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Rome Court Rules Netflix’s Italy Price Hikes Unlawful, Drawing Comparison with Nigeria’s MultiChoice

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A Rome civil court has handed Italian consumers a potentially far-reaching victory against Netflix, ruling that the streaming giant’s unilateral subscription price increases imposed between 2017 and January 2024 were unlawful and could now trigger refunds running into hundreds of euros per user.

The judgment, delivered by the sixteenth civil section of the Court of Rome in sentence 4993/2026 and published on April 1, has quickly become one of the most consequential consumer-rights rulings in Europe’s digital subscription market, with implications that may extend well beyond Italy and well beyond streaming.

At its core, the ruling challenges the legality of unilateral pricing powers embedded in standard consumer contracts, a question that has increasingly surfaced across multiple jurisdictions, including Nigeria, where MultiChoice’s repeated DStv and GOtv subscription hikes have triggered regulatory action and legal challenges.

The Italian court found that the clauses used by Netflix Italia from 2017 until January 2024, which allowed the company to revise prices and other contractual conditions without clearly stating the circumstances that could justify such increases, were vexatious and therefore null and void.

That finding goes to the heart of the civil law doctrine of ius variandi — the right of one contracting party to unilaterally alter terms.

The judges held that it is not enough for a company to merely notify customers 30 days in advance and offer them the option to cancel. Instead, consumers must be informed from the outset of the specific grounds that may justify future price increases, whether linked to regulatory obligations, service improvements, technology costs, or security requirements.

Because that framework was missing in Netflix’s earlier contracts, the court ruled that price increases implemented in 2017, 2019, 2021, and November 2024 on legacy contracts are unlawful and therefore subject to reimbursement.

According to Movimento Consumatori, which brought the action, a Premium subscriber who has continuously paid Netflix since 2017 may now be entitled to a refund of about €500, while a Standard plan subscriber may recover roughly €250.

For the Premium tier, the cumulative unlawful increases now total €8 per month, while Standard users have borne increases of €4 per month over the period. With Netflix’s subscriber base in Italy estimated to have expanded from about 1.9 million in 2019 to 5.4 million by late 2025, the aggregate exposure could run into hundreds of millions of euros if the ruling survives appeal.

Netflix has already indicated it will challenge the judgment, and an appeal with a request for suspension is widely expected. Yet the significance of the ruling lies not only in the immediate refund exposure but in the legal principle it establishes.

The court drew a clear distinction between Netflix’s earlier terms and the revised wording introduced in April 2025, which it found compliant because the new clauses now expressly anchor future changes to identifiable causes such as service modifications, regulatory compliance, technological upgrades, and security requirements.

That distinction is likely to be closely watched by subscription-based businesses across Europe, from telecoms and pay-TV providers to software-as-a-service firms. More importantly, the ruling mirrors a debate already unfolding in Nigeria.

In recent years, Nigerian consumers, regulators, and advocacy groups have repeatedly challenged MultiChoice Nigeria over successive DStv and GOtv price hikes, arguing that the pay-TV giant’s dominant market position and recurrent increases amount to unfair treatment of subscribers.

The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) in 2025 summoned MultiChoice over yet another price increase and later filed legal action after the company proceeded with the hike despite a directive to maintain existing prices pending review. That followed an earlier landmark case in 2024 when Nigeria’s Competition and Consumer Protection Tribunal fined MultiChoice and ordered a month of free service for subscribers after the company implemented a rate increase in defiance of a court order.

The Nigerian disputes have, however, also sparked criticism from market liberals and corporate lawyers, many of whom argue that direct intervention in pricing decisions risks being seen as anti-open market and inconsistent with the principles of a competitive economy.

Their argument is that in an open market, consumers should be free to switch providers rather than rely on regulators or courts to police pricing. That criticism has been particularly loud in the DStv case, where some commentators insist that judicial or regulatory interference in subscription pricing borders on price control.

Yet the Italian Netflix case introduces a more nuanced legal standard. The issue is not whether a company can raise prices in a market economy. Rather, it is whether it can do so under a contract that did not transparently define the legal basis for such increases at the time the consumer signed up.

But unlike the Nigerian MultiChoice dispute, which has often been framed through the lens of market dominance, regulatory defiance, and consumer hardship, the Rome ruling focuses squarely on contractual transparency and consumer consent.

That legal logic could become a persuasive reference point in future subscription-pricing disputes elsewhere, including Nigeria, where consumer advocates have long argued that repeated DStv hikes are imposed with little meaningful recourse for subscribers.

In that sense, the outcome of the Netflix appeal is expected to set an important precedent. If upheld, it may strengthen the hand of consumer-rights groups seeking refunds or injunctive relief against unilateral price hikes not only in Europe but in other jurisdictions confronting similar disputes in the digital services and pay-TV sectors.

The court’s order that Netflix notify current and former customers, publish the ruling for six months on its website and in major newspapers, and face a €700 daily penalty for delay after 90 days, further raises the compliance stakes.

Circle’s cirBTC Accelerates Innovating Exploration of Bitcoin Super Powers

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Circle, the company behind USDC announced cirBTC, its own wrapped Bitcoin token. cirBTC is a 1:1 backed wrapped Bitcoin token. For every cirBTC issued, Circle holds an equivalent amount of native Bitcoin in reserves. The key differentiator is real-time, onchain-verifiable reserves.

Users and institutions can independently verify the backing directly on the blockchain, without relying on third-party attestations or opaque custodians. This setup aims to address trust issues in the existing ~$8B+ wrapped BTC market by emphasizing transparency, security, and neutrality for institutional users.

Fully collateralized 1:1 by native BTC, with reserves verifiable onchain in real time. Primarily institutions, OTC desks, market makers, and DeFi protocols seeking reliable Bitcoin exposure. Designed to bring Bitcoin liquidity into DeFi; lending, borrowing, liquidity pools and TradFi, while integrating seamlessly with Circle’s existing infrastructure like USDC and its Arc Layer-1 blockchain.

Initial launch: Expected first on Ethereum and Circle’s Arc blockchain, with multichain support planned later. It’s coming soon, subject to regulatory approvals. Circle positions cirBTC as an extension of its USDC playbook: consistent issuance, auditable reserves, and high liquidity — but applied to Bitcoin to unlock more onchain utility for the asset often described as tapping into sidelined BTC holdings worth trillions.

This is Circle’s first major move beyond stablecoins into tokenized Bitcoin infrastructure. It directly competes with established players like: BitGo’s WBTC. Analysts see it as a push for greater institutional adoption and potential yield opportunities for Bitcoin in DeFi.

Unlocking sidelined BTC liquidity: Analysts highlight ~$1.7 trillion in Bitcoin currently sitting on the sidelines of DeFi due to trust issues with existing wrappers. cirBTC aims to change this by enabling institutions to deploy BTC into lending, borrowing, liquidity pools, derivatives, and yield strategies without selling their holdings.

This could increase overall onchain Bitcoin activity, especially on Ethereum and Circle’s Arc Layer-1, with potential expansion to other chains later. It positions BTC as more productive in smart contract environments, potentially boosting DeFi TVL (total value locked) through new BTC-collateralized positions.

The existing wrapped Bitcoin sector is worth roughly $8 billion+ in total supply. BitGo’s WBTC leads with ~$8 billion market cap though its supply has declined ~17% since competitors emerged. Coinbase’s cbBTC has grown rapidly to ~$5.9–6 billion, capturing significant share through integrated custody and exchange rails.

cirBTC enters as a direct challenger, emphasizing neutrality, transparency, and institutional-grade security; real-time onchain verification vs. traditional attestations or custodian reliance. Short-term: Likely intensifies competition, pressuring incumbents on trust and fees. It could spark a zero-sum reallocation of liquidity rather than purely net-new growth initially.

More options may improve standards across the sector, benefiting users. Targeted at OTC desks, market makers, lending protocols, and institutions wary of custody risks. Integrates natively with Circle’s ecosystem, creating a full-stack solution for institutions already using USDC. Could accelerate institutional flows into DeFi by offering a trusted onramp for BTC exposure, especially amid rising demand for yield on Bitcoin holdings.

Strengthens the narrative of tokenized real-world assets and cross-chain utility, potentially drawing more TradFi capital onchain. Moves Circle from primarily USDC-focused revenue into tokenized Bitcoin infrastructure, aligning with its push toward broader internet financial system infrastructure. The timing coincides with Circle’s upcoming August revenue-sharing deal renewal with Coinbase.

Success with cirBTC could strengthen Circle’s negotiating position for better terms on USDC-related revenue which has been substantial. Circle’s stock (CRCL) dipped modestly ~0.53% on announcement day amid heavy volume, reflecting investor caution over execution risks, competition, and regulatory hurdles in a crowded space. Longer-term, diversification could support growth if cirBTC gains traction.

cbBTC and WBTC have deep liquidity and integrations; cirBTC must overcome this moat through superior transparency and Circle’s brand. Regulatory and operational hurdles: Launch is coming soon and subject to approvals. Onchain verification is a strong selling point, but real-world adoption depends on DeFi protocol integrations and proven reserve resilience.

Early flows may shift from existing wrappers rather than create massive new volume immediately. Increased competition could lower costs and fees for users but raise execution pressure on all players. Initial liquidity, trading volume, and supply growth of cirBTC once live. Integrations with major DeFi protocols (lending/borrowing platforms especially).

Any shifts in WBTC/cbBTC supply or market share. Circle’s execution on multichain rollout and verifiable reserve tools. cirBTC is a calculated expansion that could meaningfully increase Bitcoin’s onchain utility and intensify the battle for institutional wrapped BTC dominance — but success hinges on trust, integrations, and overcoming entrenched competitors.

Private Sector Credit Edges Up to N75.62tn as Government Borrowing Tightens Grip on Bank Lending

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Credit to Nigeria’s private sector posted a modest increase in February 2026, offering a tentative sign of recovery in lending activity, but the broader trend still points to a banking system under strain from high interest rates, tight liquidity conditions, and rising government demand for domestic funds.

Latest monetary and credit statistics from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) show that credit to the private sector rose slightly to N75.62 trillion in February, from N75.24 trillion in January, an increase of N380 billion month-on-month.

The uptick is modest, but it comes after a weak start to the year and may suggest that the CBN’s recent monetary easing is beginning to filter gradually into the credit market.

Still, the bigger picture remains far less encouraging. On a year-on-year basis, private sector credit remains below the N76.26 trillion recorded in February 2025, indicating that businesses and households are still borrowing less than they were a year earlier.

The data also underscores how far lending has retreated from its recent peak. Private sector credit had climbed to N78.07 trillion in April 2025 before sliding steadily through the second half of the year, eventually touching a low of N72.53 trillion in September 2025.

That pattern reflects the lagged impact of aggressive monetary tightening and a banking sector that has remained highly selective in extending fresh loans. The February rise, therefore, should be read less as a full recovery and more as an early stabilization signal. What stands out more sharply in the latest figures is the divergence between lending to the private sector and lending to government.

Net domestic credit expanded to N111.40 trillion, up from N109.43 trillion in January, largely driven by a significant jump in public sector borrowing. Credit to the government climbed to N35.77 trillion, from N34.19 trillion in the previous month. This sharp increase reinforces a concern that has increasingly dominated economic analysis in recent months: the crowding-out effect.

As government borrowing intensifies, particularly through the domestic banking system, a larger share of available liquidity is absorbed by sovereign financing needs, leaving less room for productive private sector lending. Several analysts have already warned that this trend is constraining the real economy, particularly manufacturers, SMEs, and consumer-facing businesses that depend heavily on bank financing.

In effect, banks may be finding it more attractive and less risky to lend to the government than to businesses operating in an uncertain macroeconomic environment.

That preference is understandable from a balance-sheet perspective. Government securities and public sector exposures generally carry lower default risk and stronger regulatory treatment than private loans, especially in a high-rate environment where businesses face pressure from inflation, exchange-rate swings, and weak consumer demand.

The monetary backdrop remains a critical part of the story. In February 2026, the CBN cut the Monetary Policy Rate by 50 basis points to 26.5 per cent, marking a cautious shift toward easing after months of tight policy. The apex bank, however, retained the Cash Reserve Ratio at 45 per cent for commercial banks and kept the liquidity ratio at 30 per cent, meaning overall system liquidity remains relatively tight.

This mixed policy stance helps explain why credit recovery has been slow. While the rate cut should theoretically reduce borrowing costs, the still-elevated CRR continues to sterilize a substantial portion of bank deposits, limiting the amount of funds available for lending.

In practical terms, banks are still operating in a restrictive liquidity environment even as benchmark rates begin to ease. That transmission problem has been a recurring weakness in Nigeria’s monetary framework.

The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) and other market analysts have repeatedly warned that monetary easing alone may not translate quickly into stronger lending without deeper structural reforms in credit allocation and risk pricing. The challenge is particularly acute for small and medium-sized enterprises, which often face the highest borrowing costs and toughest collateral requirements.

Another important context is the money supply.

Nigeria’s broad money supply (M3) declined marginally to N123.15 trillion in February, from N123.36 trillion in January, suggesting that liquidity expansion in the wider economy remains subdued. A slower growth in money supply, combined with high reserve requirements and elevated lending rates, tends to suppress credit growth even when policy rates are cut.

That said, there are tentative reasons for cautious optimism. Disinflation has continued for several months, external reserves have improved, and the banking recapitalization exercise, which saw 33 banks meet revised capital thresholds, could strengthen the sector’s capacity to lend over the medium term.

If macroeconomic stability continues to improve, especially on inflation and foreign exchange, banks may gradually become more willing to extend credit to productive sectors. For now, however, the February figures tell a more nuanced story: while lending is no longer deteriorating as sharply as before, the recovery remains fragile and uneven.

Coinbase Contributes its x402 Protocol to Newly Launched x402 Foundation under Linux Foundation

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Coinbase has contributed its x402 protocol to the newly launched x402 Foundation under the Linux Foundation, turning it into a vendor-neutral open standard with broad industry backing.

x402 revives the long-dormant HTTP 402 Payment Required status code (part of the original HTTP spec but rarely used) to embed payments directly into standard web/HTTP interactions. Instead of redirects, forms, or separate checkout flows, a server can respond to a request from a browser, API client, or AI agentwith a 402 status plus payment details. The client then settles instantly typically via stablecoins like USDC on low-fee networks such as Base and retries the request with proof of payment. If valid, the server delivers the resource.

This makes payments feel as native to the internet as loading a page or calling an API—no accounts, sessions, or complex auth needed for many use cases. Designed for AI agents that need to autonomously pay for APIs, data, compute, content, or services in real time; an agent upgrading its model mid-task via micropayment, or paying per query.

Micropayments done right: Low-cost, near-instant settlement (sub-second to a couple seconds, fees ~$0.0001 on suitable L2s) makes charging fractions of a cent viable—something credit cards and traditional rails struggle with due to fixed fees. HTTP-native: Works within existing web infrastructure; developers can add it with minimal code changes.

Open and chain-agnostic in principle: Started focused on stablecoins and crypto but aims to support broader value transfer; tokens, potentially fiat rails later. It’s not a new coin or closed platform. No geographic or formatting barriers; value moves like data.

The protocol was initially launched by Coinbase in May 2025, inspired by earlier micropayment ideas but made practical by cheap L2 transactions. Coinbase has handed governance of the protocol to the new x402 Foundation under the neutral, non-profit Linux Foundation. This shifts it from Coinbase-led to community-driven and vendor-neutral, which should accelerate adoption across the industry.

The move mirrors how other core internet standards are stewarded. Coinbase and partners like Base remain involved as participants. x402.org for the standard, with GitHub repo and Coinbase developer docs for implementation details. The web was built without a native, frictionless way to exchange value—leading to ad-driven models, subscriptions, or clunky gateways.

x402 aims to fix that original sin by making payments a protocol-level primitive. With the explosion of AI agents and autonomous systems, there’s growing demand for machines to pay machines seamlessly. It could enable new business models like true micropayments for content, metered AI services, or decentralized economies where agents negotiate and settle value on the fly.

Backers see it as building the missing internet-native payment layer—global, programmable, and always-on. Challenges remain: widespread adoption depends on wallet and integration support, security for automated payments, developer tooling, and whether it gains network effects over proprietary alternatives.

But moving it to the Linux Foundation with this coalition is a strong signal of intent to make it a shared standard rather than a Coinbase-specific product. The timing aligns with rising interest in agentic AI and stablecoin usage for real-world transactions. This is one to watch for how the web evolves toward native value exchange.

X Rolling Out New Anti-Scam Measure Which Locks Account for First Time Mentioning Crypto

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X, formerly Twitter, is rolling out a new anti-scam measure that will automatically lock accounts the first time they mention cryptocurrency.

According to Nikita Bier, X’s Head of Product, the platform will auto-lock any account that posts about crypto for the first time in its history. The account will then require additional identity verification or steps before it can post further. This acts as a scam kill switch or kill switch to curb the common tactic where hackers or scammers hijack dormant or low-activity accounts and suddenly use them to promote tokens, airdrops, phishing links, or fake giveaways.

A surge in scams often involves compromised accounts, sometimes via fake copyright and phishing emails that pivot abruptly to crypto spam. Long-time users who suddenly shill tokens are a red flag. The policy aims to stop most of this at the source by forcing verification on first-time crypto posters.

Not a ban on crypto: Existing crypto users; those who’ve already posted about it won’t be affected in the same way. It’s focused on sudden behavior changes, especially from accounts with larger followings that could spread scams widely. This follows other recent X efforts against spam, bots, and paid promotion in crypto spaces.

Could significantly reduce scam volume, making the platform cleaner and safer for genuine discussions. Many in the crypto community have welcomed it as a way to kill off low-effort phishing and hacked-account spam. It might inconvenience legitimate new users or projects entering crypto conversations for the first time, potentially slowing organic growth or discovery.

Some worry it could feel overly broad or like indirect censorship, pushing more activity to Telegram or other platforms. Others note it may not catch every scam but could deter 99% of the incentive for quick-hit attacks. The feature is described as in the process of implementing or soon to roll out, so exact timing and fine details like what counts as a crypto mention or how verification works may evolve.

Crypto scams exploit the decentralized, irreversible nature of cryptocurrency transactions, making recovery extremely difficult once funds are sent. Scammers primarily target greed, fear, trust, and technical unfamiliarity. In 2025, losses from crypto scams reached an estimated $17 billion, with impersonation tactics and AI-enhanced methods surging dramatically.

Scammers send emails, DMs, texts, or social media messages impersonating legitimate platforms. The message often creates urgency: “Your account is compromised—click here to secure it” or “Claim your rewards/airdrop. Victims are directed to fake websites that look identical to real ones using similar domains or typosquatting.

Once there, users enter seed phrases, private keys, passwords, or connect their wallet and approve malicious smart contracts that drain funds. Variants include ice phishing (tricking users into signing transactions that grant unlimited approvals) or QR code scams at events/ATMs.

Address poisoning: Scammers send tiny dust transactions or fake NFTs to your wallet history, hoping you’ll copy-paste a poisoned address (visually similar) in a future transfer. Any unsolicited request for your seed phrase or to “connect wallet and approve” for rewards.

Scammers compromise dormant or low-activity accounts—often via phishing emails pretending to be copyright violations or security alerts. They pivot the account to suddenly promote a new token, airdrop, or double your crypto giveaway. Posts urge followers to send crypto to a scammer-controlled wallet for matching or early access.

High-follower accounts amplify reach; victims see it from a trusted source and FOMO (fear of missing out) kicks in. After posting, scammers may lock out the owner. This is why X is implementing auto-locks for first-time crypto mentions: it forces verification on sudden behavior changes, targeting this exact vector.

A long-inactive or non-crypto account suddenly shilling tokens, or any this account was hacked admission followed by promo. One of the most devastating and fastest-growing tactics, often yielding billions in losses. Scammers contact victims via dating apps, wrong number texts, or social media, building a romantic or friendly relationship over weeks/months.

They share fabricated success stories about crypto trading and introduce a surefire investment opportunity on a fake platform. Victims deposit crypto or fiat converted to crypto and see fake profits initially to build confidence.

When victims try to withdraw, they’re hit with fees or excuses—until the scammer disappears with everything. AI deepfakes make video calls more convincing. Strangers pushing unsolicited investment advice, especially crypto, after building emotional rapport. Legitimate opportunities don’t start this way.

Scammers advertise free tokens or promise to double crypto sent to a wallet. Victims connect wallets to claim, triggering drainer contracts. Or they send gas fees or small amounts upfront that vanish. Often promoted via hacked accounts, fake influencers, or spam. Ponzi elements pay early investors with new victims’ money until collapse.

Hijacking phone numbers to bypass 2FA and access accounts. AI videos and audio of celebrities or CEOs endorsing scams. Physical coercion to hand over keys. Crypto’s pseudonymity, speed, and global reach make tracing and recovery hard. Scammers use phishing-as-a-service tools, professional laundering networks, and AI for scale.

Verify all URLs, accounts, and links independently. Use hardware wallets for large holdings; enable 2FA preferably app-based, not SMS. Be skeptical of unsolicited contacts, urgency, or too good to be true offers. Research projects thoroughly: team, audits, tokenomics. Use reputable explorers and avoid copy-pasting addresses.