The New Oil Is Not Tech It’s TRUST

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We’ve heard it a thousand times: “Data is the new oil.”
In Nigeria and elsewhere , we’ve modified it further: “Tech is the new oil.”

But let’s pause for a moment. Beneath all the buzzwords, IPOs, and blockchain projects, something deeper is quietly emerging. In today’s world trust is the real oil. And like crude, it’s scarce, volatile, and extremely valuable.

What Does It Mean to Monetize Trust?

Think about it.

Uber doesn’t own cars. It sells trust in random drivers. Airbnb doesn’t own homes. It sells trust in strangers’ rooms. Bitcoin doesn’t rely on banks. It sells trust in code. Decentralized apps (dApps) don’t have CEOs. They sell trust in consensus.

And in Africa, where institutions are often distrusted, inflation erodes faith in currency, and social systems are fragile, the value of trust multiplies. People don’t just want access. They want transparency, predictability, ownership, and control.

That’s what Web3 promises.That’s what blockchain enables. That’s what tomorrow’s businesses must deliver.

The Trust Economy: Africa’s Competitive Advantage?

Here’s the twist: Africa is uniquely positioned to lead this next evolution.

Why?

Because we’ve lived with broken systems. And we’ve built creative workarounds.
Trust isn’t something we inherit from institutions, it’s something we negotiate daily.

In a world suspicious of centralized control, Africans are already fluent in decentralization: We trust communities over corporations.

We verify reputations through networks, not resumes. We’ve been trading in informal economies long before DeFi had a name. In other words, we understand the problem that Web3 is trying to solve, because we’ve been living inside it for decades.

From Platforms to Protocols: What Happens Next.

Today, we still live in the age of platforms: Facebook, Amazon, Twitter. They own the data, the traffic, and the rules.

But slowly, we’re shifting toward protocols, public infrastructures that no single entity controls.
Blockchain. Decentralized storage. Open finance. Tokenized communities. In this new world, the winners are not just those who build apps.
The winners are those who can engineer trust at scale.

And that’s a game changer for:

Creators who want direct ownership of their audience. Farmers who want fair market access without middlemen.Students who want verified digital certificates that never “get missing.”

Diaspora investors who want transparency in local real estate or startups. Trust, once invisible, is becoming a product. A feature. An asset. And now as I close with this piece, the Opportunity Hiding in Plain Sight. We doesn’t just need more apps. It needs trust infrastructure.

We need:

(A) Data systems that are transparent.

(B) Institutions that are auditable.

(C) Money that is predictable.

(D) Platforms that put people first.

And if we do this right, we won’t just consume global tech, we’ll define the future rules of digital trust. So the next time someone says “tech is the new oil,” smile politely. Then tell them:
“Maybe. But trust is the new electricity.”

And in Africa, we have everything we need to generate it.

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