Earlier in 2025, somewhere between the quiet passing of one idea and the uneasy birth of another, Moore…Earlier in 2025, somewhere between the quiet passing of one idea and the uneasy birth of another, Moore…

The curiosity that built Cognito Systems

2025/12/01 19:51
5분 읽기

Earlier in 2025, somewhere between the quiet passing of one idea and the uneasy birth of another, Moore Dagogo-Hart, a software engineer at heart, awoke in the half-light of his Lagos residence with something lodged in his sleepy mind. A word he hadn’t heard before and couldn’t place, yet it rang like a coin dropping into a well quarter-full with his dreams. He turned it over in his $thoughts, cautious that if he let go too soon, it’d fade as morning gathered. 

Cognito. 

For some time, it meant little. Then, with the recall of his past challenges and ongoing ventures, the word soon began to gain weight. 

At that point, nothing like it existed. But for Moore, Syx Labs, a patchwork built from the wreckage of a previous project, was close enough. In 2022, Apple rejected Nebula, a crypto wallet from his first company, Solarsoft, meant to put blockchain tools in African hands. The decision, driven by Apple’s caution towards crypto, halted the dream almost overnight. Moore filled the void the way engineers often do: by building again.

Moore describes Syx Labs, his small team of software developers, as a survival project, a bench in a storm, a place to test ideas while the dust settled. In the middle of that chaos, Moore’s long-time friend, Tobiloba Asu-Johnson, who was building Zap Africa, a non-custodial crypto exchange designed to give Nigerians control over their assets, reached out. When Moore joined as co-founder and CTO, his team became the engine behind the platform, its architecture and the systems that made it hum. 

When Zap Africa’s user count jumped to 10,000 in a single day, a brief “scale came quite fast” celebration was clouded by a moment of realisation. While everything else stayed in place, Syx Labs had outgrown its purpose; yet another reminder that the idea behind it was born of necessity, not a vision. 

The curiosity that built Cognito SystemsMoore Dagogo-Hart, founder and CEO of Cognito Systems

It was in that moment that Moore recalled the dream from weeks before, a name representing something broader than software. If Solarsoft had been about blockchain and Syx Labs about weathering a storm, Cognito would be about tools that helped people and businesses think better.

“With Syx Labs, I always felt something was missing; it was still tied to the remnants of Solarsoft. When we reached the milestone with Zap,” Moore said, “I realised I was mentally ready to build products that could shape Africa’s future. Syx Labs no longer reflected that.”

Ultimately, he reinvented the company as Cognito Systems, with Zap Africa as its first client. They worked as a field unit, 12 people aligned on speed and precision, each moving where the other braked. He describes it as “a forge, not a factory”, a place where ideas arrive white-hot, are hammered into form, and are only set aside once the work is completed.

Cognito builds for context, not for consensus

The first proof of Moore’s vision came in 2023 with Zap Africa, which demonstrated that locally built systems could scale reliably. In 2024, Cognito Systems took that further with Black Pride Canada, a nonprofit serving queer and Black communities. It adapted its technology to detect emotional cues and alert responders in real time, a system that has since supported 70 crisis callers and improved mental health response via anonymised data.

In 2025, the team built an automated shopfront for J Bottoms, a Lagos fashion label, which processed over $30,000 in its first four months. Later, they helped Pluto Homes integrate its listings into Google’s property ecosystem, transforming stagnant bookings into steady, algorithm-driven traffic.

The curiosity that built Cognito SystemsCognito Systems team

Its approach mirrored a shift from conventional dev shop models. Rather than selling hours or manpower, the company offers sustainable systems. Its revenue models are equally strategic: equity stakes, revenue-sharing agreements, and traditional service fees. To date, they have generated roughly $70,000 in revenue, with an additional $60,000 in their pipeline. 

The birth of Martha AI

Cognito Systems’ early projects showed the limits of manual support. At Zap Africa, after-hours enquiries from crypto traders overwhelmed the team. That experience led to the development of Martha AI, a B2B assistant built to automate customer service.

Named after the founder’s sister, Martha reflects familiarity. “We named it after her because she loves to talk. It felt natural for a system whose job is to constantly communicate with people,” Moore revealed. 

Its initial goal was to streamline interactions, reduce wait times, and automate query handling. From there, it evolved. Using customer data from Zap Africa, it was trained to switch between Nigerian English, pidgin, and local languages such as Hausa and Yoruba. Beyond answering questions, it analyses sentiment and context.

The beta version of the product is set for release this November, with a full launch planned for early 2026. Early testers are invited to join a waitlist and share feedback to shape future development. Moore explains that the goal is to collect real-world insights before the system begins handling critical workloads.

The curiosity that built Cognito SystemsMoore Dagogo-Hart, founder and CEO of Cognito Systems

Martha AI has already delivered results. Beyond streamlining client support systems, its deployment with Black Pride Canada refined real-time sentiment analysis and tested how AI performs in sensitive human interactions, revealing its wider potential for both commercial and social use.

Its strength lies in localisation and adaptability. Built on OpenAI technology, it delivers context-aware responses that reflect local language and culture, which global tools like Intercom or Zendesk can miss. A coming feature, “smart escalation,” will flag complex queries to the right team members. The product fits into a broader plan to automate full business workflows, extending to engineering, product, and finance. 

Now, Cognito Systems is shifting from client projects to in-house products, aiming to define a new model for local technology. One built on tools that think contextually and act with understanding.”

면책 조항: 본 사이트에 재게시된 글들은 공개 플랫폼에서 가져온 것으로 정보 제공 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 이는 반드시 MEXC의 견해를 반영하는 것은 아닙니다. 모든 권리는 원저자에게 있습니다. 제3자의 권리를 침해하는 콘텐츠가 있다고 판단될 경우, service@support.mexc.com으로 연락하여 삭제 요청을 해주시기 바랍니다. MEXC는 콘텐츠의 정확성, 완전성 또는 시의적절성에 대해 어떠한 보증도 하지 않으며, 제공된 정보에 기반하여 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다. 본 콘텐츠는 금융, 법률 또는 기타 전문적인 조언을 구성하지 않으며, MEXC의 추천이나 보증으로 간주되어서는 안 됩니다.

추천 콘텐츠

Wall Street sets AMD stock price target for next 12 months

Wall Street sets AMD stock price target for next 12 months

The post Wall Street sets AMD stock price target for next 12 months appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) has been hit hard
공유하기
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/19 19:51
Top Solana Treasury Firm Forward Industries Unveils $4 Billion Capital Raise To Buy More SOL ⋆ ZyCrypto

Top Solana Treasury Firm Forward Industries Unveils $4 Billion Capital Raise To Buy More SOL ⋆ ZyCrypto

The post Top Solana Treasury Firm Forward Industries Unveils $4 Billion Capital Raise To Buy More SOL ⋆ ZyCrypto appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Advertisement &nbsp &nbsp Forward Industries, the largest publicly traded Solana treasury company, has filed a $4 billion at-the-market (ATM) equity offering program with the U.S. SEC  to raise more capital for additional SOL accumulation. Forward Strategies Doubles Down On Solana Strategy In a Wednesday press release, Forward Industries revealed that the 4 billion ATM equity offering program will allow the company to issue and sell common stock via Cantor Fitzgerald under a sales agreement dated Sept. 16, 2025. Forward said proceeds will go toward “general corporate purposes,” including the pursuit of its Solana balance sheet and purchases of income-generating assets. The sales of the shares are covered by an automatic shelf registration statement filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission that is already effective – meaning the shares will be tradable once they’re sold. An automatic shelf registration allows certain publicly listed companies to raise capital with flexibility swiftly.  Kyle Samani, Forward’s chairman, astutely described the ATM offering as “a flexible and efficient mechanism” to raise and deploy capital for the company’s Solana strategy and bolster its balance sheet.  Advertisement &nbsp Though the maximum amount is listed as $4 billion, the firm indicated that sales may or may not occur depending on existing market conditions. “The ATM Program enhances our ability to continue scaling that position, strengthen our balance sheet, and pursue growth initiatives in alignment with our long-term vision,” Samani said. Forward Industries kicked off its Solana treasury strategy on Sept. 8. The Wednesday S-3 form follows Forward’s $1.65 billion private investment in public equity that closed last week, led by crypto heavyweights like Galaxy Digital, Jump Crypto, and Multicoin Capital. The company started deploying that capital this week, announcing it snatched up 6.8 million SOL for approximately $1.58 billion at an average price of $232…
공유하기
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:42
World Liberty Financial Unveils Institutional RWA Token

World Liberty Financial Unveils Institutional RWA Token

World Liberty Financial (WLFI) has announced plans to launch an institutional-grade real-world asset (RWA) product, starting with a tokenized investment linked
공유하기
Thenewscrypto2026/02/19 17:27