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    US judge overturns $469 million verdict against Dish Network over streaming patents

    (Reuters) -A Utah federal judge on Tuesday overturned a jury’s verdict that Dish Network (NASDAQ:DISH) LLC must pay $469 million to parental-control technology maker ClearPlay Inc for infringing two patents related to filtering material from streaming video.U.S. District Judge David Nuffer reversed the jury’s finding that Dish’s AutoHop commercial-skipping feature violated ClearPlay’s patent rights less than two weeks after the March 10 verdict, according to the court’s docket.A Dish spokesperson said the company “has stood firm in its belief that it did not infringe ClearPlay’s patents, and is gratified by the Court’s ruling.” Representatives for ClearPlay did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the decision.    Salt Lake City-based ClearPlay’s technology lets users filter out adult content like sex, violence and drug use from DVDs and streaming video.     It sued Dish in 2014, alleging that technology used in Dish’s Hopper set-top boxes to cut commercials from DVR content violates its patents for a “method of filtering multimedia content without altering the underlying video.”    Dish said in a March 3 filing that its technology works differently from the technology in ClearPlay’s patents and that no reasonable jury could find infringement.    Nuffer agreed with Dish and overturned the verdict on Tuesday. More

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    Cryptoverse: Bitcoin passes the bank stress test

    (Reuters) – As crisis stalks the traditional world of stocks and bonds, bitcoin is suddenly looking like a safe haven.The infamously volatile cryptocurrency seems positively hale and hearty, just as a banking meltdown drives markets into the arms of a recession.    Bitcoin has risen 21% this month, while a choppy S&P 500 has lost 1.4% and gold has gained 8%.”If you were going to describe an environment where there were successive bank runs because central banks are trying to fight inflation with fast rate increases, that is pretty close to as spot-on a thesis for owning bitcoin as you’ve ever heard,” said Stéphane Ouellette, CEO at digital asset investment platform FRNT Financial. The cryptocurrency has, for now, severed its ties with stocks and bonds and tagged on to a rally in gold, fulfilling at least one part of creator Satoshi Nakamoto’s dream – that bitcoin can serve as a refuge for suffering investors. Bitcoin’s 30-day correlation with the S&P 500 has slid to negative 0.12 over the past week, where a measure of 1 indicates the two assets are moving in lock step. A selloff in banks has wiped out hundreds of billions of dollars in market value and forced U.S. regulators to launch emergency measures. The past couple of weeks has seen Silicon Valley Bank and crypto lender Silvergate go under, while Credit Suisse has teetered on the brink. Graphic: Bitcoin refuge amid chaos https://www.reuters.com/graphics/FINTECH-CRYPTO/WEEKLY/egvbyjaakpq/chart.png ‘RETURN TO CORE ETHOS’Let’s not carried away, though. This is bitcoin. “The bearish argument would be that these dynamics are temporary, and ultimately this rally is not going to sustain,” said Ouellette.It remains to be seen if bitcoin’s bullishness will endure as attention shifts to the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting this week where the U.S. central bank must walk a fine line as it fights inflation and bank stresses. Furthermore, the cryptocurrency’s allure hasn’t all been about safety. The rapid price rise has forced some short-sellers to cut their bets and buy coin back. Data from Coinglass shows traders liquidated $300 million worth of crypto positions on Monday, with most of that total – $178.5 million – short positions. Nonetheless, bitcoin is resurgent.It now commands nearly 43% of the total crypto market, its highest share since last June, according to CoinMarketCap data, while the total cryptocurrency market’s capitalization has jumped 23% to $1.1 billion since March 10. “We’re seeing a return to bitcoin’s core ethos, that of a financial asset independent from the opacity and meddling of the centralized financial system,” said Henry Elder, head of decentralized finance (DeFi) at digital asset investment manager Wave Digital Assets. The mainstream bank crisis has also fueled some interest in DeFi, with the total value of tokens linked to such platforms rising to $49 billion from $43 billion over the past week, according to DappRadar. BITCOIN IN A BANK CRISIS Not all areas of the digital world have been immune to the banking fallout, though. The no. 2 stablecoin Circle USD or USDC lost its 1:1 peg to the dollar after disclosing its reserves were parked at the shuttered Silicon Valley Bank.As worries spread over USDC’s ability to maintain its peg, its market cap slid to $36.8 billion last Friday from $43.8 billion a week earlier, even as leading stablecoin Tether gained around $4 billion.Market participants said some USDC withdrawals were likely reinvested in bitcoin as well, helping fuel the rally.”It’s too soon to say that bitcoin has proven the narrative that it’s an alternative in a banking crisis,” cautioned Ed Hindi, Chief Investment Officer at Tyr Capital in Geneva. But he added: “The rally we are currently witnessing in bitcoin will be looked back at as the point in time where its main property as a decentralized non-sovereign asset was stress tested.” More

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    Texas lawmaker introduces resolution to protect Bitcoin miners and HODLers

    In a resolution released on March 21, Harris encourages Texas lawmakers to “express support for protecting individuals who code or develop on the Bitcoin network” as well as miners and Bitcoiners operating in the Lone Star State. The state representative added that Texas’ constitutional rights concerning “all unreasonable seizures or searches” should extend to attempts to go over residents’ digital asset holdings.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Arbitrum token finds its way to OTC market before airdrop

    The Arbitrum Foundation announced that ARB — Arbritrum’s new token — would be airdropped to eligible community members on Thursday, March 23. It explained that ARB marks Arbitrum’s official transition into a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), meaning ARB holders can vote on key decisions governing Arbitrum One and Arbitrum Nova — networks that allow users to transact on the Ethereum blockchain with better speeds and lower fees.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Bitcoin holds $28K due to spot buying, but institutional investors are still selling

    However, institutions have become net sellers of Bitcoin in 2023, which raises some red flags. Bitcoin whales, holding between 10 and 10,000 BTC, have not participated in the current rally. It appears that retail investors are mainly driving the uptrend. The divergence between whale and retail investment could cause a short-term pullback in Bitcoin prices.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Republican US senator doubles down on call for tighter Fed scrutiny

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican U.S. Senator Rick Scott doubled down on his call to replace the Federal Reserve’s current inspector general with a new, more independent office, following the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank (NASDAQ:SBNY).In an opinion column posted on the Fox News website, the Florida Republican also pledged to support legislation to claw back bonuses that media reports say were handed out to Silicon Valley Bank employees hours before the federal government seized the operation.”The Federal Reserve, the world’s largest and most powerful central bank, does not have a truly independent IG to investigate it. I’m fighting to fix that and will be introducing a bill soon – that I believe will have bipartisan support,” Scott wrote.The Federal Reserve was not immediately available for comment. The legislation, which an aide said Scott is expected to introduce on Wednesday, would create a new Federal Reserve inspector general who would be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.The online column marked the second time in two days that Scott has vowed to push for an independent Fed IG. He also informed Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell of his plans in a letter on Monday.Republicans and Democrats in Congress have pledged tighter oversight of banking regulators following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, which has been followed by billions of dollars in losses for financial stocks. The Fed’s current inspector general office was created in the 1970s and reports directly to the Fed board, rather than functioning as a completely independent auditor, as is the case at the Pentagon and other big agencies.Scott’s action coincides with a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, a key panel that makes important decisions about interest rates and U.S. money supply.Scott included a message for Powell, saying the Fed chief should do three things at this week’s meeting: support the creation of an independent IG; “tell us who at the Fed is being fired for its lack of bank oversight, and tell us what changes have been made so this never happens again.” Scott, who has been seen as a possible presidential contender, does not sit on any Senate committees that oversee the banking industry or monetary policy. But the former Florida governor has emerged in the Senate as a leading hardline conservative, who former President Donald Trump has repeatedly nominated as a replacement for Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell. Scott also authored a plan during the 2022 campaign that called for ending all federal programs after five years. But he had to revise it last month to exclude the popular Social Security and Medicare programs, after weeks of mounting criticism from Democrats and his fellow Republicans alike.”We need to recognize that there are moments in life when you work with a scalpel and others when you use a hammer. This moment calls for a hammer,” Scott said in the column. More

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    Yellen pushes for first steps in World Bank reform by April

    US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen and allies in Germany are pushing for a “binding schedule for reform” of the World Bank as early as April, as the lender comes under sustained pressure for failing to adequately address climate change.German development minister Svenja Schulze, who also acts as the country’s governor to the World Bank, held talks with Yellen on Monday, where they discussed the “fundamental reform” to ensure the lender “leads the way on climate action, pandemic control and crisis prevention”.Yellen will push for the first instalment of the World Bank’s “evolution plan” by next month, according to one source familiar with the matter. The pressure on the World Bank to tackle “global public goods” follows the abrupt resignation of sitting president David Malpass, and comes as the US and other shareholder nations seek to expand the bank’s remit to include the fight against global warming alongside tackling poverty.“Janet Yellen and I agree that the World Bank spring meetings in April must result in a binding schedule for reforms,” said Schulze on Monday. “The decision about the reform itself should be taken within this year, because we must not lose any time to tackle the global challenges we are facing.”Her comments came as almost 50 climate ministers and envoys from around the world met in Copenhagen this week, where they reiterated the need for a rapid “greening” of the World Bank.

    Denmark’s Prince Frederik, left, greets COP27 president, Egypt’s foreign minister Sameh Shoukry, centre, and COP28 president-designate, UAE’s Sultan Al-Jaber © EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

    Dan Jørgensen, Danish minister for development co-operation and global climate policy, said many ministers at the two-day summit held to discuss the agenda for this year’s UN COP28 climate meeting in Dubai spoke about the need for urgent reform of the World Bank with a focus on global warming.“They feel there is a window of opportunity for reform of multilateral development banks, especially the World Bank.”At the ministerial meeting, representatives also discussed the loss and damage fund agreed at COP27 in Egypt, to provide financial help to poorer nations hit by climate change. Egypt will host the first meeting to discuss the next steps for the loss and damage fund this weekend in Luxor.Speaking in Copenhagen, Simon Stiell, the UN climate change chief, said 2023 would be an important year for operationalising the funding arrangements. He added that multilateral development banks needed to “evolve and respond more effectively to the climate challenge”. Ajay Banga, the former Mastercard chief executive who is being backed by the US in the World Bank leadership race and is so far the sole candidate ahead of the close of nominations on March 29, is expected to begin his new role no later than June.

    The Wall Street leader has said the bank must do “everything it can” to squeeze more cash from its balance sheet while preserving its triple-A credit rating, indicating that he would explore elements of a G20-commissioned report into the “capital adequacy frameworks” of multilateral development lenders such as the World Bank.As the agenda shifts heavily towards climate change issues, a senior World Bank official, Axel van Trotsenburg, said last week that the Bank would use the spring meetings to “take stock of progress” being made “to tackle the many challenges facing global development, including climate change”. This week, the UN Economic Commission for Africa reiterated the need to reform the international financial architecture to help the continent’s nations tackle climate change and poverty. It called for multilateral development banks to provide better lending terms to kick-start “sustainable growth” and said a greater volume of low-cost lending “could be a game-changer for struggling countries”. That could be achieved via MDB reforms as well as “increasing [MDBs’] capital bases”. More