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  • Naseeruddin Shah, Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor Lead Indian Streamer Amazon MX Player’s Most Expansive Slate Yet, Topping 150 Shows for 2026

    Naseeruddin Shah, Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor Lead Indian Streamer Amazon MX Player’s Most Expansive Slate Yet, Topping 150 Shows for 2026

    Amazon MX Player, India’s free streaming service with over 250 million monthly viewers, has unveiled its most ambitious content lineup to date, announcing more than 150 new and returning titles for 2026 spanning drama, action, reality and its homegrown microdrama format.

    Leading the scripted charge is “Made In India: The Titan Story,” an ambition-and-legacy drama featuring Naseeruddin Shah and Jim Sarbh. The marquee titles also include “Sankalp,” a socio-political thriller examining power and leadership that stars Nana Patekar, Sanjay Kapoor, Neeraj Kabi and Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub.

    Kapoor also appears in “Ab Hoga Hisaab,” a justice-and-retribution thriller alongside Shaheer Sheikh and Mouni Roy. Further rounding out the dramatic lineup are the administrative drama “The Bureaucrat” starring Amol Parashar; action entertainer “Kaptaan” with Saqib Saleem; survival thriller “Vimal Khanna” featuring Sunny Hindhuja; cop drama “Waiting Hai” with Divyenndu Sharma and Bhuvan Arora; and crime drama “Clean Up Crew,” which stars Ravi Kishan, Amey Wagh and Vishal Jethwa.

    The new slate follows on the heels of recent originals including the legal courtroom drama “Amar Vishwas,” starring Rajeev Khandelwal, Aamir Ali, Ravi Behl and Barkha Bisht, and “Psycho Saiyaan,” a romantic thriller with Tejasswi Prakash and Ravi Kishan that generated strong viewership.

    On the returning seasons front, the platform is bringing back crime saga “Raktanchal” for a third season alongside youth-skewing titles “Campus Beats” Season 6, “Campus Diaries” Season 2, “Heartbeats” Season 2 and “Who’s Your Gynac” Season 2.

    In unscripted, flagship reality competition “Rise & Fall” returns for a second season following a strong debut run. Fitness reality series “Battleground” also returns for Season 2, with Shikhar Dhawan reprising his role as lead mentor. The recently wrapped “Bharat Ke Super Founders,” fronted by Suniel Shetty, saw winning startups receive funding of INR100 crore ($10.8 million)

    A central plank of the 2026 strategy is the further build-out of MX Fatafat, the platform’s mobile-first microdrama vertical, alongside the expansion of MX Vdesi – its library of localized content from Korea, China and Turkey – and a curated anime slate available in the Japanese and Hindi languages.

    “Amazon MX Player is seeing strong momentum as more audiences embrace free, premium streaming,” said Karan Bedi, head of Amazon MX Player. “With our growing premium content slate and scale, we are uniquely positioned to drive the shift from linear television to streaming for millions of viewers across India.”

    Amogh Dusad, head of content, said the platform’s emphasis is on building “a diverse and inclusive content ecosystem that reflects the many voices, cultures, and experiences of audiences across the country.”

    Girish Prabhu, head of Amazon Ads India, framed the slate in commercial terms, noting the reach of 250 million users creates opportunities for brands to connect with viewers through content “powered by shopping and streaming signals” that generate measurable outcomes.

    All titles will be available to stream free of charge on Amazon MX Player across mobile, connected TVs, the Amazon shopping app, Prime Video, Fire TV, Jio TV and Airtel Xtreme.

  • Bitcoin slips below $69,500 as tanker attacks send oil back above $100

    Bitcoin slips below $69,500 as tanker attacks send oil back above $100

    The bitcoin $BTC$69,593.87 relief rally due to oil losing gains lasted about 36 hours.

    Bitcoin fell to $69,393 on Thursday morning, down 0.8% over the past 24 hours and 4.3% on the week, after attacks on two oil tankers in Iraqi waters sent Brent crude surging back above $100 a barrel.

    The move wiped out Wednesday’s optimism around the IEA’s proposed record reserve release and pushed risk sentiment back into retreat across Asian markets.

    The chart tells the story of a market that can’t catch a break. Bitcoin touched $71,230 late Wednesday evening before the tanker headlines hit, dropping nearly $2,000 in a matter of hours.

    That’s the third time in two weeks that bitcoin has pushed above $71,000 only to get knocked back by an escalation in the Middle East conflict.

    Brent surged as much as 10.5% on Thursday, driven by a combination of the tanker attacks, clearance of the Mina Al Fahal port in Oman, continued hostilities across the Persian Gulf, and growing doubt about whether the IEA reserve release will be large enough to offset the supply disruption.

    MSCI’s Asia Pacific index dropped 1.8% with energy the only sector in the green. The session extended losses as it went on, with no signs of stabilization.

    The broader crypto market followed bitcoin lower. Ether fell to $2,025, down 0.5% on the day and 4.5% on the week. Solana dropped 1.5% to $85 and is now down 5.7% over seven days, the worst-performing major. XRP lost 0.8% to $1.37.

    Dogecoin fell 0.8% to $0.092, giving back most of Tuesday’s Musk-driven gains. BNB was flat at $642.

    The pattern of the past two weeks has been consistent. Good headlines push bitcoin toward $71,000-$74,000. Bad headlines drag it back toward $66,000-$68,000. The net movement over the period is close to zero, which is exactly what the on-chain data has been suggesting.

    Apparent demand remains deeply negative at -30,800 $BTC on a 30-day basis. CryptoQuant’s bull-bear indicator is still in bear territory, while supply in loss continues to climb. Every bounce gets sold into by holders looking to exit.

    Trump said earlier this week the war would resolve “very soon” and that military objectives were “pretty well complete.”

    But the timeline remains unclear, Iran continues to strike targets across the region, and the Strait of Hormuz is still disrupted. Mixed messaging from Washington has left markets unable to price the conflict’s duration with any confidence.

    The Fed meeting on March 17-18 is now five days away, and oil back above $100 makes the stagflation case harder to dismiss and rate cuts even more distant.

  • Google Play will let you try a game before you buy it

    Google Play has introduced a new feature called Game Trials, which will let you play a portion of paid games for free before you commit to buying them. It’s now rolling out to select paid games on mobile, and it’s coming soon to Google Play Games on PC. Titles that offer Game Trials will show a button marked “Try” on their profile pages. When you click it, you’ll see how long you can play the game before you have to buy it. In Google’s example, the survival and horror game Dredge will give you 60 minutes of free play time, after which you’ll get the option to either buy the game or delete it from your device.

    Google has also announced that it’s releasing more paid indie games over the coming months, including Moonlight Peaks, Sledding Game and Low-Budget Repairs. It has launched a new section in the Play store, as well, to feature games optimized for Windows PCs. You can wishlist the games from that section to get a notification when they’re on sale.

    Finally, the company is rolling out Play Games Sidekick, the Gemini-powered Android overlay it announced last year, to select games downloaded from Play. Sidekick can show you relevant info and tools for whatever game you’re playing without having to do a search query. But if you’d rather ask other people for gaming advice instead of an AI, you can also look at a game’s Community Posts, a feature now available in English for select titles on their Play pages.

  • Ripple Moves to Secure Australian Financial Services License for APAC Payments

    Ripple moves to secure an Australian financial services license, positioning its blockchain payments network for deeper expansion across Asia-Pacific while tightening regulatory footing in one of the region’s most active digital asset markets.

    Ripple Strengthens Global Compliance Network With Australian License Plan

    Ripple plans to secure an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) to expand its regulated payments offering in Australia and across the Asia Pacific (APAC) region, the blockchain-based enterprise solutions provider stated on March 11. The initiative aims to support financial institutions, fintechs, and enterprises seeking faster cross-border value transfers within established regulatory frameworks.

    Fiona Murray, Managing Director for Asia Pacific at Ripple, stated the licensing effort supports the company’s global compliance strategy and regional growth plans. Murray explained:

    “Licensing is fundamental to Ripple’s strategy, ensuring we can deliver secure, compliant solutions to customers worldwide.”

    “Australia is a key market for Ripple, and an AFSL strengthens our ability to scale Ripple Payments across the region,” the executive continued. “By leveraging blockchain technology and digital assets, we enable customers to move value globally with greater speed, transparency, and reliability. We remain focused on working closely with regulators to support the next phase of growth for digital asset infrastructure.”

    The company outlined that it intends to obtain the license through the proposed acquisition of BC Payments Australia Pty Ltd. The announcement states:

    “Ripple will obtain its AFSL through the proposed acquisition of BC Payments Australia Pty Ltd, which is subject to finalizing the standard completion process. This will strengthen Ripple’s ability to offer a licensed, end-to-end platform for moving funds globally.”

    With the AFSL in place, the payments platform would manage the full lifecycle of transactions including onboarding, compliance, funding, foreign exchange, liquidity management, and final payout. The acquisition of BC Payments Australia is expected to provide Ripple with an existing AFSL rather than requiring a new license application, allowing faster entry into the regulated market once the transaction closes.

    Meanwhile, APAC payments volume nearly doubled year over year in 2025, reflecting increased regional demand for blockchain-based settlement infrastructure, Ripple noted. The network works with institutions including Hai Ha Money Transfer, Novatti Group, Stables, Caleb & Brown, Flash Payments, and Independent Reserve. The company holds more than 75 regulatory licenses globally and participates in initiatives such as Project Acacia led by the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre.

    FAQ 🧭

    • Why is Ripple seeking an Australian Financial Services License?
      Ripple aims to expand regulated cross-border payment services across Australia and the broader Asia Pacific region.
    • How could the AFSL impact Ripple’s payments network?
      The license would allow Ripple to operate a fully regulated end-to-end payments platform in Australia.
    • What does Ripple’s acquisition of BC Payments Australia mean?
      The acquisition is expected to provide the regulatory pathway for Ripple to secure the AFSL.
    • Why is the Asia Pacific region important for Ripple?
      Rapid growth in APAC cross-border payments demand makes the region a major expansion opportunity for Ripple’s blockchain infrastructure.
  • Gene Simmons Says Celebrities Should “Shut the F*** Up” About Politics

    Gene Simmons, the frontman of KISS, is tired of hearing celebrities’ opinions on politics.

    The rocker was recently asked by TMZ for his thoughts on stars who are outspoken about their criticism of Donald Trump, such as Ben Stiller, who recently called out the president after the White House used a clip of his 2008 movie Tropic Thunder in an Iran war propaganda video.

    “Everybody in the world should listen to what actors and comedians say, because they’re so qualified,” Simmons responded sarcastically before adding in a more serious tone, “Basically, shut the fuck up. Do your art and shut up. Nobody’s interested in their opinions. That includes me, who I vote for, who I like,” Simmons said. “Who the fuck do you think you are?”

    The musician continued, “People in America work hard for their living, and they don’t want to be lectured to by people who live in mansions and drive Rolls-Royces. It’s time for everybody in the entertainment industry to shut their piehole and just do your art. Nobody cares what you think. I don’t.”

    Simmons specifically mentioned actor Mark Ruffalo, who has been quite vocal about politics and his disdain for Trump.

    “What would Mark [Ruffalo] think about politics?” he said before replying, “I don’t care.”

    Siller and Ruffalo aren’t the only celebrities who have been outspoken about their political stance. Just this year, during the 2026 awards season, numerous stars have called out Trump and his divisive policies during their acceptance speeches alone.

    At the 2026 Grammys, Billie Eilish slammed ICE while accepting her award with her brother Finneas O’Connell. In the days that followed, Sen. Ted Cruz and Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary were among those who also criticized her for getting political. But who came to Eilish’s defense? Ruffalo, telling O’Leary to “STFU.”

    While the KISS member seems to now be taking a more silent approach to his political views, he’s previously shared mixed opinions about Trump. He previously told Bill Maher on his Club Random podcast in 2022 that he “was happy” when The Celebrity Apprentice first got elected in 2016.

    However, he was later critical of how polarized politics has become because of Trump. “The person that I saw first coming into power is not the person I saw within a year or two of that,” Simmons told Maher at the time.

    More recently, he expressed his gratitude to the president after KISS was recognized at the 2025 Kennedy Center Honors, saying that the rock band is “deeply honored.”

  • Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry, Demi Moore (and More!): Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Starry Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Jane Fonda, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracee Ellis Ross, Katy Perry, Demi Moore (and More!): Inside Diane von Furstenberg’s Starry Oscars Luncheon (PHOTOS)

    Where can you find an Oscar-winning actress chatting up one of the world’s biggest pop stars?

    Well, during Oscars week in Los Angeles, that’s pretty much anywhere — but there’s no place quite like Diane von Furstenberg’s annual luncheon celebrating the year’s female Oscar nominees.

    This year’s garden party was particularly star-studded, with the likes of “Marty Supreme” star Gwyneth Paltrow (the aforementioned Oscar winner) catching up with Katy Perry, only to be interrupted by producer and philanthropist Nicole Avant Sarandos, then Demi Moore and finally Tracee Ellis Ross. Within minutes — and with the addition of posh jewelry designer Jennifer Meyer to the huddle — some of the industry’s most high-profile entertainers and entrepreneurs had assembled on the well-manicured lawn.

    Oh, and while this A-list group caught up with one another, von Furstenberg stood just around the corner posing with legendary actress and activist Jane Fonda.

    A lineup of talent like this — plus Anita Hill, Quinta Brunson, Tig Notaro, Fran Drescher, Lisa Ann Walter, Grace van Patten, Sabrina Impacciatore, Rachel Zoe, Elaine Welteroth, Rita Wilson, Diane Warren, Luna Blaise, Maggie Baird, Rozzi and “Sinners” Oscar nominees Ruth E. Carter and Autumn Durald Arkapaw — really gives new meaning to the term “power lunch.”

    For the last 13 years, von Furstenberg has hosted the celebration at her Beverly Hills mansion. This year, she noted, all of the nominees got a gold sticker upon arrival to wear as a badge of honor. It was a last-minute idea, but a key one.

    “It’s very important that you know who everybody is, because then you make new friends,” von Furstenberg said, taking the microphone as the crowd sat down for lunch, curated by chef Jane Coxwell. “You are all in the same industry, an industry that is not necessarily pro-women.”

    That reality makes events like this one particularly key, the fashion designer explained, with Fonda — wearing her new signature “Resist” t-shirt — seated at her right hand. (Fonda was a co-host at this year’s luncheon alongside Moore, Avant Sarandos and Ross, and an audience with her was equally as coveted as a selfie with fellow attendee Paris Hilton.)

    “[I thought] being kind was always being stupid, but lately I discovered the power of [it],” she said. “Kindness is like a currency, and it compounds like money.”

    And women are uniquely positioned to make that currency count.

    “Women always have the solutions, but women always have the power of seduction. And seduction is not only about showing your legs — although if you have good ones, you can,” von Furstenberg quipped, as the crowd chuckled. “It is about making other people believe that your ideas and your solutions are theirs. And right now, we have to use all the tools,” she continued. “Because right now is a time that we need strength, we need belief, we need values, and the best way to pass on the message is by kindness.”

    Scroll below for an inside look at the star-studded event.

     

  • 200,000 Devices Erased? Pro-Iran Hackers Hit US Firm With Data-Wiping Attack

    200,000 Devices Erased? Pro-Iran Hackers Hit US Firm With Data-Wiping Attack

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  • Justin Sun Deal Complicates SEC’s Crypto Stance, Legal Experts Say

    Justin Sun Deal Complicates SEC’s Crypto Stance, Legal Experts Say

    In brief

    • The SEC moved to settle its case against Justin Sun for $10 million over alleged violations tied to tokens TRX and BTT.
    • To impose the fine, the SEC effectively asserted that TRX had been offered as a security at some point.
    • Experts say this position could complicate the regulator’s narrative that most crypto tokens fall outside securities law.

    Last week, the SEC did something rather unusual for the Trump era—it announced a plan to fine a crypto company for violating America’s securities laws.

    Since President Donald Trump’s return to power, the Wall Street regulator has dropped virtually all crypto-related cases it inherited from prior administrations. The agency’s new leadership has argued it should have no part in regulating most crypto activity.

    But on Thursday, the SEC moved to settle its longstanding case against Justin Sun, a controversial crypto entrepreneur with business ties to the Trump family. Legal experts say the unique dynamics of the settlement may have unforeseen implications—and, potentially, undermine some of the logic propping up the Trump SEC’s aggressively pro-crypto posture.

    In 2023, the SEC under President Joe Biden accused Sun not only of offering unregistered securities in the form of two crypto tokens—TRX and BTT—but also of manipulating the secondary markets for those tokens with wash trading.

    Within weeks of Trump’s return to the White House, however, the SEC paused the case. The move prompted an uproar among Democrats, who highlighted Sun’s payments of tens of millions of dollars to Trump family crypto projects. Sun quickly became the face of political attacks regarding the president’s alleged “crypto corruption.”

    Last week, the SEC finally announced a plan to settle its case against Sun for $10 million and dismiss all outstanding charges against the entrepreneur. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) swiftly blasted the deal, which still needs to be approved by a federal judge, as a “free pass” handed to a “crypto billionaire with ties to Donald Trump.”

    But there may be more to the proposed settlement than meets the eye. While the agreement between Sun and the SEC did not require the crypto entrepreneur to admit any wrongdoing, it did expressly state Sun needed to pay the $10 million for violating the Securities Act of 1933.

    If the SEC wanted to fine Sun, it had to claim jurisdiction over his case. But does that mean the Trump SEC still contends TRX or BTT were, in fact, securities? Such an admission could constitute a huge shift in the SEC’s approach to crypto, given the regulator has dismissed nearly every other ongoing case involving similar tokens.

    A source familiar with the SEC’s thinking confirmed the agency did, in fact, take such a view when deciding it had jurisdiction to settle its case against Sun.

    “The SEC has jurisdiction because it alleged in the amended complaint that, at the time of the wash trading, TRX was offered and sold subject to an investment contract,” the source told Decrypt.

    Amanda Fischer, a former SEC official who worked at the regulator when Sun was initially charged, told Decrypt she found the explanation strange. If the SEC believes TRX was offered as a security, then U.S.-based crypto platforms that listed the token should therefore also be considered unregistered securities exchanges, she said.

    What’s more, TRX is not unlike numerous other crypto tokens listed by crypto exchanges previously sued by the SEC, including Coinbase and Kraken. SEC lawsuits against Coinbase, Kraken, and other major crypto exchanges were dismissed when Trump returned to office last year.

    The SEC declined to comment for this story. Representatives for Sun did not respond to Decrypt’s requests for comment.

    Fischer argues the SEC is only asserting jurisdiction over TRX because agency leadership found itself stuck between a rock and a hard place. Drop all charges against someone like Justin Sun and face immense public blowback; pursue the case against him, and the SEC would have to explain in court why this crypto offering is a security but most aren’t.

    A relatively small fine may have emerged as the best compromise, Fischer said. But now, the move has potentially put the SEC in an awkward position.

    “The agency is desperate to save face and create the appearance that they’re enforcing the law against the president’s benefactors by imposing a sweetheart settlement,” Fischer said. “After scolding the Gensler SEC for creating ‘uncertainty,’ the Commission now asserts jurisdiction when it’s politically convenient.”

    Gary Gensler, the previous chair of the SEC, was endlessly criticized by crypto leaders for taking a case-by-case view of digital assets. In contrast, the Trump SEC has pledged to create simple, uniform rules that will allow most crypto projects to breathe easy.

    But if the Trump SEC now contends TRX was a security offering—at least at some point—legal experts say that view could throw a wrench in the regulator’s laissez faire crypto logic.

    “The whole message has been we want clear rules of the road,” Drew Rolle, a partner at Alston & Bird specializing in securities law and crypto, told Decrypt. “That’s what makes this interesting.”

    Rolle said that, in light of the Justin Sun settlement, crypto projects may have to continue deducing for themselves what types of crypto tokens and sales potentially trigger securities laws—even if the Trump SEC has promised most crypto tokens shouldn’t be considered securities.

    Andrew Hinkes, a crypto-focused partner at Winston & Strawn, agreed. He said the SEC’s settlement with Justin Sun suggests the agency is now taking the view that crypto tokens can be sold in ways that trigger the securities laws, even if the tokens are not themselves securities.

    “The fact that the SEC is settling this action suggests that the SEC seems to believe that the instruments at issue were offered in investment contracts at the relevant time,” Hinkes told Decrypt

    It remains to be seen whether the SEC will actually enforce that view broadly, or if it was unique to Justin Sun’s case. But the move could immediately impact other litigation—such as private lawsuits filed by TRX holders against Sun.

    “I wouldn’t be surprised if potential claimants point to this and try to leverage it,” Rolle said.

    Editor’s note: Updated name of law firm from Alliston & Bird to Alston & Bird

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  • Myriad to Use USD1 on BNB Chain as Exclusive Settlement Asset

    Myriad to Use USD1 on BNB Chain as Exclusive Settlement Asset

    Prediction market Myriad is transitioning to World Liberty Financial’s USD1 stablecoin as its exclusive settlement asset.

    As part of the move, Myriad, owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan, is migrating its entire prediction market catalog to BNB Chain.

    The move will result in a “faster, simpler, and more consistent prediction environment,” according to Myriad, replacing the current fragmented multi-chain experience with a single, unified standard.

    Myriad’s migration to BNB is “long overdue,” said Myriad Markets co-founder and President Farokh Sarmad, adding that, “With over $5 billion in TVL and millions of active users, we needed a home that can sustain the incoming growth of our platform.”

    Earlier this year, Myriad became the first prediction market to integrate USD1, a stablecoin launched by the Trump-backed DeFi platform World Liberty Financial, on its 5-minute markets.

    Partnering with USD1 was a no-brainer, said Farokh, calling it a “top stablecoin” that will enable deeper integration with the BNB Chain ecosystem.

    Myriad’s tie-up with USD1 underpins the prediction market’s incoming transition from an automated market maker liquidity model to a Central Limit Order Book (CLOB), enabling an array of new features including slippage controls, limit orders, dynamic fees, and broader market information for users.

    A CLOB, which matches buy and sell orders based on price and time priority, enables users to trade directly with each other rather than through an intermediary. “The CLOB is by far the most important update to Myriad,” said Farokh, adding that it will “unlock billions of dollars being able to be traded on our platform and 100x our user base.”

    Myriad Season 3

    Simultaneously, Myriad is launching Season 3 with “game-changing updates across the platform.”

    Season 3 launches alongside the full rollout of Myriad Wallet across the platform. Built from the ground up for speed, the Myriad Wallet is optimised for fewer approvals and lower gas costs. Integrated with MoonPay as Myriad’s official payments partner, the Myriad Wallet enables users to deposit in seconds from over 12 currencies, with a simple user flow.

    In response to user feedback, Season 3 introduces an overhauled leaderboard and points structure, with points now distributed every 7 days and taking into account an array of metrics rather than a single signal.

    That lays the groundwork for Myriad’s journey into the MYR ecosystem, with participants who contribute liquidity, information, and infrastructure to the network able to claim rewards when the system goes live. “Season 3 will play the biggest role in what comes next,” said Farokh. “So even if you missed earlier seasons, there’s still plenty of time to catch up!”

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