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ChatGPT: OpenAI to Collect 7.5% VAT From Nigerian Users from November

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OpenAI

By Adedapo Adesanya

OpenAI, which operates the generative artificial intelligence service ChatGPT, will begin collecting 7.5 per cent Value-Added Tax (VAT) on its services in Nigeria starting on November 1, 2025.

This was disclosed by the company in an email sent to users, noting the new charge complies with Section 10 of the Value Added Tax Act, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004 (as amended) and the FIRS Information Circular 2021/19.

This means that the 7.5 per cent levy will apply to all paid subscriptions, including ChatGPT Plus and any other OpenAI services billed in Nigeria.

The company advised users with a valid Tax Identification Number (TIN) to include it in the payment section of their OpenAI account to ensure proper tax documentation.

This is the latest development as Nigeria seeks to tighten tax compliance for foreign digital service providers operating in the country.

Earlier this year, President Bola Tinubu signed a series of tax bills into law. These acts will help harmonise taxation in the country and help improve the country’s tax to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio.

Already, technology companies operating in Nigeria like Google, Netflix, Facebook, and Amazon among others already charge Nigerians VAT on their products. Newly operational services offerings like OpenAI will come into the fold.

Amendments in the VAT act now compel non-resident digital firms to collect the levy directly from Nigerian users and remit it to the Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS).

Speaking earlier this month during a session at the 31st Nigerian Economic Summit (NES#31) in Abuja, the Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy & Tax Reforms, Mr Taiwo Oyedele, said the country’s tax reforms will help reduce risks for companies getting value from Nigerians.

“The tax reforms are not to impose higher taxes. You won’t find that anywhere in the laws. Rather, they are to reduce business risk. I can give you examples. We have companies in Nigeria that are being asked to pay minimum tax on their capital. So the idea is to reduce business risk and make the environment simpler.”

As a result, the compliance by OpenAI indicates the growing integration of global tech firms into Nigeria’s digital tax system.

The compliance, however, translates to increase in payment of these services for Nigerians. For instance, people who use premium ChatGPT services will have to pay more. Currently, ChatGPT Plus users pay N31,500 per month, the inclusion of a 7.5 per cent VAT means they will now pay N33,862.50 monthly.

To cushion this, OpenAI has opened a cheaper subscription tier of N7,000 a month to Nigerians, with limited capabilities.

Business Post gathered that other AI services will also be affected by the VAT compliance.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

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Nigeria, Finland Strengthen Ties on Digital Economy

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Digital Economy Policy

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigerian government and the Republic of Finland have formalised a strategic partnership on digitalisation and innovation, signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at expanding economic activities and strengthening cooperation in the digital sector.

The agreement was signed in Abuja by the Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Mr Bosun Tijani, and Mr Jarno Syrjälä, Under‑Secretary of State (International Trade) at Finland’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs.

According to a statement from the Special Assistant on Media and Communications to the communications minister, Mr Isime Esene, the MoU will establish a framework for collaboration across key areas, including digital government, emerging technologies, digital public infrastructure, cybersecurity, innovation ecosystems, and capacity building.

Mr Tijani described the signing as “an important step in strengthening the partnership between both countries as we work to build a more inclusive, innovation-driven digital economy.”

“This agreement is a significant next step following our engagements in Helsinki in February, where we met with key stakeholders, including Finnvera and Finnfund, and held productive discussions on advancing collaboration around digital infrastructure, the Data Exchange Platform, and opportunities for Finnish participation in Project Bridge.”

The Minister emphasised that the partnership would “unlock meaningful opportunities for both countries, enabling us to leverage digital transformation as a catalyst for sustainable growth and shared prosperity.”

Echoing this optimism, Mr Syrjälä said: “Finland is very pleased to deepen its partnership with Nigeria in building resilient, secure, and human‑centric digital societies. Digitalisation is at its best when it empowers people, strengthens trust, and creates new opportunities for innovation.”

“Nigeria is a key partner for Finland in Africa, and this MoU provides a strong basis for concrete cooperation between our governments, institutions, and private sectors. Together, we can advance digital solutions that are interoperable, future‑fit, and beneficial to both our nations,” he added.

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Technology

Meta Launches AI Support Assistant on Facebook, Instagram

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Meta AI Support Assistant

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

New Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools designed to provide support for users of its applications have been launched by Meta.

The AI Support Assistant will work on the Facebook and Instagram apps, the company said in a statement.

The tools will help users to receive reliable and action-oriented assistance when needed.

In December, the Meta AI support assistant, a tool designed to provide reliable, 24/7 support for nearly any support issue at any time, was previewed.

Now, Meta is rolling it out globally on the Facebook and Instagram apps for iOS and Android, and within Help Centre on Facebook and Instagram on desktop, with even more capabilities and ways to help.

The new Meta AI support assistant is designed to help resolve account problems from start to finish. It offers answers for any question, like notification settings or new features, and can also take action for users on a growing set of requests directly within Facebook and, in the future, on Instagram.

The feature can report scams, impersonation accounts, or problematic content, make it easier to see why content was taken down, provide appeal options, track what happens next, manage privacy settings, reset passwords, and update profile settings.

The Meta AI support assistant can respond to requests typically in under five seconds, dramatically reducing wait times compared to traditional help centre searches or seeking answers on external websites.

“The Meta AI support assistant is a major step in our work to deliver stronger support on our apps. In fact, among people who have provided feedback, the majority report a positive experience with the Meta AI support assistant. It’s rolling out now in all languages supported by Facebook and Instagram for support topics.

“We’re continuing to invest in AI- powered tools to make support more accessible, reliable, and effective — and we’ll keep evolving the Meta AI support assistant as more people use it and as the technology advances, so it continues to improve over time,” the organisation disclosed.

Meta has also deployed AI to improve content enforcement to help users reduce the chance that scammers trick people into giving away their login details, ultimately finding and mitigating 5,000 scam attempts per day that no existing review team had caught before.

Meta said over the next few years, it would be deploying these more advanced AI systems across its apps once they consistently perform better than its current methods of content enforcement, transforming its approach.

“As we do this, we’ll reduce our reliance on third-party vendors for content enforcement and focus on strengthening our internal systems and workforce.

“While we’ll still have people who review content, these systems will be able to take on work that’s better-suited to technology, like repetitive reviews of graphic content or areas where adversarial actors are constantly changing their tactics, such as with illicit drug sales or scams,” it stated.

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Facebook Offers New Tools to Report Impersonation, Removes 20 million Accounts

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Facebook Original content creators

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

As part of its commitment to celebrating and rewarding creativity, Facebook has updated its guidance, with clear definitions of what counts as original and unoriginal content.

In a message on Monday, the social media platform said it was offering content creators new tools to report impersonation.

Launched last year, the content protection tool is expanding beyond detecting reel matches across Meta platforms to now also flag potential impersonation.

Creators can take action on content theft and easily submit impersonation reports all in one place.

Facebook, in the statement received by Business Post, said creators can check for access to content protection in their professional dashboard or apply for access here.

The platform also disclosed that in 2025, it removed over 20 million accounts impersonating large content creators, and impersonation reports related to large content creators dropped by 33 per cent.

Further, Facebook is deprioritising unoriginal content by making sure they do not perform well on its platform.

It noted that content that is duplicated from other sources or makes low-value changes to someone else’s content may see significantly reduced reach, and accounts that primarily post unoriginal content may lose eligibility for recommendations and monetisation.

It was emphasised that “these changes provide creators who post original content with greater reach and monetisation opportunities, provide stronger protections for their work, and reduce the reach of unoriginal content.”

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