It’s such a shame Meta had to shut down its “tokenmaxxing” system that ranked employees by how heavily they used AI. The employee who created the dashboard later discontinued it after news of the tool leaked online.
- +👨🏿🚀TechCabal Daily – A Standard hack
But I’ll be borrowing a leaf from its playbook to tokenmax my freewill this weekend by keeping my laptop off (at least until Sunday afternoon) and attempting something equally productive, like finding a needle in a haystack.
But I’ll be borrowing a leaf from its playbook to tokenmax my freewill this weekend by keeping my laptop off (at least until Sunday afternoon) and attempting something equally productive, like finding a needle in a haystack. You’re welcome to tokenmax your own freewill too, ideally with equally questionable life choices, or by hate-watching Arsenal’s game this weekend.👍
Segun Akinnibosun is a Product Designer with experience spanning Web3, fintech, and emerging technologies, with a strong focus on building scalable, user-centred products that deliver measurable business outcomes.
Akinnibosun currently serves as a Lead Product Designer at Rvysion, where he has led and delivered over 8 client products across fintech, media, logistics, and infrastructure. His work spans end-to-end product design, from early-stage concept development (0 → 1) to scaling existing systems.
I am someone who makes apps and websites easy and fun to use.
Imagine you have a big toy box where everything is mixed up: cars, dolls, LEGO, crayons, all in one place. It’s hard to find anything, right? I’m the person who comes in and says, “Let’s fix this.”
I figure out where everything should go so it’s easy to find and nice to look at. I make things simple so people don’t get confused and can use them without stress.
But I don’t just fix things myself. I also lead a team of people who help build these apps and websites. So I’m a team captain, making sure everyone works together to create something really good. I also like to teach people what I know, so they can learn how to design things better, too.
I get excited about how much influence product design has in tech today—to be a full sprint on its own, shape product thinking, and contribute to how people perceive your self-value as a business. Previously, if you simply had a developer, you were good. But design is evolving so much today.
It’s no longer just about making screens look good; it’s about shaping how products work, how businesses grow, and how people experience technology daily.
I’d say the hardest part of the work is that same level of influence—it’s also a burden. The scope of our work is expanding, so it’s not enough to say “I designed it”; you’re also responsible for the outcomes. If product adoption is low, if users are confused, if the product doesn’t perform, you haven’t performed.
I’ve had many moments where I’m thinking, “This is not the best version of this idea… but it’s the version we can ship right now.” It’s a real tension and a burden that talented designers now carry. Product design today gives you a seat at the table, but it also expects you to earn that seat every single day.
I’ll be honest, most entry-level designers are focusing on the wrong things. They’re obsessing over Dribbble-level visuals, perfect UI, and trendy animations. Meanwhile, the people actually getting hired are the ones who can think.
Learn to communicate your work like your career depends on it, because it does. Be clear and simple: what was the problem, what did you do, and what changed? People are evaluating how you think, not just what you made.
Pick a lane, but don’t box yourself in. The goal is not to just be a UI designer forever. The goal is to own problems end-to-end. Focus less on making things look good and more on making things make sense.
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There’s something in the air, and several major organisations across Africa seem to have caught it: a data breach bug.
In case you missed it, Nigerian payment processing firm, Remita, and tier-2 lender, Sterling Bank, were allegedly breached in March, with the country’s data protection agency later confirming it is investigating “Remita, Sterling, and other entities” to uncover the full extent of the attack.
On Wednesday, Nigeria’s Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), which keeps corporate records, confirmed that it suffered a security breach. In March, Standard Bank, South Africa’s largest bank, was also hit. The common denominator is Dark Forums. For every single case here, there are anonymous hackers on the data trading site claiming that they “hacked” these organisations.
Between the lines: In Standard Bank’s case, it immediately alerted customers in March that data had been stolen, but said it took steps to “secure its environment and mitigate the impact” and was investigating further.
In a Thursday statement, however, the bank told local publication TechCentral that a limited number of cases revealed that card details, specifically card numbers and expiry dates, were accessed in the attack. The bank said that card verification value (CVV) numbers, the three-digit numbers on the back of cards, were not affected. According to another local publication, MyBroadBand, the hacker is holding the bank to a 1 bitcoin (worth $74,585 on Thursday evening) ransom.
What is really happening? The wave of attacks, and how simultaneously it is happening, is pointing to how much hacker tools have upgraded, thanks to AI. Banking experts, including the US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, have warned that newer, more powerful models, including Mythos from Anthropic, whose release was pushed back, could expose cybersecurity vulnerabilities that were previously unknown.
AI is growing so fast that it’s becoming powerful enough to stress-test critical systems, a major cause for concern for African banks and organisations that have long been in a constant battle with cyber threats. Yet across these hacks, none have affected core banking operations so far. They’ve mostly hit document filings, likely pointing to weaker systems used to store customer records.
Standard Bank, in its latest update on Tuesday, said transactional banking and core operations were not impacted, critical because if that layer is breached, the monetary losses could be devastating.
Zoom out: While these incidents are concerning, AI tools could also be giving the same leverage to security experts. They can use these tools to stress-test their own systems, identify vulnerabilities early, and strengthen them before attackers do. We hope no other bank gets attacked, but more than ever, security can’t be an afterthought anymore.
Breet is offering a $10,000 equity-free grant to growth-stage fintech, crypto and payments startups in Africa. Integrate the API, submit your product, and pitch live at ATE Lagos. Two winners get $5,000 each. Deadline by May 31. Learn more.
