As Africa’s mobility sector expands, one challenge continues to slow growth across ride-hailing platforms: driver verification. Every new driver must undergo identity checks, document validation, and compliance screening before being approved to operate. Traditionally, much of this process has relied on manual review teams, creating delays that can slow onboarding and limit platform growth.

To address this challenge, Nigerian software engineerv built MyCoPilot’s AI Verification Agent, a multi-modal artificial intelligence system designed to automate large portions of the driver verification process. The system combines computer vision, document analysis, and intelligent workflow automation to review submitted documents, extract relevant information, identify inconsistencies, and flag applications requiring human review. By reducing manual intervention, the platform significantly accelerates onboarding while maintaining verification standards critical to rider safety and platform trust.

The project reflects Ezechukwu’s broader background in enterprise software and fintech infrastructure. Prior to MyCoPilot, he worked on payment systems, banking integrations, and workflow automation platforms serving large-scale financial institutions, experience that proved valuable in designing systems where reliability, auditability, and trust are essential.

Beyond its technical achievement, the AI Verification Agent highlights a growing trend within Africa’s technology ecosystem: engineers developing practical AI solutions tailored to local operational challenges rather than simply adapting global products. As mobility platforms across the continent seek to balance rapid growth with user safety, innovations like MyCoPilot’s verification system demonstrate how artificial intelligence can move beyond experimentation and deliver measurable business impact.

For Ezechukwu, the goal is to use technology to remove friction from processes that traditionally require significant manual effort. In doing so, he is helping shape a future where trusted digital verification can occur in minutes rather than days, a small but important step toward more efficient mobility infrastructure across Africa.

Chinwe Michael is a financial inclusion advocate and economy journalist who uses compelling storytelling to drive awareness. With a background in Banking and Finance and experience across accounting, media, and education, she applies sharp analysis and attention to detail to every piece. She simplifies complex financial and economy concepts into engaging content for Africa and global audience. Chinwe also doubles as a speaker with global recognition for her expertise.

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