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Printemps and the Adoption of Cryptocurrency Payments

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A picture taken on in Paris on May 28, 2020, shows the Printemps department store on the Boulevard Haussman in Paris, as France eased lockdown measures taken to curb the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronavirus. (Photo by Thomas SAMSON / AFP)

In a groundbreaking move that signals a significant shift in the luxury retail sector, Printemps, the esteemed French department store, has become the first major retailer in Europe to embrace cryptocurrency as a valid form of payment. This pioneering decision not only positions Printemps at the forefront of retail innovation but also reflects the evolving landscape of consumer preferences and the growing integration of digital currencies in mainstream commerce.

This innovative move allows customers to use digital currencies as a form of payment for their luxury purchases. The cryptocurrencies that Printemps accepts include Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and stablecoins such as Euri, which is pegged to the euro, and USDC, which is tied to the US dollar.

The strategic partnership between Printemps and Binance Pay, along with the French crypto payments fintech Lyzi, has facilitated this momentous transition. By leveraging Binance Pay’s global reach and Lyzi’s expertise in connecting brands with cryptocurrency users, Printemps has effectively opened its doors to a new demographic of tech-savvy consumers who prefer the convenience and security of digital transactions.

This collaboration has already garnered industry acclaim, earning Printemps and Lyzi the Bronze Laureate Award in the Innovative Collaboration category at the 11? Nuit du Commerce Connecté organized by Républik Retail. Such recognition underscores the importance of innovation in retail and the potential of cryptocurrency to revolutionize the shopping experience.

The adoption of cryptocurrency payments by Printemps is more than just a nod to modern payment methods; it is a testament to the store’s commitment to customer service excellence and its foresight in anticipating market trends. With over 6.5 million French cryptocurrency users, the initiative opens up a new realm of possibilities for both the retailer and its customers.

Printemps’ integration of cryptocurrency payments is expected to enhance the shopping experience by providing a fast, secure, and straightforward payment process. This move is particularly significant in the context of the European luxury goods industry, where such an adoption may set a precedent for other high-end retailers to follow.

The implications of this development extend beyond the immediate benefits to Printemps and its clientele. It may influence policy decisions within the European Union and financial regulators, potentially fostering a more crypto-friendly business environment across the continent. As the adoption of blockchain technology continues to gain momentum, we may witness a transformative period in payment systems not only in Europe but globally.

The adoption of cryptocurrency payments by Printemps may very well set a precedent for other luxury retailers in Europe. As digital currencies gain mainstream traction, the expectation for more flexible payment solutions will likely increase, potentially influencing policy decisions and fostering a more crypto-friendly business environment across the continent.

Printemps’ bold decision to accept crypto payments reflects a broader trend of digital transformation within the luxury goods industry, where customer experience and satisfaction remain paramount. It’s a clear indication that the luxury retail sector is not just witnessing change; it’s leading it.

Printemps’ decision to accept cryptocurrency payments marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of luxury retail. It reflects a forward-thinking approach to customer service and a keen understanding of the intersection between technology and commerce.

OpenAl Launches ChatGPT Pro Tier With Advanced Reasoning Capabilities

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Artificial Intelligence company OpenAl, has unveiled ChatGPT Pro, a premium subscription tier offering unlimited access to its most advanced artificial intelligence features.

As AI becomes more advanced, OpenAI has taken it significantly to enhance its product with more enhanced capabilities. The ChatGPT Pro tier is priced at $200 (N150,000) per month and targets users who require enhanced Al capabilities. The model introduces significant upgrades designed to perform complex reasoning tasks with human-like precision. OpenAl highlighted that the Pro tier incorporates an expanded version of its cutting-edge reasoning model, referred to as o1.

Announcing the launch of ChatGPTPro, OpenAI wrote on its website,

“Today, we’re adding ChatGPT Pro, a $200 monthly plan that enables scaled access to the best of OpenAl’s models and tools. This plan includes unlimited access to our smartest model, OpenAl o1, as well as to o1-mini, GPT-40, and Advanced Voice. It also includes o1 pro mode, a version of o1 that uses more compute to think harder and provide even better answers to the hardest problems. In the future, we expect to add more powerful, compute intensive productivity features to this plan.”

The ChatGPT Pro provides a way for researchers, engineers, and other individuals who use research-grade intelligence daily to accelerate their productivity and be at the cutting edge of advancements in AI. Furthermore, ChatGPT Pro provides access to a version of OpenAI’s most intelligent model that thinks longer for the most reliable responses. In evaluations from external expert testers, o1 pro mode produces more reliably accurate and comprehensive responses, especially in areas like data science, programming, and case law analysis. Compared to both o1 and o1-preview, o1 pro mode performs better on challenging ML benchmarks across math, science, and coding.

The launch of OpenAI ChatGPT Pro builds on the success of OpenAl’s existing ChatGPT Plus subscription, launched in 2023, which is pegged at $20 (N15,000) per month. The ChatGPT plus enabled users’ General access to ChatGPT even during peak times, faster response times and priority access to new features and improvements.

As part of OpenAI ChatGPT Pro is the OpenAI o1 which is out in preview on ChatGPT. The newly upgraded model now supports image uploads, allowing it to apply reasoning to visuals for more detailed & useful responses. Notably, OpenAI o1 is more concise in its thinking, resulting in faster response times than o1-preview.

Testing shows that o1 outperforms o1-preview, reducing major errors on difficult real-world questions by 34%. The updated OpenAI o1 system card builds on prior safety work, detailing robustness evals, red teaming insights, and safety improvements using Instruction Hierarchy. It maintains a “medium” risk rating based on testing with an expanded suite of evaluations, reflecting it is safe to deploy. OpenAI o1 is fully rolled out to 100% of ChatGPT Plus, Team, and Pro users.

OpenAI’s code-name “Strawberry” is ready to be picked — for $200 a month. The artificial intelligence startup’s “reasoning” model is out of preview mode, with the full version of o1 now part of a top-tier $200 monthly plan called ChatGPT Pro. The subscription, aimed at researchers and engineers, includes an exclusive “o1 pro mode” which “uses more compute to think harder and provide even better answers to the hardest problems,” along with unlimited access to o1, GPT-4o and Advanced Voice. Some ChatGPT Plus users are balking at Pro’s price point, since it’s 10 times higher than Plus.

The release of ChatGPT Pro comes as OpenAl seeks to secure additional funding amid intense competition in the Al industry. Companies like Google and Anthropic are also racing to develop advanced Al systems capable of performing complex reasoning tasks. These enhanced reasoning capabilities aim to improve the performance of Al models, addressing challenges faced by developers in achieving consistent advancements. OpenAl emphasized that its Pro tier offers value for customers and businesses willing to invest in premium Al software to access state-of-the-art technology.

As the demand for sophisticated Al systems grows, OpenAl’s efforts to combine innovation with monetization represent a critical strategy in maintaining its leadership within the evolving artificial intelligence landscape. The company has announced plans to add more capabilities to Pro over time, to unlock more compute-intensive tasks.

UK’s Regulatory Hammer Hits PumpDotFun

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The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has issued a warning against Pump.fun, a Solana-based memecoin launchpad, stating that it is not authorized to operate in the country. “This firm is not authorized by us and is targeting people in the UK,” the FCA said in the warning. “Based upon information we hold; we believe it is carrying on regulated activities which require authorization.”

The FCA highlighted that PumpDotFun may be targeting people in the UK without proper authorization, which puts investors at greater risk. The regulator advised the public to avoid dealing with this firm and to be cautious of potential scams.

The FCA outlined its timeline for shaping the regulations. By the end of 2024, the agency plans to publish discussion papers on market abuse and disclosure standards. Early next year, it will release papers covering stablecoins, trading platforms, staking, crypto lending, and prudential exposure. Final policy statements are expected to pave the way for the regime to go live in 2026.

The situation with PumpDotFun has indeed sparked several contentious issues:

Regulatory Concerns: The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has issued a warning against Pump.fun, stating that it is not authorized to operate in the country. This has led to the platform being blocked in the UK.

Exploitation Incident: There was a significant exploit involving a former employee of Pump.fun, who allegedly used their position to steal $1.9 million from the platform. This individual was arrested in the UK and is currently out on bail.

Community Trust: The combination of regulatory actions and the exploitation incident has severely impacted community trust in PumpDotFun Many users are concerned about the platform’s security and the ethical practices of its management.

Operational Challenges: Following the exploit and regulatory scrutiny, PumpDotFun has faced operational challenges, including pausing its live streaming feature due to a wave of abusive content.

Earlier in May, a former Pump.fun employee claimed he was arrested and subsequently released on bail in the United Kingdom following a $1.9 million exploit on the platform. Pump.fun alleged that Jarett Dunn used a “privileged position” to access a “withdraw authority,” compromising the protocol’s systems.

Dunn confirmed the allegations in a series of X posts, stating that he “spent overnight in custody” and was charged with “theft from employer” for $2 million and conspiracy to steal an additional $80 million. He added that he was “released on bail and mental health sectioned.”

The UK Government intends to clarify the legal status of staking, which allows users to lock up tokens to support blockchain operations and earn rewards. Siddiq indicated that the government supports industry calls for staking to be treated as a technology service rather than a collective investment scheme, which would subject it to stricter financial regulations.

This move is part of the FCA’s broader efforts to regulate the growing cryptocurrency market and protect consumers from unregistered and potentially fraudulent activities. These issues highlight the complexities and risks associated with emerging crypto platforms, especially those that operate without proper regulatory oversight.

TikTok Is In Trouble in America As The Appeal Court Rules Against It

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Where things stand: “A federal appeals court on Friday upheld a law requiring China-based ByteDance to divest ownership of TikTok, citing national security concerns. The ruling, handed down unanimously by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., mandates that TikTok be sold by January 19, 2025, or face an effective ban in the United States. This decision puts the app’s future in jeopardy and leaves its parent company with only two viable options: appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court or seeking intervention from President-elect Donald Trump.”

My April 2024 call remains: “It is now the law of the land: TikTok must either be in the hands of the natives or exit America… I posit that ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, will not sell, but after some legal challenges, will count its losses and exit the United States. Why? China will not allow it to ship the AI to the Americans – and without the AI, the ingredients of the soup which make TikTok amazing will not be complete. The worst-case scenario is to ship the users with the trademark while the AI code remains with the company in China. That will mark the valuation of TikTok down by more than 70%.”

Simply, TikTok should not expect an American court to rule against its Congress when the case is anchored on national security. So, I do not expect any help from the Supreme Court for TikTok if it wants to keep wasting time.  This is not an executive order; this is an American law, and any justice that rules otherwise is lost in the legal ocean.

Then, lessons for all: For companies like Temu, Shein and other Chinese online companies operating in the US, this is the moment of truth! Geopolitics is now the risk vector, well ahead of the typical competition. But we will see how China responds to the clipping of TikTok, and you should expect the typical: nothing will happen because TikTok is not in semiconductors and microelectronics which are core priorities for the communist party.

As spectators in this era, other nations do hope that China and US will both continue to rise in peace.

Comment on Feed

Comment: Bitcoin is decentralized

My Response: How is crypto decentralized? The top 10 BTC miners control more than 90% of the market. The top 10 exchanges control more than 90% of the volume. All those companies need bank accounts and they are under the control of governments. Your decentralization is an illusion as the US can shut down Coinbase tomorrow if it wants and can sanction Binance tomorrow if it desires. You can tell me that crypto is technologically decentralized but that does not mean it is economically not centralized. BTC is fully under the control of governments now. All the shadow exchanges have gone.

Federal Appeals Court Upholds TikTok Ban, Leaving ByteDance with Two Options

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A federal appeals court on Friday upheld a law requiring China-based ByteDance to divest ownership of TikTok, citing national security concerns.

The ruling, handed down unanimously by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., mandates that TikTok be sold by January 19, 2025, or face an effective ban in the United States. This decision puts the app’s future in jeopardy and leaves its parent company with only two viable options: appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court or seeking intervention from President-elect Donald Trump.

The contested law, signed by President Joe Biden in April 2024, requires ByteDance to sell TikTok or risk being barred from app stores and internet hosting platforms. The law was a response to bipartisan concerns over TikTok’s alleged ties to the Chinese government, with lawmakers claiming the app poses a significant national security threat.

Attorney General Merrick Garland praised the court’s ruling, calling it a critical step in protecting U.S. interests.

“Today’s decision is an important step in blocking the Chinese government from weaponizing TikTok to collect sensitive information about millions of Americans, covertly manipulate content, and undermine our national security,” Garland said.

Judge Douglas Ginsburg, writing for the court, described the law as carefully crafted to address national security threats while respecting constitutional boundaries.

“The U.S. government provided persuasive evidence demonstrating that the Act protects national security in a manner consistent with the Constitution,” Ginsburg wrote.

The court found no merit in TikTok’s claims that the law violates the First Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, or protections against unlawful takings and bills of attainder.

TikTok has long been under scrutiny for its data practices and alleged links to Beijing. While the app denies sharing data with the Chinese government, critics argue that its parent company’s location in China makes it subject to the country’s stringent surveillance laws.

Congressional Republicans and Democrats have repeatedly expressed alarm. Rep. Troy Balderson (R-Ohio) earlier described TikTok as a tool for espionage.

“TikTok is a surveillance tool used by the Chinese Communist Party to spy on Americans and harvest highly personal data,” he said.

The court’s ruling further noted that TikTok has never categorically denied accusations of content manipulation at the direction of Chinese authorities.

TikTok’s Fight and Constitutional Concerns

TikTok has vowed to continue its legal battle, describing the ban as an unconstitutional restriction on free speech. The platform, which has 170 million active users in the U.S., asserts that banning it would silence millions of voices.

“The Supreme Court has an established historical record of protecting Americans’ right to free speech, and we expect they will do just that on this important constitutional issue,” TikTok spokesperson Michael Hughes said.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) echoed TikTok’s concerns. Patrick Toomey, deputy director of the ACLU’s National Security Project, criticized the ruling.

“Banning TikTok blatantly violates the First Amendment rights of millions of Americans who use this app to express themselves and communicate globally. The government cannot shut down an entire communications platform without concrete evidence of imminent harm,” he said.

TikTok has announced plans to file an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court. However, there is no guarantee the court will agree to hear the case.

Turning To Trump

As ByteDance faces a ticking clock, attention has turned to President-elect Donald Trump. While his stance on TikTok has fluctuated, Trump has options to delay the ban or offer a solution to ease national security concerns.

During his first administration, Trump pushed for TikTok’s divestment but softened his rhetoric after meeting billionaire Jeff Yass, a Republican donor and investor in ByteDance. Yass’s trading firm, Susquehanna International Group, holds a 15% stake in ByteDance, creating speculation about Trump’s intentions.

Trump could grant ByteDance a 90-day extension, provided the company demonstrates significant progress toward divestiture. Alternatively, he could explore other solutions to address security concerns, such as adopting stronger data protection measures under ByteDance’s proposed Project Texas initiative.

However, Trump’s position remains uncertain. While campaigning, he criticized the Biden administration’s push to ban TikTok, urging voters to support his presidency to save the app.

“If you like TikTok, go out and vote for Trump,” he said in a September post on Truth Social.

Racing Against Time

If ByteDance fails to sell TikTok by January 19, 2025, app store companies such as Apple and Google will be required to remove TikTok from their platforms. Additionally, internet hosting providers will be barred from supporting the app, effectively rendering it unusable in the United States.

The ruling emphasizes that TikTok users will bear the consequences of Beijing’s hybrid commercial threats to U.S. national security.

“This decision has significant implications for TikTok and its users,” the court wrote. “But this conclusion is supported by ample evidence that the Act is the least restrictive means of advancing the Government’s compelling national security interests.”

The outcome of this case could redefine how the U.S. government regulates foreign-owned platforms, particularly those deemed security risks. If the Supreme Court declines to hear the case or rules against TikTok, the app’s departure from the U.S. market will leave a significant void for its users and influencers.