Overnight, many Nigerian users had to find alternative ways to buy, sell or move their Bitcoin because the platform they had become used to no longer offered the service they depended on.
Nigerians already had alternative while binance was operating. Binance and bitget were existing in Nigeria at the time but binance was more popular probably because of its coin BNB and some additional value service like zero fee for transactions to naira and also P2P. So when they have the issue of manipulation of the Naira value with the Nigerian government and were forced to suspend Naira transaction, Nigerian had to focuse on exchanges like bitget who were ready to be regulated by the government.
It also made me realize something else. I think at the beginning many of us unintentionally associate Bitcoin with the first exchange we use. So when something changes on that platform, it almost feels like something has changed about Bitcoin itself. In reality, the exchange is just a service built around Bitcoin. The network keeps running regardless.
I don't think anything changed with bitcoin. What is happening in an exchange doesn't have the capacity to change anything in bitcoin ecosystem. Moreover, it was just isolated in Nigeria at the time.
When I first got into Bitcoin, I thought that as long as my balance showed up on an exchange, those coins were mine. It took me a while to understand what people meant by “Not your keys, not your coins.” The exchange holds the private keys, while you’re trusting them to give you access to your Bitcoin whenever you need it.
Yes they are still your coin in custody of the exchange. The major reason for using CEX is because of trading and most times you see yourself sending your coins there for the purpose of all kinds of trading.
What I’m really wondering is whether too many people stop at that stage.
Nope, people did not stop. They moved into other CEX when binance deactivated P2P.
Personally, I think exchanges are a great way to enter the Bitcoin ecosystem, but they shouldn’t stop us from learning what makes Bitcoin different in the first place. Understanding wallets, private keys and self-custody gives you a choice. You may still decide to keep some or even all of your Bitcoin on an exchange, but at least that decision is an informed one rather than simply the most convenient one.
Keeping your coins in exchange is a choice, a purpose that you want to achieve and not that you don't have the choice to learn about bitcoin on your own. Dealing with exchange doesn't stop you from learning about bitcoin. In the first place, exchange is not where you can learn about bitcoin, private keys, wallet, security etc.