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    California cannot block rule it says invites predatory lending

    (Reuters) – A U.S. judge on Tuesday upheld a rule that allows national banks to sell loans without adhering to state interest rate caps, rejecting three states’ claims that the rule invites abuse.Judge Jeffrey White in San Francisco found that the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) did not act arbitrarily in approving the rule, which states that when a bank lends at a valid interest rate, the rate remains valid when the loan is sold to a nonbank.Under federal law, national banks can charge the interest rates allowed by their home states, regardless of where the borrower lives.California, New York and Illinois sued the OCC in 2020, arguing the rule allowed banks to improperly extend that policy to non-bank financial companies in an end-run around state regulation of consumer finance.”We are disappointed with today’s ruling, but remain committed to doing all we can to protect vulnerable California borrowers from predatory lenders and others who would seek to take advantage of them,” a spokesperson for the California attorney general’s office said in an email.Banking trade groups had argued that undoing the rule would threaten secondary debt markets that allow billions of dollars to flow from lenders to U.S. borrowers every year.The judge rejected the states’ claims that the regulator had failed to consider whether the rule would lead to “rent-a-bank” schemes, in which third-party lenders seek to evade interest rate caps by having national banks originate loans they then purchase. More

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    RIAA moves to take down NFT auction site HitPiece

    RIAA sent a letter to the attorneys representing the notorious (and now offline) NFT site HitPiece.com and its founders, demanding that they halt all infringement of music Intellectual Property (IP) rights. Part of the letter demanded that HitPiece provides a complete listing of site activities and revenues to date, and also account for all NFTs and artwork auctioned off.RIAA’s Chairman and CEO Mitch Glazier explained the reason for the association’s swift decision:After its launch in December 2021, HitPiece positioned its auctions as a means for fans to own NFTs of their favorite songs, packaged with the possibility of real-world experiences with artists. These NFTs featured no audio content but used visual materials from artists’ work, allegedly without their permission.Jack Antonoff, Sadie Dupuis (of Speedy Ortiz), Clipping, Eve6, and Muna were among several artists who openly criticised the platform for selling NFTs without their permission.The company eventually apologized to its customers and shut down its marketplace, stating in its apology that it would appropriately reimburse artists in NFT sales.Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    PayPal establishes advisory council for crypto and blockchain

    In a Tuesday announcement, PayPal said the addition of six members to its Blockchain, Crypto and Digital Currencies advisory council would help to support its current and future products as well as its goal of creating a more inclusive digital financial ecosystem. Fortress Investment Group co-CEO Peter Briger, Georgetown University Law Center professor Chris Brummer, Weizmann Institute of Science professor Shafi Goldwasser, former Commodity Futures Trading Commission chair Timothy Massad, MIT Sloan School of Management finance professor Antoinette Schoar, and MIT Digital Currency Initiative director Neha Narula will be joining the PayPal initiative.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: SoftBank to seek US listing for Arm after Nvidia sale collapses

    Japan’s SoftBank plans to list Arm Holdings in New York after a $66bn sale to Nvidia fell through. The collapse of the deal has sparked a political and corporate battle over the future home of one of Britain’s most successful tech companies. “I believe that Arm is about to enter its golden age and so deep down I would rather avoid this sale as much as possible,” SoftBank chief executive Masayoshi Son said yesterday, despite the fact that he and his leadership team had spent 18 months working to offload the company to the US chip heavyweight.“We think that the Nasdaq stock exchange in the United States, which is at the centre of global high-tech, would be most suitable [for a listing],” he added. Rene Haas, the incoming chief executive of Arm, told the Financial Times that the timing of an IPO was “just right”. “We’re entering a really unique supercycle of growth for semiconductors and computers,” he said. The decision to target the US has already sparked a furore in the UK at a time when the country is experiencing deep insecurities about its ability to retain homegrown technology champions.Thanks for reading today’s FirstFT Asia. Do you have feedback on today’s newsletter? email me at [email protected] and share your thoughts, — EmilyFive more stories in the news1. US arrests two and seizes $3.6bn in crypto from Bitfinex hack The US Department of Justice has arrested New York-based llya Lichtenstein, 34, and his wife, Heather Morgan, 31, and confiscated more than $3.6bn worth of cryptocurrency it said was stolen during the high-profile 2016 hack of the Bitfinex exchange. The move marks the DoJ’s largest financial seizure.2. Macron says Putin promises not to ‘escalate’ Ukraine crisis French president Emmanuel Macron said he had obtained assurances from his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, that there would be no “deterioration or escalation” of the crisis over Ukraine. Macron was speaking on the way to Kyiv, where he met Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky after more than five hours of talks with Putin in Moscow.More on the Russia-Ukraine conflict: President Joe Biden said that if Russia invaded Ukraine, the US would “bring an end” to Nord Stream 2, the pipeline linking Russia with Germany.3. Peloton chief to step down after activist campaign Peloton’s co-founder John Foley is ceding the top job at the fitness bike maker in a shake-up that will cost 2,800 jobs, after a collapse in its market value drew pressure from activist investors and potential bidders. Barry McCarthy, the former chief financial officer of Spotify and Netflix, will replace Foley as chief executive.4. Eileen Gu’s gold at Beijing Olympics ignites celebrations in host country The American-Chinese freestyle skier has won her first gold medal, prompting celebrations across China and pushing the hosts to the top of the medals table. Gu, 18, was born in the US to a Chinese mother and an American father but chose in 2019 to represent China at the Olympics.

    Eileen Gu’s gold medal in the first big air freestyle skiing event at an Olympic Games took China’s total to five © Peter Kneffel/dpa

    5. Ex-BofA lawyer jailed in Hong Kong over police assault allegations Samuel Bickett, a former Bank of America lawyer in Hong Kong, has been sent back to prison for assaulting a plainclothes police officer during pro-democracy protests two years ago, in a case that analysts said highlighted the legal risks for foreigners working in the city. Coronavirus digestIn Hong Kong, some patients at one of the city’s quarantine centres are becoming so desperate to get out that they are gargling hand sanitiser in a vain bid to neutralise test results as the government tries to maintain its zero-Covid policy.The US has enjoyed an entrepreneurial renaissance during the pandemic, with the largest increases in new businesses coming in black communities.A quarter of UK employers said long Covid was now a leading cause of long-term sickness absence among staff.The Omicron variant has exposed the weakness of current vaccines and revived interest in an all-protective “super jab”. How far is it from becoming a reality?

    The day aheadAntony Blinken visits Australia The US secretary of state will meet members of the Quad alliance, which includes Australia, India, Japan and the US to reaffirm America’s commitment to Asia. (Reuters) Earnings Japanese carmakers Toyota, Honda and Mazda report earnings today. Other companies set to release results include AstraZeneca, Coca-Cola Company, Credit Suisse, PepsiCo, Twitter and Unilever.What else we’re reading Inside Axel Springer’s #MeToo moment In the spring of 2021, senior employees at German publisher Axel Springer thought they had defused misconduct claims against the editor of Bild, Europe’s top-selling daily newspaper. Instead, the real trouble was yet to come. A three-month investigation by the Financial Times takes a closer look into this episode.Beijing mixes geopolitics and the Olympics The scar on Qi Fabao’s forehead was barely discernible when he started his run in the torch relay. But China’s choice to have the People’s Liberation Army officer who was wounded in a deadly border clash with India kick off the Games ripped a gash in the atmosphere of peace and friendship, writes Kathrin Hille.Do you think China went too far in selecting Colonel Qi for the Olympic torch relay? Tell us below in our latest poll.

    Tata begins overhaul of Air India The Indian conglomerate is determined to defy critics of its deal to take over the struggling airline after prime minister Narendra Modi handed over the state carrier last month. “It’s been years since we have seen timely payment,” said Ritesh, a second-generation Air India pilot who asked to use a pseudonym. “We are hoping that when the Tatas take over, things will be streamlined.”Instagram doesn’t know what to do about your 13-year-old Under-13s are not allowed on Instagram, which is owned by Meta, partly to comply with US privacy laws. Nevertheless, a survey of more than 2,000 minors published last year by the children’s charity Thorn found that 65 per cent of nine- to 12-year-olds have used Instagram at least once, and 40 per cent use it at least once a day.The BBC at 100 — the past and future of a British institution Part broadcasting history, part social history, David Hendy’s new work — The BBC: A People’s History — looks back at the corporation’s idealistic beginnings and traces its development to the crossroads of today.GamingWordle may not appear to have much in common with Grand Theft Auto, but it draws from and subverts several key principles of game design. What can developers learn from its titanic success?

    ‘Wordle’ has become a shared digital experience for millions © Ted Hsu/Alamy  More

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    Aave officially introduces NFT-based social media platform ‘Lens’

    In terms of user experience, Lens will be very similar to traditional social media. However, extensive use of NFTs will be employed to manage and represent features like user profiles, publications, and relationships with followers. This will allow users to monetize and freely manage pieces of data.Users are allowed to create various “publications” such as posts and comments. They can also create mirror content, similar to the retweet feature on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR).Lens will support IPFS hosting for the off-chain storage of large files such as videos, music, and images, even though all publication data will be stored on-chain.The team behind the decentralized finance lending protocol (Aave) has dedicated significant resources to the social media project since the beginning of 2021. Its original goal was to become a kind of Twitter-on-Ethereum. However, the project “Lens” has grown in scope, with a new aim of supporting a range of social media platforms on a shared protocol layer.Kulechov has previously confirmed that the “Aave fam launched the Lens Protocol” and has changed his icon to the Lens logo. He was also one of the first to hint at the idea of the launch since January 2021. More

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    DoJ seizes $3.6B in crypto and arrests two in connection with 2016 Bitfinex hack

    In a Tuesday announcement, the U.S. Department of Justice said it had ordered the arrest of Ilya Lichtenstein and his wife Heather Morgan for allegedly conspiring to launder crypto connected to the 2016 Bitfinex hack. The 119,756 Bitcoin (BTC) — worth $72 million at the time hackers breached security at the exchange in August 2016 — is now valued at more than $5.1 billion. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Zuckerberg Warns Europe About New Data Regulations

    Jokes aside, the topic is quite controversial, because the European Union does care about the data of its citizens, while Meta Inc. indeed struggles with the new regulations. In short, new European data regulations stated that companies cannot store and process Europeans’ data on US-based servers. Meta claimed in an annual report: “If a new transatlantic data transfer framework is not adopted and we are unable to continue to rely on SCCs (standard contractual clauses) or rely upon other alternative means of data transfers from Europe to the United States, we will likely be unable to offer a number of our most significant products and services, including Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and Instagram, in Europe.”
    While most people stay skeptical about this course of events, the fans of decentralization like the idea of shifting users to a decentralized social space, which is web3. And such metaverses as Decentraland and The Sandbox provide the feature. Moreover, recent studies show that 25% of the population will be spending an hour per day in the metaverse by 2026. On the other hand, crypto regulations are far from ideal. It will take some time to fill all the gaps for people to stay safe in the new evolutionary step of the internet. EMAIL NEWSLETTERJoin to get the flipside of cryptoUpgrade your inbox and get our DailyCoin editors’ picks 1x a week delivered straight to your inbox.[contact-form-7]
    You can always unsubscribe with just 1 click.Continue reading on DailyCoin More