10 Comments

Amazing post!! Love it!! I don't understand why people in comment section are so negative. (Perhaps some bloggers?)

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You are doing an incredible job! What I would like to see is what does a blogger earn with interest vs their affiate earnings. Their business is not P2P Investing, their business is selling affiliate Links.

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This man is an angry man. Therefore he cannot be taken seriously. The IMF the World Bank and French Club and many others say the opposite of his filthy analysis. Whatever his motivations are he's missed the opportunity to be a truth worthy writer.

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Oh sorry for first comment but when I watched the video I get it because he is one of the victim's PIRATES Kidnapped him and he survived so you lucky man you don't need to charge all Somalia some bad people who was created your own government so think about it and talk about that how your government created the pirates and how they end up

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I think they raped he's mother

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This article tells no more then a hate of a unprofessional journalists

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This article is so negative and simply unfair to somalia, a country desperately trying rebuild itself from 3 decades of war. Somalia has actually shown great improvement in terms of development. This article and like many others are the reason why no one invests in somalia. Rather than portray it in a negative way, why don't you mention all the startups who are making million dollar turnovers. Disgraceful. Shameful. Bad journalism.

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"4 Latvian P2P platforms have shut down" - 3 were registered in Estonia, 1 in Ireland, so technically those are not Latvian platforms. Suggest writing a blog post about jurisdictions, it is interesting angle actually. Why scammers love Estonian jurisdiction for example, why they often prohibit investors from the country of registration, why they don't like to register in the same country were they based, stuff like that.

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I find that overview table of P2P blogger investments very interesting. A recommendation I read is to invest about max. 10% of the savings into high risk investments such as P2P.

Considering some of the huge sums in those portfolios (at least they appear huge to me with an income that I would say is middle class) I wonder about their risk appetite / nativity to put that amount into P2P. It is hard to believe the invested amount is only 10%, or perhaps indeed their business model never was investing in P2P rather affiliate links / blog income which might have been invested in P2P (instead of the own money).

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When I looked in to this platform a few months ago Fr. Ted's raffle came to mind, look it up for a laugh. Should have been called agrigrab.

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