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Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle - Business - Nairaland

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Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by DaddyJapan(op): 1:16pm On Feb 01
Tech Founder and Investigative Reporter Lock Horns in ₦140 Million Defamation Battle

Tech Founder and Investigative Reporter Lock Horns in ₦140 Million Defamation Battle

The collision between tech entrepreneurship and investigative journalism rarely ends quietly, and the current standoff between Ezra Olubi and David Hundeyin proves no exception.

Late January 2026 brought an explosive development, Olubi, who helped build Paystack into one of Africa's fintech success stories before his controversial departure, sent his lawyers after Hundeyin with a pre-action notice demanding ₦140 million in damages. The journalist's response? A social media post dripping with defiance and colourful language that suggested he has zero intention of complying.

What Sparked the Legal Threat

The roots of this confrontation stretch back to December 2025, when Hundeyin published a series of tweets that quickly went viral, racking up millions of views. His posts drew uncomfortable comparisons between Olubi and Sean Diddy Combs, the American entertainment mogul whose reputation has faced serious challenges.

According to the legal notice, Hundeyin didn't mince words. He allegedly accused Olubi of harbouring a God complex, operating with an absence of consequences, and engaging in sexual perversion traits he claimed mirrored those of Combs. Perhaps most provocatively, the journalist said he'd "bet a good sum of money" that Olubi struggled with drug addiction.

Olubi's legal team has fired back, calling these assertions baseless, malicious, and designed to paint their client as a threat to society. The language in their notice is unambiguous, these claims are untrue, unsubstantiated, and aimed at destroying Olubi's reputation.

The Demands and the Pushback

Olubi's legal notice lays out four specific requirements, with a seven-day deadline attached:

Complete removal of the allegedly defamatory tweets, with no trace left online. A full public retraction and apology. Written commitment that Hundeyin will never again publish defamatory content about Olubi. Payment of ₦140 million (approximately $100,000) in compensation.

Fail to meet these demands, the letter warns, and the dispute heads straight to the Lagos State High Court.


Hundeyin's reaction suggests courtroom drama may be inevitable. Rather than retreating, he posted the legal notice publicly, accompanied by expletive-laden commentary mocking both the demands and the eye-watering sum being requested. His tone made one thing clear, he's not apologising, not deleting anything, and certainly not writing a cheque.

A Broader Pattern Emerges

This confrontation doesn't exist in a vacuum. Nigeria's digital landscape has become increasingly litigious, with defamation suits following viral content becoming almost routine.

Just weeks ago, in January 2026, renowned human rights attorney Femi Falana secured a $25,000 judgment against Meta after pursuing legal action over content shared on the platform. That case, like this one, underscores how seriously Nigerian courts are taking online speech and how willing prominent figures are to use legal mechanisms to protect their reputations.

The question now is whether Olubi and Hundeyin will settle this privately or whether Nigeria's courts will be asked to draw new lines around what constitutes acceptable public commentary versus actionable defamation.


What Happens Next

As it stands, no lawsuit has been formally filed. But given the public nature of the dispute and neither party's willingness to compromise, escalation seems likely.

For Olubi, the stakes involve salvaging a reputation already damaged by his Paystack exit. For Hundeyin, it's about defending investigative journalism's role in holding powerful figures accountable, though his methods and tone have certainly raised questions about where commentary crosses into character assassination.

The coming weeks will reveal whether this remains a war of words on social media or transforms into a landmark legal battle that could shape how Nigerian law treats online speech, journalistic freedom, and the limits of public criticism. One thing seems certain, neither side is backing down without a fight.
Source: https://www.techcrier.com/2026/01/tech-founder-and-investigative-reporter.html

Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by tobenuel(m):
I dey watch United match abeg

I will come back to this later

Edited

Hundeyin is a busy body.

what's in for Olubi-------- Salvaging a reputation already damaged by his Paystack exit.
what's in for Hundeyin------- Defending investigative journalism's role in holding powerful figures accountable
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by NurseJay: 3:34pm On Feb 01
May the best man win. Wetin consine me
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by strictrept: 3:36pm On Feb 01
Adjournments upon adjournments, laced with appeals n further adjournment.

Let the case be filed quickly sha.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Image123(m): 3:37pm On Feb 01
Two agnostics slugging things out financially and legally. undecided
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by backtalkG(m): 3:53pm On Feb 01
Why the current trend of people using AI to write news report.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Judolisco(m): 3:59pm On Feb 01
Two busurus dey fight... Wetin concern court grin
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by DesChyko: 3:59pm On Feb 01
According to Nigerian Courts, his X account can be held liable for the post, and not him. 🤔
Just as the $460,000 forfeiture was a judgement against the account and not the owner.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Judolisco(m): 4:00pm On Feb 01
backtalkG:
Why the current trend of people using AI to write news report.
It so nauseating, every online media platform is using AI
ehn, what I'll advise is the proper use of AI... It has come to stay bros... Embrace it
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by skydancer: 4:02pm On Feb 01
Yea the right approach is to report the tweet and have X take it down first. This platform promote and protect free speech and it's hard to prove David Hundeyin is the one operating the account.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by motymop: 4:10pm On Feb 01
How come he didn't die the woman that destroyed his career
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Kobicove(m): 4:13pm On Feb 01
Na wetin concern David Hundeyin for this matter?
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by axglide(m): 4:19pm On Feb 01
Live well and live right my people. Jesus Christ has come to give you life and life more abundantly
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by ruffhandu: 4:20pm On Feb 01
People don't like it when their secrets are exposed to the public. Who does anyway? Better to live a clean life, no matter how much money you have access to.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by GloriousGbola: 4:40pm On Feb 01
The fact that ezra is not throwing about the usual billion naira suit means this may not be performative but actually intentional.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Akwamkpuruamu: 5:15pm On Feb 01
tobenuel:
I dey watch United match abeg

I will come back to this later

Edited

Hundeyin is a busy body.

what's in for Olubi-------- Salvaging a reputation already damaged by his Paystack exit.

what's in for Hundeyin------- Defending investigative journalism's role in holding powerful figures accountable
Now we don hammer Fulham 3-2, oya come talk that thing wey dey your mind now
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by PlayerMeji: 5:45pm On Feb 01
Ezra should be thankful he's in a country like Nigeria where he could say he had sexz with a cat and no eyebrows were raised...

He would be sitting in a steel chair in Arkansas waiting for the jury to tell him his fate in the US.

Hundeyin too is also lucky to be in a country like Nigeria because in saner climes you dare not write anything without facts about just anyone.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by incogni2o: 6:53pm On Feb 01
This guy continues to demaze me, Why can't He sue makispoke who started the whole saga.

If not transfer of aggression, The first on the defamation list should be that tomboy.

He's still proving stubborn, instead of humbling himself and setting things straight from foundation.

Even having to delete the x account is enough shame already.

I hope he gets off his High Horse and prays to God for mercy and redirection.

Only God is merciful, ready to receive at anytime and can mend any form of brokenness.

The Devil on the other hand is a master of deceit. He's not finished until he makes you walk drunk to the cliff of doom.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by erniok(m): 7:24pm On Feb 01
One oyibo sued him in the UK, how far abi na sue sue we go dey hear.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by erniok(m): 7:26pm On Feb 01
PlayerMeji:
Ezra should be thankful he's in a country like Nigeria where he could say he had sexz with a cat and no eyebrows were raised...

He would be sitting in a steel chair in Arkansas waiting for the jury to tell him his fate in the US.

Hundeyin too is also lucky to be in a country like Nigeria because in saner climes you dare not write anything without facts about just anyone.
Is David in Nigeria? Strongly doubt. Plenty go chop am raw if he were here.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by pkasso(m): 7:49pm On Feb 01
backtalkG:
Why the current trend of people using AI to write news report.
I find it annoying. The moment I notice an article is AI-generated, I just skim through it rather than taking the time to immerse myself and enjoy the reading experience. The writing always comes across as 'mechanical' and there is a lack of nuance and subtlety.

They say these AIs are going take away the jobs of writers and other people in the creative industry but from what I've seen they have a long way to go. Shey na ChatGPT wey dey gbagaun on top simple question? They can be prolific but they will never match the quality and depth of human creativity.

Every writer has a unique style, which sets them apart. Not these AI articles though, they all read the same. So generic and unoriginal.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Onegai(f): 8:43pm On Feb 01
GloriousGbola:
The fact that ezra is not throwing about the usual billion naira suit means this may not be performative but actually intentional.
I'm kinda hoping this David Hyundai has shown that not only is he an unpleasant person, he has very journalistic integrity. He goes after people he doesn't like as opposed to reporting the news. Nobody drags Fisayo Soyombo, who does solid work and doesn't let his personal bias get in the way.

Ezra is also an arrogant yet deeply intelligent person with deep pockets. This may go the way of Peter Thiel and Gawker (Gawker shut down for good when he was done with them and he used Hulk Hogan, of all people, to sue them to oblivion).
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by GloriousGbola: 9:12pm On Feb 01
Onegai:
I'm kinda hoping this David Hyundai has shown that not only is he an unpleasant person, he has very journalistic integrity. He goes after people he doesn't like as opposed to reporting the news. Nobody drags Fisayo Soyombo, who does solid work and doesn't let his personal bias get in the way.

Ezra is also an arrogant yet deeply intelligent person with deep pockets. This may go the way of Peter Thiel and Gawker (Gawker shut down for good when he was done with them and he used Hulk Hogan, of all people, to sue them to oblivion).
cue david and the rice cooker [in the saga they took everything from editor A.J. Delurio]. it was terrible

and gawker was a fantatsic site cry cry cry cry cry

https://abovethelaw.com/2016/08/too-poor-to-pay-million-dollar-judgment-former-gawker-editor-offers-up-rice-cooker-dishes/

We also wish to advise you that Mr. [A.J.] Daulerio intends to take the following personal items with him to California: his computer, his phone, and a limited amount of clothing. Would you like him to ship the other personal items he has in Florida — such as his rice cooker, dishes, books, and remaining clothing — to you? Or, would it be easier to ship those items directly to Mr. [Terry] Bollea or Mr. [Peter] Thiel? If it is acceptable to Mr. Bollea and his benefactor Mr. Thiel, Mr. Daulerio would prefer to take those items with him to California, but did not want to run afoul of their desires.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by jessicahanlo(f): 9:25pm On Feb 01
Omo, this one don dey hot oh, I no know whether to dey laugh or just shake my head. Tech guys dey make money like say tomorrow no dey, investigative journalists dey speak truth like say dem no fear wahala… now you go see 140 million Naira waka enter court 😅

Hundeyin no dey carry last, e sabi fight, and Ezra sef no be small guy… Na real gbege be this. I just dey wonder how e go end, because if court enter, e fit turn long drama wey everybody go dey watch. Ehn, na Naija be this, everywhere gist full ground!
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by SixSeven: 12:50am On Feb 02
pkasso:
I find it annoying. The moment I notice an article is AI-generated, I just skim through it rather than taking the time to immerse myself and enjoy the reading experience. The writing always comes across as 'mechanical' and there is a lack of nuance and subtlety.

They say these AIs are going take away the jobs of writers and other people in the creative industry but from what I've seen they have a long way to go. Shey na ChatGPT wey dey gbagaun on top simple question? They can be prolific but they will never match the quality and depth of human creativity.

Every writer has a unique style, which sets them apart. Not these AI articles though, they all read the same. So generic and unoriginal.
AI can never have creative license, which humans have.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by AlphaTaikun: 1:56am On Feb 02
DaddyJapan:
Tech Founder and Investigative Reporter Lock Horns in ₦140 Million Defamation Battle


Tech Founder and Investigative Reporter Lock Horns in ₦140 Million Defamation Battle

The collision between tech entrepreneurship and investigative journalism rarely ends quietly, and the current standoff between Ezra Olubi and David Hundeyin proves no exception.

Late January 2026 brought an explosive development, Olubi, who helped build Paystack into one of Africa's fintech success stories before his controversial departure, sent his lawyers after Hundeyin with a pre-action notice demanding ₦140 million in damages. The journalist's response? A social media post dripping with defiance and colourful language that suggested he has zero intention of complying.

What Sparked the Legal Threat

The roots of this confrontation stretch back to December 2025, when Hundeyin published a series of tweets that quickly went viral, racking up millions of views. His posts drew uncomfortable comparisons between Olubi and Sean Diddy Combs, the American entertainment mogul whose reputation has faced serious challenges.

According to the legal notice, Hundeyin didn't mince words. He allegedly accused Olubi of harbouring a God complex, operating with an absence of consequences, and engaging in sexual perversion traits he claimed mirrored those of Combs. Perhaps most provocatively, the journalist said he'd "bet a good sum of money" that Olubi struggled with drug addiction.

Olubi's legal team has fired back, calling these assertions baseless, malicious, and designed to paint their client as a threat to society. The language in their notice is unambiguous, these claims are untrue, unsubstantiated, and aimed at destroying Olubi's reputation.

The Demands and the Pushback

Olubi's legal notice lays out four specific requirements, with a seven-day deadline attached:

Complete removal of the allegedly defamatory tweets, with no trace left online. A full public retraction and apology. Written commitment that Hundeyin will never again publish defamatory content about Olubi. Payment of ₦140 million (approximately $100,000) in compensation.

Fail to meet these demands, the letter warns, and the dispute heads straight to the Lagos State High Court.

Hundeyin's reaction suggests courtroom drama may be inevitable. Rather than retreating, he posted the legal notice publicly, accompanied by expletive-laden commentary mocking both the demands and the eye-watering sum being requested. His tone made one thing clear, he's not apologising, not deleting anything, and certainly not writing a cheque.

A Broader Pattern Emerges

This confrontation doesn't exist in a vacuum. Nigeria's digital landscape has become increasingly litigious, with defamation suits following viral content becoming almost routine.

Just weeks ago, in January 2026, renowned human rights attorney Femi Falana secured a $25,000 judgment against Meta after pursuing legal action over content shared on the platform. That case, like this one, underscores how seriously Nigerian courts are taking online speech and how willing prominent figures are to use legal mechanisms to protect their reputations.

The question now is whether Olubi and Hundeyin will settle this privately or whether Nigeria's courts will be asked to draw new lines around what constitutes acceptable public commentary versus actionable defamation.

What Happens Next

As it stands, no lawsuit has been formally filed. But given the public nature of the dispute and neither party's willingness to compromise, escalation seems likely.

For Olubi, the stakes involve salvaging a reputation already damaged by his Paystack exit. For Hundeyin, it's about defending investigative journalism's role in holding powerful figures accountable, though his methods and tone have certainly raised questions about where commentary crosses into character assassination.

The coming weeks will reveal whether this remains a war of words on social media or transforms into a landmark legal battle that could shape how Nigerian law treats online speech, journalistic freedom, and the limits of public criticism. One thing seems certain, neither side is backing down without a fight.

Source: https://www.techcrier.com/2026/01/tech-founder-and-investigative-reporter.html
The coming weeks will reveal whether this remains a war of words on social media or transforms into a landmark legal battle that could shape how Nigerian law treats online speech, journalistic freedom, and the limits of public criticism. One thing seems certain, neither side is backing down without a fight.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by elitper: 4:21am On Feb 02
I pray this Hyundai guy doesn't end up in jail very soon.
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by yinkeys(m): 7:45am On Feb 02
tobenuel:
I dey watch United match abeg

I will come back to this later

Edited

Hundeyin is a busy body.

what's in for Olubi-------- Salvaging a reputation already damaged by his Paystack exit.
what's in for Hundeyin------- Defending investigative journalism's role in holding powerful figures accountable
My opinion
Hundeyin should stick to a niche instead of creating too many enemies for himself or being all over the place just to make the news
No one is encyclopedic
Politics niche that is, he’s already deep in.
Popularly known for his
Nasco 4 Jihad & NA to attack Niger write up/whistleblowing
Ezra Olubi isn’t a big fish or our problem at large
Re: Ezra Olubi And David Hundeyin Lock Horns In ₦140 Million Defamation Battle by Whois(m): 10:07am On Feb 03
Why is olubi always in the news for wrong reasons
1 Reply

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