, PressOne Africa’s intelligent virtual employee, which now manages thousands of customer conversations across messaging platforms. 

    According to him, human intervention in conversations has dropped from about 50 per cent in the first week to less than five per cent today.

    “Customers engaged without realising they were speaking to AI. Juliet now outperforms any human team we could have hired,” he said, stressing that AI is not merely a trend but “business.”

    Addressing concerns about AI replacing software engineering roles, Okegbenle urged students to see the technology as a catalyst for new forms of work.

    He reminded the audience that the term computer originally referred to a human job title before machines took over due to their superior speed.

    The anniversary event also saw him launch two major departmental projects: the Babcock Compendium and a new Artificial Intelligence Laboratory designed to support research in machine learning, robotics and intelligent systems.

    Babcock University said the engagements reflect its commitment to preparing students for an increasingly digital future.

  • Obodo emerges 275th certified Global Tech Hero

    Obodo emerges 275th certified Global Tech Hero

    Obodo Bright has been formally inducted as the 275th Certified Global Tech Hero, an accolade that recognizes a career defined by technical mastery, product-led impact, community stewardship, and a clear commitment to building technology that improves lives.

    A software engineer, technical writer, and AI enthusiast, Bright has progressed from early internships to leadership roles where he has architected scalable systems, led cross-functional teams, and driven measurable product outcomes across fintech, game-tech, ed-tech, and startup ecosystems.

    His work has modernized application architectures, accelerated performance through techniques such as lazy loading and code-splitting, and introduced reusable components and design systems that increased development velocity and consistency across products.

    Throughout his career, Bright has delivered notable business and user outcomes of optimizing financial workflows to reduce page-load times and increase mobile adoption, integrating secure payment and KYC systems that strengthened platform reliability, and engineering real-time, low-latency features that drove significant engagement and transaction growth.

    As a technical leader, he has mentored and developed junior engineers, turning internship talent into reliable contributors and helping to cultivate a pipeline of skilled developers. His writing on frontend practices and accessibility extends his influence beyond the codebase, shaping how peers adopt better standards and approaches.

    Entrepreneurially, Bright co-founded and serves as CTO of an innovative credit-based e-commerce platform that pairs everyday grocery purchases with a mechanism for building financial credibility for immigrants and underserved communities. That initiative, alongside fintech and web3-aligned projects that explore asset-backed digital finance, demonstrates an orientation toward pragmatic innovation: solving local, real-world problems with thoughtfully applied technology.

    “His work embodies a practical, people-first vision of innovation, using engineering skill to build products and expand opportunity and financial inclusion,” said Qazeem Oladejo, founder of The Connected Awards. “This recognition celebrates a technologist who pairs measurable impact with mentorship and community purpose.”

    This induction immortalises a professional trajectory that marries product thinking, technical excellence, and social purpose. As the 275th Certified Global Tech Hero, Obodo Bright joins a lineage of practitioners whose contributions have advanced technology’s capacity to create opportunity, resilience, and measurable value.

  • Stakeholders warn Africa to act fast on AI, future of work

    Stakeholders warn Africa to act fast on AI, future of work

    Stakeholders have raised fresh concerns over Africa’s urgent need to secure its place in the future of work, artificial intelligence, and global competitiveness.

    As global economies accelerate investments in AI, digital infrastructure, and skills development, experts warn that Africa risks deepening inequality and falling further behind unless it adopts coordinated strategies for technology-driven and inclusive growth.

    The concerns are driving renewed high-level engagement across the continent, and it is in this context that The New Africa has announced the 2025 Global Economic Summit and Honours — a flagship gathering of policymakers, CEOs, innovators, financiers, and thought leaders.

    Convener Dr. Gift Nnamoko described the summit as part of a broader effort to reshape Africa’s narrative through innovation, leadership development, and strategic partnerships, noting that the Abuja event is a timely intervention for a continent facing rapid technological disruption.

    According to her, it will convene influential stakeholders from across Africa and the diaspora to deliberate on how the region can reposition itself for long-term competitiveness in an increasingly AI-powered global economy.

    “With the theme ‘Re-Imagining Africa: AI-Driven Growth, Inclusive Education, and Global Partnership for a Prosperous Future’, the summit aims to provide a strategic platform for addressing the continent’s most pressing development priorities.

    “Discussions will centre on artificial intelligence and digital transformation, human-capital development, innovation-led entrepreneurship, sustainable economic reforms, and cross-border cooperation.

    “This is because these issues have become unavoidable in national and regional planning, as African countries struggle to bridge gaps in skills, technology adoption, infrastructure, and industrial competitiveness,” she said.

    As part of the expected outcomes of the summit to chart way forward for the continent, the Convener said stakeholders will be expected to outline practical steps for accelerating digital readiness, scaling innovation, and building inclusive economic systems capable of competing globally.

    Noting that the summit is expected to draw a wide network of leaders, investors, development institutions, and young innovators, Nnamoko emphasised that continental cooperation is now more critical than ever, given the speed at which new technologies are redefining economic opportunities and global influence.

    “The 2025 edition will prioritise turning high-level discussions into actionable strategies that can support long-term reforms in technology adoption, education, job creation, and regional integration.

    “The goal is to ensure that Africa does not remain a bystander in the global technological revolution but becomes an active and competitive participant,” she explained.

    A major feature of the event, according to the organizers, is the African Leaders Hall of Fame, an honours platform designed to recognise individuals whose work has contributed significantly to Africa’s progress in governance, business, technology, education, and social impact.

    They said the awards align with the summit’s mission to spotlight excellence and inspire a new generation of transformational leaders.

  • PRNigeria publisher presents study on AI’s role in crisis communication

    PRNigeria publisher presents study on AI’s role in crisis communication

    The publisher of PRNigeria, Yushau A. Shuaib, has unveiled key findings from his latest research on Artificial Intelligence (AI) in crisis communication at the National Crisis Communication Symposium organised by the Centre for Crisis Communication (CCC) in Abuja.

    The study—endorsed by the CCC and supported by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA)—reveals a rapidly growing, though uneven, adoption of AI tools across Nigeria’s security, emergency response, and public communication sectors.

    Drawing from a survey of 182 crisis communication professionals and interviews with five senior experts, Shuaib revealed that 75.8% of them are familiar with AI applications; 54.9% confirmed their organisations already deploy AI tools during emergencies. The respondents include personnel in security agencies, emergency services, and public and private institutions.

    Findings showed that AI tools are used for public information dissemination (50%), social media monitoring (40.7%), emergency coordination (31.3%), early warning systems (25.3%), and risk assessment (24.7%). ChatGPT is the most applied platform at 75.3%, followed by Meta AI and Google Gemini. Professionals also turn to AI for brainstorming, drafting press releases, summarising reports, and producing social media content.

    Shuaib stated that while AI enhances message clarity, confirmed by 80% of respondents, trust in AI-generated alerts remains fragile. “Over 51% of the respondents still trust human updates more than AI alerts,” he said. Nevertheless, 63.2% believe AI already outperforms traditional communication methods in high-pressure emergencies.

    The study highlights improvements in crisis response times: 65.9% acknowledge faster communication, and 58.8% praise the 24/7 availability of AI-powered systems. Overall satisfaction with AI responsiveness reached 80.2%, with clarity of messaging identified as the most valued benefit. The entire research will be formally unveiled at the 2026 National Spokespersons Awards in Abuja.

    Shuaib, however, observed AI usage in Nigeria remains largely tactical rather than strategic, saying adoption is skewed toward content creation and monitoring, while predictive analytics and early risk detection are underutilised. He added that digital literacy, affordability, and infrastructure deficiencies continue to hinder equitable access; 33.5% of respondents identified accessibility challenges.

    The researcher noted that although AI is reshaping crisis communication, especially in public messaging and real-time monitoring, its full potential has not been realised. “The future clearly points toward deeper AI integration,” Shuaib said. “But success will depend on enhanced training, stronger digital infrastructure, and a well-balanced synergy between AI systems and human expertise.”

    In his keynote address, Director General of NITDA, Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, called for an AI-driven task force to counter misinformation during crises and elections. He warned that while technology itself is neutral, its misuse can trigger economic shocks, polarise societies, and enable the spread of harmful content.

    Inuwa also emphasised the need for regulation of big tech, accountability of digital platforms, and the establishment of independent crisis management centres aligned with local realities. He cited Nigeria’s ongoing efforts, including the Nigerian Data Protection Commission and the proposed Online Harm Protection Bill.

    Minister of Information Mohammed Idris Malagi, represented by Voice of Nigeria Director General Jibrin Ndace, described the symposium as timely, given the growing influence of social media and AI. He urged ethical use of digital tools to promote peace and unity, expressing hope that the conference would become an annual event.

    CCC Chairman, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade (Rtd.), underscored the strategic value of crisis communication, which he called a national security asset. He stressed the need for technology-driven solutions to strengthen early warning, verified information dissemination, and inter-agency coordination.

    Other speakers included Dr. Omoniyi Ibietan, Secretary General, African Public Relations Association; Musikilu Mojeed, Editor-in-Chief of Premium Times; ACC Abdullahi Maiwada, Nigeria Customs Service spokesperson; and a representative of Nigeria Data Protection Commission CEO, Dr. Vincent Olatunji.

    The symposium brought together key stakeholders from security institutions, communication experts, academics, emergency managers, media professionals, and civil society advocates, demonstrating a shared commitment to strengthening Nigeria’s crisis communication architecture.

  • Africa risks digital marginalization amid rising use of foreign AI tools, expert warns

    Africa risks digital marginalization amid rising use of foreign AI tools, expert warns

    Technology experts in Abuja have warned that Africa could face long-term digital marginalization as the continent becomes increasingly dependent on foreign-built artificial intelligence tools that do not reflect its cultures, languages, or social realities.

    They argued that the growing dominance of Western AI systems risks shaping how young Africans learn, communicate, and make decisions, often through frameworks that were never designed with them in mind.

    ‎The concerns were raised at a press briefing examining the dangers of relying almost exclusively on AI models trained on Western data.

    ‎Experts at the event argued that while AI is rapidly becoming a daily companion for students, entrepreneurs, and professionals, many of the systems guiding critical tasks are blind to African contexts and may gradually weaken the continent’s digital identity.

    ‎“There is a widening cultural and information gap,” one researcher said. “When Africans depend on tools that cannot recognise their lived realities, it shapes how they see themselves — and how the world understands them.”

    ‎It was against this backdrop that developers introduced Jafi.ai, a homegrown artificial intelligence system, which, according to them, was created to ensure Africans are not left behind or misrepresented in the next phase of global technological change.

    ‎Samuel Ekpo, Head of Technical Department for Jafi.ai, stressed that the project is not just a commercial pitch but an attempt to correct what they describe as the continent’s growing “digital invisibility.”

    ‎According to him, the dominance of external AI platforms has already influenced how schoolwork is done, how businesses are run, and how young people consume information — often in ways that sideline African languages, learning styles, and cultural nuances.

    ‎He said Jafi.ai aims to reverse that trend by offering technology trained on African contexts and capable of understanding local realities.

    ‎AI researcher Ochoyi Blessing, who spoke during the briefing, warned that the stakes are particularly high given Africa’s demographic weight. With more than 60 per cent of the continent’s population under 25, she said the question is what kind of knowledge and worldview will shape this generation if their primary learning tools are built elsewhere.

    ‎“If young Africans learn, build businesses, and solve problems through systems that don’t understand them, they risk internalising a worldview where their environment is invisible. That is the real danger — not just technological dependence, but cultural erosion,” she said.

    ‎Other experts at the briefing also raised concerns about the growing habit of outsourcing assignments, essays, and decision-making to AI tools, saying over-reliance could weaken independent reasoning if the systems are not adapted to local contexts.

    ‎They called for stronger investment across the continent in locally grounded AI research and datasets.

  • Financial market analyst predicts interest rate cut by CBN

    Financial market analyst predicts interest rate cut by CBN

    Lukman Otunuga, Senior Manager and Market Analyst at FXTM, has forecast the possibility of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) cutting interest rates by as much as 100 basis points on Tuesday, citing easing inflationary pressures and a busy week of high-impact global economic events.

    Otunuga noted that Nigeria’s annual inflation dropped to 16.05 percent in October 2025 — the lowest since March 2022 — providing the CBN with fresh room to stimulate economic growth through a rate cut.

    He added that indicators from Nigeria’s Q3 GDP report, expected this week, suggest further signs of recovery that could boost confidence in an expansionary monetary stance.

    On the global stage, the analyst said equity markets have opened the week strongly, led by gains in the tech sector amid rising expectations of a U.S. interest rate cut in December.

    Dovish signals from U.S. Federal Reserve officials last Friday have pushed the odds of such a cut to 70 percent, though upcoming economic data could alter those projections.

    Otunuga also highlighted ongoing geopolitical tensions, noting that weekend talks involving top U.S., Ukrainian, and European diplomats on a Russia–Ukraine peace plan have stalled, with European leaders rejecting the proposals. A deadlock, he warned, could trigger broad risk aversion in global markets.

    He further projected volatility for both the British pound and the U.S. dollar ahead of the UK Autumn Budget scheduled for Wednesday, November 26, 2026. With the UK facing a fiscal gap of up to £30 billion, expected tax hikes may pressure consumers, weaken growth, and intensify speculation around lower UK interest rates.

    For the U.S., he said retail sales and Producer Price Index (PPI) data due this week will provide clearer signals on economic health, adding that weaker-than-expected figures could strengthen expectations of a December Fed rate cut.

    Turning to cryptocurrencies, Otunuga said Bitcoin is still reeling from last week’s sharp selloff. Despite a slight rebound, the digital asset is on track for its worst month since 2022 and is down nearly 10 percent year-to-date.

    Trading at around $86,000, he warned that persistent weakness below $90,000 could trigger a further slide toward $80,500 and beyond.

    “Looking at commodities, oil flashed red amid hopes about a Ukraine-Russia peace deal, while gold has been stuck within a wide range since mid-November.

    “A potent fundamental catalyst may be needed to trigger a break above $4130 or below $4000. This may come in the form of geopolitical developments or key US data”, he concluded.

  • Africa risks new era of data colonialism, Olorunyomi warns at CJID media conference

    Africa risks new era of data colonialism, Olorunyomi warns at CJID media conference

    Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID), Dapo Olorunyomi, on Monday, warned that Africa is drifting toward a dangerous new form of exploitation – data colonialism, unless governments, regional blocs, and civic institutions urgently rethink how democracy, development, and digital governance are pursued in the coming decade.

    Speaking at the opening of the third edition of the Media Development Conference (MDC-03), Olorunyomi said the continent is at a “historic crossroads,” where its democratic fragility, economic vulnerabilities, and the rapid expansion of global tech power threaten to reshape its destiny if left unmanaged.

    The event, held at the Abuja Continental Hotel, drew more than 300 delegates from across the ECOWAS sub-region, Central Africa, Namibia, and South Africa, making it one of the largest media-development gatherings on the continent.

    Olorunyomi’s central warning reverberated through the hall: after the extraction of land, labour, and minerals, Africa now stands at risk of having its data – the behavioural and digital footprints of its citizens – exploited by foreign technology giants.

    He described the trend as a “civilisational threat,” marked by intrusive surveillance systems, weak data protection laws, foreign-controlled platforms, and algorithms that discriminate against African users.

    “A continent historically subjected to extraction cannot afford a new era in which its data becomes the next frontier of exploitation,” he cautioned.

    The next decade, he argued, will determine whether Africa becomes an architect of its digital future, or remains “a passive recipient of other people’s technologies and decisions.”

    The CJID boss painted a stark picture of a region facing rising civic anxiety, shrinking civic spaces, coups, constitutional manipulations, and plummeting trust in public institutions.

    “Democratic reversals – once a matter of doubt – now demand new forms of regional response,” he said.

    For him, democracy must be rebuilt on transparency, participation, civic empowerment, and institutions that “listen and learn.”

    He stressed that elections alone do not constitute democracy, insisting that Africa must rebuild trust and strengthen regional bodies charged with protecting constitutional order.

    Olorunyomi expressed grave concern over the state of independent media on the continent, saying it is “under unprecedented strain.”

    With declining advertising revenue, diminishing donor support, and escalating censorship – both traditional and digital – he said that African journalism is struggling to survive even as the demand for trustworthy information grows.

    “The media is not a luxury – it is the oxygen of democracy,” he said.

    He listed urgent reforms, including sustainable business models, public-interest funding, AI-supported fact-checking, digital safety training, and civic literacy programmes.

    “These are the issues this conference will interrogate in the next three days,” he added.

    Olorunyomi pointed to countries such as India, South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil, and Chile, noting that they offer clear models for Africa on data governance, digital identity systems, online rights, and transparency reforms.

    He urged African governments to invest in sovereign data infrastructures, ethically governed digital ecosystems, and regional regulatory frameworks that protect citizens without stifling innovation.

    Reaffirming CJID’s focus on young people, he spotlighted the Campus Reporter programme, active in 34 Nigerian universities and set for expansion into 13 countries next year.

    Africa’s youth, he said, are already shaping the continent’s future through fintech, agritech, health tech, and civic tech.

    “But they need policy protection, regulatory clarity, and access to regional markets to scale their innovations,” he noted.

    Olorunyomi ended on a hopeful but urgent note, saying the next decade presents Africa with a rare opportunity to define its place in the world – if leaders act with vision.

    “We possess the knowledge, the talent, and the demographic strength,” he said.

    “If we act with courage and govern with humility, Africa will not simply take part in shaping the next decade – it will help define it.”

  • Taxtech marks decade of innovation, launches 2025 data security conclave

    Taxtech marks decade of innovation, launches 2025 data security conclave

    Taxaide Technologies Limited (Taxtech), a leading developer of tax administration and data security technologies in Nigeria, has announced two major milestones: its 10th Anniversary Celebration and the upcoming 2025 Africa Data Security Conclave (ADSC).

    The announcement was made in Lagos during a briefing that attracted technology partners, industry leaders and members of the media.

    Speaking at the briefing, Taxtech’s Chief Executive Officer, Bidemi Olumide, recounted the company’s evolution from a modest digital solutions provider to one of Africa’s most influential players in tax automation and data security.

    “Taxtech has been building quietly. Now is the time to let the world know us, like us, and project us appropriately,” Olumide said. “Our story is simple: we automate processes and we secure data.”

    Olumide explained that the upcoming Africa Data Security Conclave was conceived as a uniquely African platform to address the continent’s growing exposure to cyber threats and its reliance on foreign security models.

    “ADSC is where we call Africa together to discuss data security issues and design solutions tailored to our context. We cannot continue to adopt Western approaches wholesale,” he added.

    Scheduled for 26–27 November 2025, the Conclave will gather regulators, cybersecurity professionals, public sector leaders, innovators, finance experts, and development partners for two days of strategic dialogue on Africa’s digital future.

    READ ALSO; Let’s rethink schools’ closure

    The event will adopt a hybrid format, allowing for both physical and virtual participation. Registration has already opened via the official portal. 

    Taxtech’s Executive Director and Partner, Olugbenga Sile, underscored the urgency of widespread involvement in conversations about digital security:

    “The ADSC is a conversation everyone needs to join. You don’t need to be a digital security expert. AI is now part of everything we do.”

    Further highlighting the company’s achievements, Joshua Oladunjoye, Chief Technology Officer, and Oyeyemi Oke, Executive Director/Partner for Data Security Services, described Taxtech’s role in strengthening compliance, fiscal transparency, and digital trust across Nigeria and the continent.

    Over the past decade, Taxtech has built a robust suite of indigenous technologies designed to simplify operations for governments, businesses, and individuals. 

    These include: TSuite® — Integrated Business Tools, featuring: TPay®: Payment aggregation (salaries, pensions, bills, transfers); THR®: Payroll, recruitment, and performance management; TVisit®: Visitor and event management; TLearn®: Training and certification modules; TBook®: Personal finance and tax computation; TServe®: Government and public service automation

    ACRE Framework (Assessment, Collections, Receipting, Enforcement)–powered solutions, including: TRev®: Revenue management– A government-grade version of TPay® for multi-channel collections

    TPay® – Secure Payment Aggregator, supporting tax payments, utilities, pensions, payroll, wallet transfers and invoice generation.

    These platforms reinforce the company’s mission to deliver African-built digital tools that enhance compliance, improve operational efficiency, and safeguard data.

    Founded ten years ago, Taxtech has grown into a central player in Nigeria’s digital transformation ecosystem, contributing significantly to improved tax governance, secure automation, and indigenous technological capacity across Africa.

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    Nota: verifica sempre i termini attuali sul sito del casino prima di giocare.

    CasinoBonus di BenvenutoMetodo di Pagamento che Accetta €10
    Wonaco€2.500 + 1 Bonus Crab sui primi depositiVisa / Crypto
    Dolly€1.000 sul primo depositoVisa / Mastercard
    Spinanga€500 + 200 FS + 1 Bonus Crab (deposito minimo per il bonus completo: €20)Visa / e-wallet
    Revolution100% fino a €500 + 200 FS (deposito minimo €10 con molti metodi)Skrill / Neteller

    Metodi di Pagamento per Casino con Deposito Minimo 10 Euro

    Un deposito di 10 euro funziona senza problemi solo se il metodo di pagamento è rapido, affidabile e privo di costi inutili. Abbiamo testato diverse opzioni su piattaforme non-AAMS per verificare quali garantiscono transazioni veloci e prelievi regolari. Quattro categorie si sono dimostrate le più solide.

    Carte

    Le carte permettono depositi istantanei e raramente applicano commissioni. Inoltre facilitano le verifiche d’identità durante i prelievi.
    Esempi: Visa, Mastercard.

    E-wallet

    Gli e-wallet sono perfetti per chi vuole prelievi rapidi e maggiore privacy, poiché non condividono i dati della carta.
    Esempi: Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter.

    Voucher Prepagati

    I voucher consentono di depositare esattamente 10 euro senza fornire dati bancari, ma non possono essere utilizzati per i prelievi.
    Esempi: Paysafecard, Neosurf.

    Wallet Crypto

    I pagamenti in criptovaluta vengono elaborati in pochi minuti e spesso hanno commissioni di rete contenute, rendendoli adatti ai piccoli depositi.
    Esempi: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin.

    Come Effettuare un Deposito da 10 Euro nei Casino Online in Italia

    Un deposito di 10 euro viene elaborato rapidamente sulle piattaforme non-AAMS affidabili, e i passaggi sono quasi identici su ogni dispositivo. L’unico requisito reale è scegliere un casino online con deposito di 10 euro che accetti ricariche basse senza aumentare l’importo durante il pagamento.

    Come completare un deposito corretto da 10 euro:

    • Seleziona un casino verificato che supporti chiaramente i pagamenti da €10 senza modificarne l’importo.
    • Crea il tuo account con dati corretti per evitare problemi durante i controlli KYC.
    • Apri la sezione “Cassa” e scegli “Deposito” da mobile o desktop.
    • Scegli un metodo di pagamento adatto ai piccoli importi, come Visa, Skrill, Neteller o crypto.
    • Inserisci manualmente €10 e annulla l’operazione se il casino aumenta automaticamente la cifra.
    • Attiva il bonus di benvenuto selezionando l’opzione o inserendo il codice promozionale.
    • Conferma il pagamento; il saldo si aggiorna quasi sempre in modo immediato, permettendoti di iniziare subito.

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    Come Prelevare

    I prelievi sui casino non-AAMS sono semplici, ma la velocità dipende da quanto il tuo account è preparato. Sui casinò deposito minimo 10 euro questo aspetto è ancora più evidente, perché ogni passaggio deve essere gestito senza errori. Alcune verifiche preliminari possono evitare ritardi e rendere l’operazione più fluida.

    Passaggi per un prelievo senza problemi:

    • Completa la verifica inviando un documento d’identità e la prova del metodo di pagamento utilizzato.
    • Controlla lo stato dei bonus e termina eventuali requisiti di puntata che possono bloccare la richiesta.
    • Apri la sezione “Cassa” e seleziona “Prelievo”, di solito usando lo stesso metodo del deposito.
    • Inserisci un importo che rispetti il limite minimo di prelievo del casino.
    • Conferma la richiesta e attendi l’elaborazione. Gli e-wallet sono i più rapidi, le crypto sono veloci, mentre i bonifici richiedono più tempo.
    • Traccia lo stato nella tua area personale e contatta il supporto se non ci sono aggiornamenti entro 24 ore.

    Bonus Attivabili con un Deposito di 10 Euro

    Un deposito di 10 euro è sufficiente per sbloccare diversi tipi di bonus nei casino non-AAMS. Molte piattaforme costruiscono le loro promozioni pensando anche ai giocatori con budget ridotto, offrendo vantaggi concreti.

    Bonus di benvenuto

    La maggior parte dei pacchetti di benvenuto si attiva con €10 e include fondi extra e giri gratis. Nei bonus di benvenuto non AAMS casinò 10 euro rientrano spesso offerte complete che puoi sbloccare senza dover versare importi più alti. I termini possono variare, quindi è importante controllare i requisiti di puntata.

    Giri gratis

    Un piccolo deposito può attivare da 20 a 200 free spin su slot molto richieste, permettendoti di provare giochi popolari con un rischio minimo.

    Cashback

    Alcuni casino rimborsano il 10–15% delle perdite nette, utile per gestire sessioni brevi e provare nuovi giochi con maggiore tranquillità.

    Promozioni settimanali o giornaliere

    Bonus ricarica, drop di giri gratis e piccoli tornei accettano spesso €10 come deposito qualificante.

    Nessuna restrizione territoriale

    Nei casino non-AAMS i bonus sono disponibili anche per i giocatori italiani senza i limiti imposti dagli operatori ADM.

    Giochi Accessibili nei Casino Deposito Minimo 10 Euro

    Un deposito di 10 euro basta per accedere all’intero catalogo di giochi sulla maggior parte dei casino non-AAMS. Puoi giocare alle slot più richieste, provare tavoli a puntata bassa e entrare nelle sale live senza limitazioni.

    Slot

    Ottime opzioni che funzionano bene anche con un saldo ridotto:

    • Sweet Bonanza (96,5%) – vincite a cluster e moltiplicatori.
    • Big Bass Bonanza (96,7%) – simboli cash e round bonus progressivi.
    • Gates of Olympus (96,5%) – caduta dei simboli e moltiplicatori casuali.
    • Legacy of Egypt (96,5%) – giri gratis con ruota dei moltiplicatori.
    • Fire Joker (96%) – slot semplice con re-spin e ruota dei moltiplicatori.

    Giochi con dealer dal vivo

    Studi come Evolution ed Ezugi offrono roulette, blackjack e game show con limiti di puntata bassi, perfetti anche con un saldo di €10.

    Giochi da tavolo

    Blackjack, roulette, baccarat e video poker partono spesso da €0,10–€1 per mano, permettendoti di gestire il budget in modo efficace.

    Pro e Contro dei Casino AAMS con Deposito Minimo 10 Euro

    Un deposito di 10 euro è un modo semplice per provare piattaforme con denaro reale senza impegnare troppo. Puoi accedere a bonus, giochi e pagamenti rapidi, anche se un saldo ridotto può limitare la durata delle sessioni.

    ProContro
    Ingresso a basso rischio per nuovi giocatoriSessioni più brevi, soprattutto con slot ad alta volatilità
    Accesso a bonus di benvenuto e giri gratisI requisiti di puntata pesano di più con un saldo ridotto
    Funziona con carte, e-wallet e cryptoAlcuni bonus richiedono un deposito più alto per l’attivazione completa
    Accesso completo a slot, tavoli e giochi liveI prelievi minimi spesso superano i €10

    Esistono Casino con un Deposito Inferiore a 10 Euro?

    Alcune piattaforme non-AAMS accettano depositi inferiori a 10 euro, offrendo un punto d’ingresso ancora più basso. Alcuni operatori permettono ricariche da €1, soprattutto tramite voucher prepagati o determinati e-wallet. In questi casi l’accesso ai bonus è spesso limitato, ma il gioco con denaro reale rimane disponibile.

    I casino da €5 offrono un equilibrio migliore tra flessibilità e funzionalità, permettendo di attivare piccole promozioni e accedere a un numero maggiore di giochi.

    Il deposito da €10 resta comunque l’opzione più pratica e corrisponde a ciò che molti considerano un tipico €10 deposit casino: attiva i bonus completi, garantisce pagamenti più fluidi e permette l’accesso senza limiti a slot, tavoli e giochi live.

    Tabella Comparativa: Casino con Deposito Minimo di €1, €5 e €10

    Caratteristica€1€5€10
    Bonus disponibiliRariLimitatiAccesso completo ai bonus di benvenuto
    Selezione giochiSolo slot baseSlot + alcuni giochi da tavoloLibreria completa, inclusi giochi live
    Metodi di pagamentoPrincipalmente voucherCarte, voucher, alcuni e-walletCarte, e-wallet, crypto, voucher
    Durata sessioneMolto breveModerataPiù lunga con gestione attenta del bankroll
    PrelieviSpesso non disponibiliPossibili con condizioniDisponibili sulla maggior parte delle piattaforme

    FAQ

    I giocatori italiani possono utilizzare casino non-AAMS che accettano un deposito di 10 euro?

    Sì, i giocatori italiani possono accedere ai casino non-AAMS con licenze come Curaçao o Kahnawake, che operano legalmente al di fuori del circuito ADM.

    È possibile vincere denaro reale con un deposito di 10 euro?

    Sì, un saldo di 10 euro ti permette di giocare a titoli con RTP standard e di attivare bonus completi, quindi le vincite sono reali.

    Posso prelevare anche se ho iniziato con un deposito di 10 euro?

    Sì, purché tu completi la verifica del conto e rispetti eventuali requisiti di puntata legati ai bonus.

    I casino assegnano giri gratis con un deposito di 10 euro?

    Molti operatori offrono tra 20 e 200 free spin su slot selezionate dopo una ricarica di 10 euro.

    Esiste un bonus di benvenuto con “deposito 10 euro”?

    Sì, la maggior parte dei casino non-AAMS attiva il pacchetto di benvenuto con questa cifra, includendo fondi extra e giri gratis.

    Quali tipi di bonus sono più comuni per chi deposita 10 euro?

    I più frequenti sono bonus di benvenuto, ricariche, drop di free spin e offerte cashback, soprattutto all’interno dei bonus 10 euro nel casinò online non aams, dove anche i piccoli depositi attivano promozioni complete.

    Quali slot sono più popolari nei casino da 10 euro?

    Gates of Olympus, Big Bass Bonanza, Sweet Bonanza e Fire Joker sono tra i titoli più giocati grazie alle loro funzioni e agli RTP competitivi.