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eCheckCasinos.ca Hires Former Investopedia Writer Lucy Adegbe to Lead Fact-Checking and Boost Reader Trust

Lucy Adegbe Joins as Fact-Checker

eCheckCasinos.ca has brought Lucy Adegbe on board as its fact-checker. She previously wrote for Investopedia, covering crypto and finance. At eCheckCasinos.ca, her job is to review all content before it goes live, verify facts, and follow up if something doesn’t add up or needs clarification

Her Background

Lucy didn’t come from a traditional media background.She got her start in rural Nigeria, working on development projects where things didn’t always run smoothly. Information was scattered, systems changed without notice, and there wasn’t a playbook to follow. You had to figure things out on the ground, often with very little to work with. You had to pay attention. You had to ask better questions. And you learned pretty quickly not to take anyone’s word without checking it yourself.

Later on, she got into crypto — not through a big firm, but through small teams trying to build things from the ground up. She wrote content, helped explain confusing tools, and worked in roles where everyone was figuring it out as they went. That kind of work led her to different blockchain startups, and eventually to Investopedia. There, she spent time reviewing wallets and exchanges. It wasn’t just about listing features — she tested them, read every bit of fine print, and tried to see what regular users would actually deal with. If something didn’t make sense, she didn’t let it slide.

Her Work Experience

Lucy has held several roles across fintech and finance writing, including:

  • Guru Capital LTD – Crypto investment content and advice for new investors
  • Paychant (Celo-backed) – Content on crypto payments and blockchain adoption
  • DeFi Planet – Blockchain writer and journalist covering decentralized finance
  • Spherium Finance & CRD Network – Content-driven marketing for fintech startups
  • Top10.com – Personal finance and product comparison writing
  • Bitcoin.ng – Crypto and blockchain educational content
  • The Street Journal – Articles covering finance and economic developments
  • Investopedia – Reviewed wallets and exchanges, tested products directly
  • eCheckCasinos.ca – Primary fact-checker for all site content

Her Approach to Fact-Checking

That same approach is exactly what she brings to her new role. She checks casino features, payment timelines, bonus conditions — anything that might affect how people interact with a site. If something’s unclear, she asks questions. If a claim looks too good, she takes a closer look. She’s not there to rewrite marketing language. She’s there to confirm what’s real and flag anything that isn’t.

What makes Lucy valuable to the team is not just what she knows, but how she works. She doesn’t speed through tasks. She pays attention, takes her time, and follows the details until everything lines up. Her role is simple: don’t let anything go live unless it’s solid. She goes over each piece carefully, looking for gaps, checking claims, and making sure what’s being said actually holds up. If something feels off — even slightly — she stops.

She doesn’t brush past unclear details. She looks into them. She finds where the info came from, checks it again, and only moves forward when it lines up. Nothing gets a pass just because it sounds convincing. She’s worked in places where financial systems lacked structure, and where documentation was hard to come by. That taught her to slow down, look harder, and not rush anything out until it’s clear.

Dana Nikolic’s Assessment of Working with Lucy

According to Dana Nikolic, who works closely with Lucy on comparison scoring: “What stands out about Lucy isn’t only what she knows, but how she approaches the work. She takes her time with each piece, checking claims carefully and following the details until they line up. If something feels even slightly off, she stops and investigates. Having worked in places where documentation wasn’t always reliable, she’s developed a habit of double-checking sources and not moving forward until things are accurate.”

Editorial Team and Collaboration

She’ll be working directly with the site’s editorial team, which includes:

  • Trevor Hallsey, who oversees all review content
  • Donna Dorsa, a long-time contributor focused on game testing
  • Dana Nikolic, who handles platform comparison, scoring, and writing articles

This team already tests casinos firsthand, verifies payout methods, and contacts providers to confirm details. Lucy’s role is to go even deeper, especially when it comes to how money is handled, how terms are worded, and how player-facing claims are presented.

Focus on the eCheck Ease Score

One of the first areas she’s focusing on is the site’s eCheck Ease Score. This is the internal rating used to show how easy it is to use eCheck payments on each platform. It includes everything from how fast money moves, to what limits apply, to whether the process is simple for the average user.

Lucy is carefully reviewing the data behind each score. If payment times have slowed, she updates that. If deposit limits have changed, the score reflects it. If fine print hides extra steps, she brings that into the review. The goal is to make sure these scores reflect what players actually experience today — not outdated info or claims that only look good in ads.

For Canadian players who use eCheck to deposit or withdraw, this kind of detailed work adds another layer of trust. Most casino review sites copy the same language or skip testing completely. eCheckCasinos.ca places a strong emphasis on accuracy, and Lucy’s role supports that aim.

Lucy’s Perspective

According to Lucy, her experience reviewing financial tools taught her to stay skeptical. “If you don’t look closely, it’s easy to get misled,” she said. “I’ve worked in places where documentation is hard to come by. So now, I don’t take shortcuts. I dig into the details.”

That mindset fits well with what the site aims to do. Canadian readers want clear, honest information — especially when it involves their money. Having someone like Lucy on the team makes that possible.

About eCheckCasinos.ca

eCheckCasinos.ca is a Canadian review platform focused on online casinos that support eCheck for deposits and withdrawals. The site rates each casino based on ease of use, payment reliability, and how clearly the terms are written. Every listing is reviewed by a small team who tests each feature directly, with accuracy as the priority.

About Lucy Adegbe

Lucy Adegbe is a writer and fact-checker with experience in finance, crypto, and public development. She has worked with blockchain startups and contributed to Investopedia. She currently leads fact-checking for eCheckCasinos.ca.

Contact

echeckcasinos.pr@gmail.com
https://echeckcasinos.ca

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Haifa University launches $60 Million ‘Home Again’ Campaign to help rebuild war- devastated northern Israel

Canadian Friends of Haifa University Executive Director Ariel Karabelnicoff

By MYRON LOVE In early July, Haifa University announced a new campaign to help rebuild the war-devastated communities of northern Israel.  The “Home Again” campaign aims to raise $60 Million for regional recovery  – and the Canadian Friends of Haifa University is set to do its part.
“We at CFHU hope to raise $1-million or more from our donors  across Canada toward the campaign,” reports Ariel Karabelnicoff, executive director of Canadian Friends of Haifa University.
In an earlier interview that was published in this newspaper last year, the former Winnipegger – now in his third year with CFHU – noted that the University of Haifa is among the largest universities in  Israel, but is also the youngest.  Fully accredited in 1972, he said, the university has an enrollment of 18,000 students – with a student body that reflects the diversity of Israel’s population.  About 40% of the students come from the Druze, Circassian and Arab communities and – among the Jewish students – there are many whose families are from Ethiopia.
The University of Haifa, Karabelnicoff added, also boasts the highest percentage among Israeli universities of students who are the first generation in their families to attend university.
The new initiative, he reports, aims to “restore and revitalize the north through science, innovation, and data-driven research rooted in community priorities and focused on real-world outcomes. “
While the campaign, Karabelnicoff points out,  was originally conceived to address the cascading crises that first began on October 7, 2023, the urgency has become even greater due to  direct missile strikes on Haifa and surrounding areas during the short war with Iran in April.
“The devastation brought mass displacement, overwhelmed public services, and deepened strain on communities already struggling to recover from months of conflict,” Karabelnicoff notes. “The campaign now represents not just regional recovery, but a cornerstone of Israel’s national resilience strategy for the post-conflict era. “
Karabelnicoff quotes University of Haifa President Professor Gur Alroey as stating that “in this moment of national crisis, when Israel’s northern communities have been tested like never before, University of Haifa is stepping forward to turn trauma into transformation. What was already a crucial mission of recovery after October 7 has become an existential imperative following the devastation of recent weeks. We are not just restoring what was lost, we are building the foundation for Israel’s long-term future—something stronger, more resilient, and more just.”
In the aftermath of October 7, Alroey reports, Hezbollah rockets devastated northern towns, triggering the largest internal displacement in Israel in decades. More than 68,000 people—families, farmers, and seniors—became refugees in their own country. Today, less than half have returned home. As Iranian long-range missiles threatened the north, communities faced not just a security crisis but a comprehensive breakdown in public health, education, employment, and social cohesion. In rural and peripheral areas, rehabilitation beds are scarce, mental health services are overwhelmed, and economic life has ground to a halt.
Karabelnicoff  notes that the Home Again campaign is offering a coordinated, data-informed strategy, anchored in real-time research, local partnerships, and measurable programs across three core pillars.
The first is a multi-front recovery strategy – led by emotional and physical rehabilitation specialists affiliated with the university – for one of the region’s greatest invisible burdens –  trauma. 
“PTSD has surged by 33% among residents,” Karabelnicoff reports, “with children and parents bearing some of the deepest scars.”
Simultaneously, he continues, northern hospitals are ill-equipped to meet rising demands for complex rehabilitation care. The university is addressing both gaps. 
The university is addressing this issue through mental health teams operating rapid-response networks – including the establishment of 24/7 hotlines and mobile therapeutic units. As well, the university’s Cheryl Spencer Nursing School is training more frontline responders to assess and manage trauma – and a proposed Community Rehabilitation and Research Center, spearheaded by Dr. Hilla Sarig Bahat, would merge academic research with hands-on clinical care—the first model of its kind in Israel.
The second focus is aimed at restoring economic stability and regional capacity in the north.  With unemployment in the north spiking nearly 50%, Karabelnicoff points out, “the university is launching targeted workforce initiatives designed to meet immediate needs and build long-term regional capacity. These include specialized training programs for nurses, educators, trauma specialists, and environmental rehabilitation professionals. Additionally, discharged soldiers are being offered re-skilling opportunities in sustainable marine industries tied to Israel’s northern coastline, connecting economic recovery to national resilience.”
The final prong in the University of Haifa’s new initiative is focused on investing in community futures through real-time legal aid clinics, AI-assisted social service platforms, and coexistence-building programs that will bring Jewish and Arab residents together in the workplace.
“The university is working to restore both public trust and strategic cohesion,” Karabelnicoff says.  “Researchers are partnering with kibbutzim, regional councils, and national ministries to revitalize schools, renew cultural life, and strengthen the social fabric at a time when national solidarity is dangerously frayed.”
For readers interested in contacting Ariel about supporting this new Canadian Friends of Haifa University initiative, his email address is ariel.karabelnicoff@haifa-univ.ca.

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Trump’s Nobel Peace Prize Quest And the Ukraine War

By HENRY SREBRNIK In a recent letter nominating U.S. President Donald Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel heaped praise on the diplomatic deals known as the Abraham Accords, establishing diplomatic relations between his country and three Arab states.

Netanyahu called the 2020 accords, brokered by Trump, “breakthroughs” that had “reshaped the Middle East,” making a “historic advance toward peace, security and regional stability.” Trump brokered the treaties between, initially, Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, signed at the White House that September 15. 

As I wrote at the time, Trump deserved the prize, but his detractors saw to it that it was instead awarded to the World Food Program, “for its efforts to combat hunger, for its contribution to bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas and for acting as a driving force in efforts to prevent the use of hunger as a weapon of war and conflict.”

A worthy organization, of course, but it could have been granted the prize in any year since its foundation in 1961. Trump deserved the prize, but didn’t get it, due to animosity from the international liberal elites.

By 2021 Trump was out of office, but he would still have been eligible. Instead. the prize went jointly to Maria Ressa, a Filipino-American journalist and investigative reporter for CNN and a professor at Columbia University, and Dmitry Andreyevich Muratov, founder of a pro-democracy Russian newspaper, for “their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a precondition for democracy and lasting peace.” Again, more of a “human rights” award than a diplomatic effort to end armed conflict.

Trump has long sought a Nobel Prize and has publicly questioned the decision to award the honour in 2009 to former president Barack Obama, who had barely entered the White House at the time. This time around, despite lingering bias, I think Trump will receive it. He can’t be overlooked — because he is really bringing at least a modicum of peace between longtime foes around the world. 

The August 8 agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan notched another victory for him. The photograph of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan shaking hands, with a smiling Trump holding both their arms, should alone do it. And it comes after a series of such deals. He spent much of his appearance promoting his administration’s role in overseas peace processes. His last such success came at the end of July, when he intervened to bring Cambodia and Thailand to the negotiating table after a border dispute. 

Trump claimed involvement in a May ceasefire between India and Pakistan, two nuclear powers, though India denied, for domestic reasons, that the U.S. was a major actor. In June, he celebrated a peace agreement brokered by the U.S. between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, doing so with a signing in the Oval Office. 

“Today’s signing follows our success with India and Pakistan. They were going at it. They were going at it big,” Trump reminded people. “Also the Congo and Rwanda. Now that was one, which was going on for 31 years, and we have it all done, and people are very happy.”

Several world leaders have said they were nominating Trump for the prize, including Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet. Among others, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have expressed their support. Pashinyan and Aliyev said that they believe Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and that they will advocate on his behalf to the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Aliyev remarked that what Trump did in six months was a “miracle.”

Now comes the hardest part: the horrific Russia-Ukraine war. It has become Trump’s obsession to end it and enter the history books as a peacemaker. The symbolism of Trump meeting Vladimir Putin on the tarmac in Anchorage, Alaska August 15 was a photograph that undoubtedly made it to the front pages of every newspaper in the world. Prior to the meeting, former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party candidate who lost the presidential election to Trump in 2016, said she would nominate him for the Nobel Peace Prize if he managed to pull off this extremely challenging feat!

Of course, the Alaska summit was actually just a first step. The ball is now in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s court. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Aug. 20 that Russia would agree to Western security guarantees for Ukraine only if Russia and China have a veto. 

Russia’s list of demands includes assurance that Ukraine will not join NATO. Conversely, Moscow will have to accept an eventual Ukrainian accession to the European Union. Remember: unlike the U.S. and Europe, neither Russia nor Ukraine can afford to lose. Both — yes, both — see themselves up against the wall. 

A redrawing of national borders seems inevitable. Much of Donetsk, Luhansk, and of course all of Crimea, with their Russophone populations, will likely remain Russian. On the other hand, Ukraine will become a far more homogenous nation state, perhaps a step towards its greater democratization. Otherwise, the war will continue. 

And I haven’t even mentioned Gaza.

As for Trump’s Nobel? The road ahead is rough, but it will still be a sure thing.

Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

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How beginners can profit from crypto

There are some people who have made money through investing in cryptocurrency. However, how can crypto help you make a profit if you are a beginner who doesn’t have a lot of technical expertise? Here is a list of some of the ways you can make money with crypto without having a lot of experience in the subject. 

Get in early

One way you can, potentially, earn money from crypto without needing any deep technical knowledge is by finding opportunities to get in on the ground floor. If you study any upcoming crypto launches by, for instance, looking at the list of new crypto presales from Best Wallet, you might find a coin or token which you could make a profit from. Very often, a cryptocurrency’s presale price is lower than what it trades at when it first appears on the open market. So, if you are careful, do your own research, and have luck on your side, you could make a profit from a cryptocurrency presale. 

Earn interest

If you want to make a profit in a slow but sure manner, then earning interest on a crypto savings account might just be for you. Much like a traditional, fiat, savings account, your money is lent out to borrowers or, in some cases, put into liquidity pools, and you earn interest, which can be as much as 10 per cent. Most major exchanges will let you do this, and they are often pretty user-friendly, too, so it won’t require a great deal of crypto expertise. If you do put your money into a savings account, make sure you research the platform and start with a small amount, the sort of amount of crypto you could afford to lose. It also helps if you diversify somewhat and use different platforms to avoid the risk of losses. 

Earn as you learn

While the debate between centralized and decentralized exchanges isn’t going to go away at any point soon, something that can work in favor of centralized exchanges is how they can give you free crypto in the form of learn-to-earn programs. These involve surveys and quizzes about particular cryptocurrencies, which reward players with some of the subject cryptos once they have completed them. Although the rewards are not exactly massive – usually a few dollars’ worth of the said crypto – they are real. What is, perhaps, even more useful is that the quizzes are educational, so you won’t just gain crypto from doing them, you will also learn more about the whole cryptosphere. 

Keep loyal

If you’ve been shopping at any point this century, the chances are that you will be familiar with the concept of loyalty cards. These give you rewards for doing your shopping, or eating and drinking, at a specific chain or store. And what’s true of traditional retail is becoming ever more commonplace with cryptocurrency. Whether it’s with crypto debit cards, which give users rewards in the form of crypto, shopping platforms such as StormX or Lolli offering points, or travel sites like Travala giving customers crypto cashback, there are plenty of ways in which you can get crypto just by getting things you would normally get. And, better yet, they usually just need you to sign up and link your card to your account, so there’s no mining or staking or anything like that. As ever, though, make sure that you read the small print and check that you comply with any tax requirements for any coins or tokens earned via a crypto loyalty program.  

Hold steady

Crypto investors who make money know when to get into a market and come out of it. However, one thing that can work in your favor is the simple act of buying and holding crypto. Now, this isn’t foolproof. Firstly, because nothing is foolproof and, secondly, because prices can go down as well as up. That said, there is a theory that, ultimately, this is the best way to make money with crypto, because it can involve a long-term strategy. You will, however, need to make sure that you do your own research, remember that prices can go down as well as up, and never invest more than you can afford to lose. It also helps to be patient, because you might not see a profit you want to take for quite some time. So just buying and holding can help you turn a crypto profit without having to study the technical intricacies of cryptocurrency. 

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