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  • In a bid to counter China, Trump hosts a summit for Latin America leaders

    In a bid to counter China, Trump hosts a summit for Latin America leaders

    Over the past two decades, China has quietly eclipsed the United States as the dominant trading partner in parts of Latin America.

    But since taking office for a second term, United States President Donald Trump has pushed to reverse Beijing’s advance.

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    That includes through aggressive manoeuvres directed at China’s allies in the region.

    Already, the Trump administration has stripped officials in Costa Rica, Panama and Chile of their US visas, reportedly due to their ties to China.

    It has also threatened to take back the Panama Canal over allegations that Chinese operatives are running the waterway. And after invading Venezuela and abducting President Nicolas Maduro, the US forced the country to halt oil exports to China.

    But on Saturday, Trump is taking a different approach, welcoming Latin American leaders to his Mar-a-Lago estate for an event dubbed the “Shield of the Americas” summit.

    How he plans to persuade leaders to distance themselves from one of the region’s largest economic partners remains unclear.

    But experts say the high-level meeting could signal that Washington is prepared to put concrete offers on the table.

    Securing meaningful commitments from Latin American leaders will take more than a photo op and vague promises, according to Francisco Urdinez, an expert on regional relations with China at Chile’s Pontifical Catholic University.

    Even among Trump’s allies, Urdinez believes significant economic incentives are required.

    “What they’re really hoping is that Washington backs up the political alignment with tangible economic benefits,” he said.

    ‘Reinforcing the Donroe Doctrine’

    Already, the White House has confirmed that nearly a dozen countries will be represented at the weekend summit.

    They include conservative leaders from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, and Trinidad and Tobago.

    Mexico and Brazil, the region’s largest economies, have been notably left out. Both are currently led by left-leaning governments.

    In a post on social media, the Trump administration framed the event as a “historic meeting reinforcing the Donroe Doctrine”, the president’s plan for establishing US dominance over the Western Hemisphere.

    Part of that strategy involves assembling a coalition of ideological allies in the region.

    But rolling back Chinese influence in a region increasingly reliant on its economy will not be an easy feat, according to Gimena Sanchez, the Andes director at the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), a US-based research and advocacy group.

    The US “is trying to get countries to agree that they’re not going to have China be one of their primary trading partners, and they really can’t at this point”, Sanchez said.

    “For most countries, China is either their top, second or third trading partner.”

    China, after all, has the second-largest economy in the world, and it has invested heavily in Latin America, including through infrastructure projects and massive loans.

    The Asian giant has emerged as the top trading partner in South America in particular, with bilateral trade reaching $518bn in 2024, a record high for Beijing.

    The US, however, remains the biggest outside trade force in Latin America and the Caribbean overall, due in large part to close relations with its neighbour, Mexico.

    As of 2024, US imports from Latin America jumped to $661bn, and its exports were valued at $517bn.

    Rather than choosing sides, though, many countries in the region are trying to strike a balance between the two powers, Sanchez explained.

    Still, she added that the US cannot come empty-handed to this weekend’s negotiations.

    “If the US is very boldly telling countries to cut off strengthening ties with China”, Sanchez emphasised that “the US is going to have to offer them something.”

    What’s on the table?

    Trump has already extended economic lifelines to Latin American governments politically aligned with his own.

    In the case of Argentina, for instance, Trump announced in October a $20bn currency swap, meant to increase the value of the country’s peso.

    He also increased the volume of Argentinian beef permitted to be imported into the US, shoring up the country’s agricultural sector, despite pushback from US cattle farmers.

    Trump has largely tied those economic incentives to the continued leadership of political movements favourable to his own.

    The $20bn swap, for instance, came ahead of a key election for Argentinian President Javier Milei’s right-wing party, which Trump supports.

    Isolating China from resources in Latin America could also play to Trump’s advantage as he angles for better trade terms with Beijing.

    A show of hemispheric solidarity could give Trump extra leverage as he travels to Beijing in early April to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Urdinez pointed out.

    Then there’s the regional security angle. The US has expressed particular concern about China’s control of strategic infrastructure in Latin America and the critical minerals it could exploit in the region to bolster its defence and technology capabilities.

    Bolivia, Argentina and Chile, for instance, are believed to hold the world’s largest deposits of lithium, a metal necessary for energy storage and rechargeable batteries.

    The Trump administration referenced such threats in its national security strategy, published in December.

    “Some foreign influence will be hard to reverse,” the strategy document said, blaming the “political alignments between certain Latin American governments and certain foreign actors”.

    But Trump’s security platform nevertheless asserted that Latin American leaders were actively seeking alternatives to China.

    “Many governments are not ideologically aligned with foreign powers but are instead attracted to doing business with them for other reasons, including low costs and fewer regulatory hurdles,” the document said.

    It argued that the US could combat Chinese influence by highlighting the “hidden costs” of close ties to Beijing, including “debt traps” and espionage.

    ‘More aspiration than reality’

    Henrietta Levin, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, believes that many Latin American countries would prefer to deepen economic engagement with the US over China.

    But in many cases, that hasn’t been an option.

    She pointed to Ecuador’s decision to sign a free trade agreement (FTA) with China in 2023 after it failed to negotiate a similar agreement with the US under President Joe Biden.

    Some US politicians had opposed the deal as a threat to domestic industries. Others had encouraged Biden to reject it due to alleged corruption in Ecuador’s government.

    Critics, though, said the resistance pushed Ecuador into closer relations with China.

    “ When Ecuador signed their free trade agreement with China a couple years ago, their leader actually made quite clear that they had wanted an FTA with the US and would’ve preferred that,” said Levin.

    “But the US didn’t want to negotiate such an agreement, and China did.”

    As a result, Ecuador became the fifth country in Latin America to ink a free trade pact with China, after Chile, Peru, Costa Rica and Nicaragua.

    For Levin, the question looming over this weekend’s summit is whether the Trump administration will step up and provide alternatives to the economic engagement China has already delivered.

    Options could include trade agreements, financing for new development and investments with attractive terms.

    But without such offers, Urdinez, the Chilean professor, warns that Trump will face limits to his ambitions of checking China’s growth in Latin America.

    “Until Washington is willing to fill the economic space it’s asking countries to vacate, the rollback strategy will remain more aspiration than reality,” said Urdinez.

  • Nvidia Is Probably Done Investing in OpenAI and Anthropic, Says CEO—Why?

    Nvidia Is Probably Done Investing in OpenAI and Anthropic, Says CEO—Why?

    In brief

    • Nvidia signaled the end of its major investments in OpenAI and Anthropic.
    • The OpenAI-Anthropic feud is escalating fast after a Pentagon deal and federal backlash.
    • With this decision, Nvidia avoids choosing sides as AI labs clash with each other and Washington.

    At the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media, and Telecom conference in San Francisco on Wednesday, Jensen Huang said Nvidia is likely done investing in AI giants OpenAI and Anthropic.

    The $30 billion investment it just finalized into OpenAI was a steep drop from the $100 billion deal announced last September, and will likely be the last check. Same for the $10 billion it put into Anthropic in November.

    The official reason sounds clean: Both companies appear to be heading toward IPOs later this year, and private deals of this nature close once that window opens.

    “This might be the last time we’ll have the opportunity to invest in a consequential company like this,” Huang told the audience.

    Granted, late-stage investors write checks right up to the IPO bell all the time, and the original $100 billion OpenAI commitment didn’t shrink to $30 billion because of some procedural IPO rule. Something else changed.

    Nvidia now holds stakes in two companies in the middle of an all-out war with each other—and with Washington. Trump ordered all federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s technology after the company refused to let Claude be deployed for autonomous weapons or mass domestic surveillance. Within hours, OpenAI announced its own Pentagon deal—a move Anthropic publicly called “mendacious.”

    The public sided with Anthropic. Within 24 hours of the back-to-back announcements, Claude shot to the top of the free app rankings on Apple’s U.S. App Store, overtaking ChatGPT. At the end of January, it was outside the top 100. An Anthropic spokesperson told Decrypt that it saw record signups in the days following the Pentagon’s move.

    Meanwhile, the QuitGPT movement had claimed an estimated 2.5 million users taking action against OpenAI—canceling subscriptions or spreading the boycott—by the time the dust started settling.

    Nvidia’s relationship with Anthropic was already strained before all this. Two months after putting $10 billion into the company, Dario Amodei stood at Davos and compared U.S. chip companies selling high-performance processors to approved Chinese customers to selling nuclear weapons to North Korea. He didn’t name Nvidia, but didn’t need to either.

    There’s also the structural awkwardness of the whole circular economy behind Nvidia’s massive investments in AI startups. Nvidia invests in OpenAI, but OpenAI spends it on Nvidia chips. The circularity drew bubble comparisons.

    Source: Bloomberg

    What Nvidia is actually doing is getting out of the business of picking sides. It sells GPUs to OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Google, and everyone else racing for the frontier. The arms dealer doesn’t get to have a favorite army.

    Getting caught holding equity on both sides of a Pentagon standoff, in which one investee is increasingly hated and the other gets designated a national security supply-chain risk, is exactly the kind of mess that makes customers nervous.

    The IPO story is a convenient door. Huang walked through it.

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  • Crypto Exchange OKX Debuts Social Platform Linking Posts to Trades

    Crypto Exchange OKX Debuts Social Platform Linking Posts to Trades

    In brief

    • Orbit lets users discuss markets, host livestreams and execute trades directly from posts within the OKX app.
    • Performance data, including holdings, profit and loss, and trading history, can be displayed in real time using exchange-derived metrics.
    • The platform won’t initially be available in the U.S., Europe, Singapore, Australia or the UAE.

    Crypto exchange OKX said Thursday it is rolling out a native social networking feature inside its trading app that allows users to discuss markets, disclose trading performance, and execute trades directly from posts.

    The feature, called Orbit, embeds a real-time discussion layer into the OKX app where users can post trade ideas, host livestreams, and form groups while linking directly to tradable assets through cashtags such as $BTC or $ETH. 

    The launch reflects a broader push by trading platforms to blend social media with market activity.

    Social trading platform eToro pioneered the model in 2010 with its OpenBook platform and CopyTrader feature, while crypto exchanges have since introduced similar tools, including Bybit in 2022 and by Binance on its futures platform in 2023.

    The launch comes as OKX pushes further into traditional finance following an investment from Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, in a deal valuing the exchange at $25 billion and aimed at enabling tokenized stock trading.

    OKX said Orbit aims to address a long-standing credibility issue in online trading communities, where influencers often share screenshots of profitable trades without independently verifiable records.

    “When you view an Orbit user’s profile, you can toggle at the top between ‘posts’ and ‘performance,’” an OKX spokesperson told Decrypt. “These update in real time and are calculated based on the user’s trading history via the OKX app.”

    Under the “performance” tab, users can view a trader’s holdings, total profit and loss, and “trading history (open, closed, and existing positions),” where leverage is also visible.

    Those metrics can also be sorted across multiple time frames, including 7 days, 30 days, 90 days, and one year.

    Users must first complete identity verification and comply with the platform’s terms of service before accessing Orbit, which is subject to the same KYC, AML, and transaction-monitoring controls applied across the exchange, the OKX spokesperson added.

    Still, sharing the data is optional. 

    “The user can decide whether or not to share performance data, but cannot selectively edit or omit the data shown,” the spokesperson said, adding that the information displayed is derived directly from exchange data and “is not editable by the user.”

    Orbit also introduces creator rewards tied partly to follower engagement and activity. 

    “Follower trading activity is one way to earn rewards,” the spokesperson said, adding that traders can also be rewarded for posting content, livestreaming and building communities on the platform.

    The feature won’t initially be available in the U.S., Europe, Singapore, Australia, or the United Arab Emirates, markets where regulators have shown greater interest in social trading and online investment promotion.

    The rollout has begun with a limited group of users and will expand after a beta phase.

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  • Olivia Rodrigo, Cameron Winter, Wet Leg and More Unveil New Songs on War Child’s Stellar ‘Help(2)’ Benefit Compilation: Album Review

    Olivia Rodrigo, Cameron Winter, Wet Leg and More Unveil New Songs on War Child’s Stellar ‘Help(2)’ Benefit Compilation: Album Review

    The first “War Child,” a British-all-star charity album featuring rare tracks from such then-rising-ish stars as Oasis, Radiohead, Blur, Portishead and Massive Attack as well as Sinead O’Connor, Suede and the Stone Roses, arrived in September of 1995 — so long ago that the primary motivation at the time was to support the War Child charity’s efforts in Bosnia. The organization aims to deliver aid, education, mental health support and protection to children affected by conflict around the world; musically speaking, we can remember getting a specially burned advance CD of that album and being very excited about the new songs from Radiohead (“Lucky,” which of course would be a highlight of the “OK Computer” album almost two years later) and Portishead (“Mourning Air,” ditto their self-titled sophomore set).

    Much more importantly, the album — recorded in a single day — raised over £1.2 million for War Child.

    Some 31 years later, the sequel, “Help (2),” has arrived and was overseen by executive producer James Ford, known for his work with Arctic Monkeys, Depeche Mode, Pulp, Fontaines DC and many others. He put his address book to work here: There are new tracks — nearly all of which were recorded at Abbey Road Studios across one week last November — from all of the above artists (including the first new song from the Arctic Monkeys since 2022) as well as new songs from Olivia Rodrigo, Geese’s Cameron Winter, Arooj Aftab & Beck, Damon Albarn (with Johnny Marr on guitar), Wet Leg, Big Thief, Beabadoobee and many more — a whopping 23 songs in all, the full tracklist appears below. As the announcement notes, “The new album, like the original, speaks to the urgency of the humanitarian situation globally today.”

    Bringing a critical take to such a well-intended album is always awkward, but highlights include the Arctic Monkeys’ first new song since 2022, an uncharacteristically low-key “Obvious” from Wet Leg, an unlikely tag-team on the Broadway song “Lilac Wine” from Arooj Aftab and Beck, a sensitive take on Sinead O’Connor’s hard-hitting “Black Boys on Mopeds” from Fontaines D.C., a sweetly soulful “Naboo” from Sampha, Big Thief’s “Relive, Redie” — and probably most of all, Olivia Rodrigo’s gorgeous, hushed take on Magnetic Fields’ “Book of Love,” from their 1999 classic album “99 Love Songs,” which she sings in a tone that summons “Drivers License” flashbacks.

    There is also a visual component to the album, for which Academy Award-winning filmmaker Jonathan Glazer acted as creative director, working with Academy Films to assemble a team of creatives and overseeing the filming and art direction for the project. Glazer’s concept was “By Children, For Children”: Each child operated their own small camera and was invited into the studios to film the artists recording without any restrictions, according to the announcement. Glazer’s also team worked with fixers and filmmakers in Ukraine, Gaza, Yemen and Sudan to gather footage filmed by children on the ground in those conflict zones.

    Most importantly of all, as the announcement states, “When ‘Help’ was first released, around 10% of the world’s children were affected by conflict. Today, that figure has almost doubled to nearly 1 in 5, or 520 million children worldwide; more than at any time since the Second World War. With conflicts escalating and funding cuts hitting hard, War Child U.K.’s work has never been more urgent and the need for these artists to carry forward the original album’s spirit of collective action could not be more vital.”

    “Help(2)” Tracklist:

    Arctic Monkeys – “Opening Night”
    Damon Albarn, Grian Chatten & Kae Tempest – “Flags”
    Black Country, New Road – “Strangers”
    The Last Dinner Party – “Let’s do it again!”
    Beth Gibbons – “Sunday Morning”
    Arooj Aftab & Beck – “Lilac Wine”
    King Krule – “The 343 Loop”
    Depeche Mode – “Universal Soldier”
    Ezra Collective & Greentea Peng – “Helicopters”
    Arlo Parks – “Nothing I Could Hide”
    English Teacher & Graham Coxon – “Parasite”
    Beabadoobee – “Say Yes”
    Big Thief – “Relive, Redie”
    Fontaines D.C. – “Black Boys on Mopeds”
    Cameron Winter – “Warning”
    Young Fathers – “Don’t Fight the Young”
    Pulp – “Begging for Change”
    Sampha – “Naboo”
    Wet Leg – “Obvious”
    Foals – “When the War is Finally Done”
    Bat For Lashes – “Carried my girl”
    Anna Calvi, Ellie Rowsell, Nilüfer Yanya & Dove Ellis – “Sunday Light”
    Olivia Rodrigo – “The Book of Love”

  • Lucy Dickins Stepping Down From WME’s Contemporary Music Division

    Lucy Dickins Stepping Down From WME’s Contemporary Music Division

    Lucy Dickins, who has been head of WME’s contemporary music and touring division since 2022, is stepping down from her role, according to an internal memo from co‑chairman Christian Muirhead obtained by Variety.

    The memo does not cite a reason for her departure; reps for the company did not immediately respond to requests for further information, although sources tell Variety her contract was up; Hits suggests she may be going to rival agency CAA.

    “We wanted to share with everyone that our friend and colleague Lucy Dickins will be leaving WME.

    “Over the past seven years, Lucy helped us navigate one of the most disruptive periods in the live music business. As the head of our UK office, she re-energized our presence in London, built a strong team, and solidified WME’s leadership in the region. Then COVID hit and she dove right in, taking on her expanded role, relocating to Los Angeles, and providing critical support to our team during an unprecedented crisis.

    “On the other side of the pandemic, she led major signings, constructed innovative tour models, and brought exceptional heart and enthusiasm to our business. 

    “Kirk Sommer will continue to lead the Contemporary Music division moving forward, and we will keep you posted with further updates.  

    “Please join us in wishing Lucy the best in her next chapter.”

    Dickins joined WME in 2019 after more than two decades at International Booking Talent (ITB), the U.K.-based agency founded by her father, Barry Dickins and Rod MacSween. She comes from a long line of British music business titans: her grandfather Percy launched the long-running music weekly NME, her uncle Rob Dickins led Warner Music U.K. for 15 years, and her brother Jonathan Dickins has managed Adele, Glass Animals and Rick Rubin.

    When she was elevated to global head of contemporary music and touring in 2022, she became the first woman to take on such a role at a major agency. Over the years she has worked closely with Adele, Zach Bryan, Luke Combs, Chris Stapleton and many others.

  • GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic May Help Reduce Migraine Symptom Severity

    GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic May Help Reduce Migraine Symptom Severity

    Female sitting by a window smiling and looking relaxedShare on Pinterest
    Recent research has found that GLP-1s may reduce the need for emergency care in those with chronic migraine. Image Credit: Maskot/Getty Images
    • A recent study suggests that GLP-1 drugs, like Ozempic, may make people with chronic migraine less likely to require emergency care.
    • People using GLP-1s may be less likely to need new preventive migraine medications.
    • The study does not prove that GLP-1s lower emergency care needs for people with chronic migraine, but it shows an association.
    • More research is needed to determine how GLP-1s could help in the future of migraine management.

    Migraine is a common condition both worldwide and throughout the United States. It may affect females more than males, but anyone can experience migraine.

    This condition affects 37 million people in the United States. It is the third most common disease in the world and one of the 10 most disabling conditions.

    Of those who experience migraine, 2% experience chronic migraine. Migraine is considered chronic when a person experiences 15 or more days per month with a headache for more than 3 months. Of these, at least 8 days per month have other features of migraine, such as aura, nausea, and heightened sensitivity to light and sound.

    A recent preliminary study by researchers in Brazil and the United States suggests that GLP-1 medications for weight loss, such as Ozempic and Wegovy, may reduce the need for emergency care among people with chronic migraine compared with those who are treated with topiramate for migraine prevention.

    “People with chronic migraine often end up in the emergency room, or they need to try several preventive medications before finding one that can work for them,” study author Vitoria Acar, MD, of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, and one of the study authors, said in a press release.

    “Seeing these patterns of lower use of emergency care and lower use of drugs to stop migraines or trying additional drugs to prevent migraines among people taking GLP-1 drugs for other conditions suggests that these therapies may help stabilize the disease burden in ways that we haven’t fully appreciated yet,” Acar said.

    For this study, the researchers analyzed data from a health record database of people with chronic migraine based on medical records.

    They compared people who had begun taking a GLP-1 medication for other reasons, like weight loss, within a year of receiving a diagnosis of chronic migraine to individuals who started taking topiramate during the same period.

    Each group consisted of around 11,000 people. The two groups were matched for factors such as:

    The GLP-1 medications included in the study were:

    The researchers found that 23.7% of people using GLP-1 drugs visited the emergency room in the following year. This is compared to 26.4% of those using topiramate.

    Overall, they found that individuals using GLP-1s were 10% less likely to visit the emergency room, 14% less likely to be hospitalized, and around 13% less likely to need a nerve block procedure or receive a triptan prescription than those taking topiramate.

    “The mechanisms are not yet fully understood in humans, but preclinical studies point to several overlapping pathways,” said Hsiangkuo (Scott) Yuan, MD, associate professor at Thomas Jefferson University, clinical research director at Jefferson Headache Center, and one of the study authors.

    “These include anti-inflammatory effects within the trigeminal pain system, reduction of intracranial pressure through decreased CSF [cerebrospinal fluid] secretion, and modulation of CGRP [calcitonin gene-related peptide] (a key migraine-promoting signaling molecule),” Yuan said.

    “Weight loss itself, regardless of how it is achieved, has also been associated with migraine improvement in patients with obesity, as supported by recent meta-analyses, though high quality RCT evidence remains limited,” he told Healthline.

    The researchers also found that the group that was using GLP-1s was less likely to need new preventive migraine medications.

    When compared to those taking topiramate, GLP-1 users were:

    However, there was no significant difference between the two groups, and the need to begin taking beta-blockers.

    Yuan noted that it is important to remember that this was observational data: it shows an association, not causation.

    “We cannot yet conclude that GLP‑1 RAs treat migraine, and patients should not seek these medications specifically for that purpose outside of a clinical trial or established indication,” he said.

    “It is also worth noting that our comparison with topiramate, which shares a weight loss property, may partly reflect topiramate’s poor real-world tolerability and compliance rather than a true pharmacological advantage of GLP‑1 RAs.”

    However, he also stated that the overall signal is encouraging and justifies further investigation.

    Medhat Mikhael, MD, pain management specialist and medical director of the non-operative program at the Spine Health Center at MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, CA, who was not involved in the study, agreed.

    “I believe it is a good start, but it is far too early to consider it as an agent or drug to use for [the] prevention of migraine. We need several large-scale trials to assess safety, particularly in young and middle-aged women, [who] constitute the majority of the population with migraine.”

    The main goal of migraine management is to treat the symptoms and prevent future attacks.

    “Managing migraine nowadays has been very advanced, and it depends on the cause and frequency of the migraine,” said Mikhael.

    Some quick steps to ease symptoms include:

    • rest or nap in a quiet, dark room
    • place an ice pack or cool cloth on your forehead
    • drink plenty of fluids, especially if the migraine causes vomiting

    Short-term treatments include:

    • triptan drugs
    • CGRP drugs
    • over-the-counter medications, such as ibuprofen, aspirin, or acetaminophen
    • nausea relief medications

    Preventive medications include:

    If you experience migraine, speak with your healthcare professional to decide what care plan is best for you.

  • Capcom’s long-delayed Pragmata is now arriving a week earlier

    Capcom revealed during its March 5 Spotlight showcase that Pragmata, its repeatedly delayed dystopian sci-fi adventure game, will release on April 17 for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch 2 and PC via Steam. The game had been set for April 24 since its appearance at The Game Awards in December.

    The game’s new trailer shows previously unseen locations and gameplay moments, and new elements within the Shelter, the in-game lunar base. Pragmata was first revealed in 2020 with a 2022 release window. Capcom then delayed it to 2023, then went radio silent on the project before resurfacing with a new 2026 date last year.

    A free Sketchbook demo is available now on the PlayStation Store, Xbox Store, Nintendo eShop and Steam. Pre-orders for the game are available now.

  • COPPA 2.0 passes the Senate again, unanimously this time

    Today the US Senate unanimously passed proposed legislation known as COPPA 2.0. This measure, fully named the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act, aims to create new protections for younger users online, such as blocking platforms from collecting their personal data without consent.

    COPPA 2.0 is a modernized take on the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, attempting to address recent changes in common online activities, like targeted advertising, that could prove harmful to minors. Lawmakers have made several attempts to get this bipartisan bill through. While it has made varying amounts of headway in the Senate, none of the COPPA 2.0 bills to date have gotten past the House of Representatives. Industry groups such as NetChoice have previously opposed COPPA 2.0 and other measures around minors’ online activity such as KOSA, the Kids Online Safety Act. NetChoice members include Google, YouTube, Meta, Reddit, Discord, TikTok and X. Google specifically has since changed its stance to support COPPA 2.0, however.

    “This bill expands the current law protecting our kids online to ensure companies cannot collect personal information from anyone under the age of 17,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said in a statement about the latest result. “This is a big step forward for protecting our kids. We hope the House can join us. They haven’t thus far.”

    However, there has been a bigger push both domestically and internationally toward restrictions on when and how younger people engage online. Several states — Utah, California and Washington to name a few — have enacted laws requiring some level of age verification, either to access mature content online or to use social media apps at all. Many of these efforts have raised concerns about privacy regarding where and how people’s personal information is stored and protected. COPPA 2.0 might wind up benefitting from the privacy debates since it emphasizes giving teens and parents ways to protect themselves from having their data used against them rather than asking adults to give up data in order to use the internet as usual.

    Update, March 6 2026, 11:38AM ET: Article updated with additional context on Google.

  • Aave Labs Proposes Dedicated Bug Bounty Program for Aave V4 With Sherlock

    Aave Labs Proposes Dedicated Bug Bounty Program for Aave V4 With Sherlock

    • Aave Labs has published a proposal for a dedicated bug bounty program for a 24/7 channel to report security issues.
    • High-priority submissions require participants to stake at least 250 $USDC, which is forfeited if the report is invalid or deemed spam.

    Aave Labs has published a proposal to launch a new dedicated bug bounty program for its v4 on Sherlock’s security platform for DeFi protocols.

    The proposal aims to establish a channel to report any security concerns on the DeFi platform as it transitions to the fourth version (v4) of its protocol. The Labs says that Sherlock has been working with the community to audit the current v3 protocol and was used for early v4 testing. This translates to shared reporting standards and escalation paths for all parties.

    Founder Stani Kulechov noted that bug bounties have been an important part of the network’s security strategy. He also praised the Sherlock team for its expertise in managing previous bug bounty programs and security contests.

    We propose launching the Aave V4 bug bounty program with Sherlock. Bug bounties have long been an important part of Aave’s security strategy, and the Sherlock team has demonstrated strong expertise in managing both security contests and bug bounty programs. https://t.co/azjjaV7fIZ

    — Stani.eth (@StaniKulechov) March 5, 2026

    On its part, Sherlock expressed support for the proposed program, adding, “Always-on coverage, structured triage, and clear escalation for high-severity reports as V4 ships and scales. Aave’s commitment to security stays constant.”

    Aave’s 250 $USDC Stake to Prevent Spam

    The bug bounty program will be limited to the Aave v4 repositories and deployed contracts. Any expansion or migration of other programs would need a separate governance poll.

    Participants can hand in medium- or low-priority submissions at will. However, they cannot upgrade these to upper-tier submissions even if they expand in scope to ensure they pay enough attention to the original classification.

    The high-priority and critical submissions, which receive heftier payouts, will be limited to users who stake 250 $USDC. If the submission is valid, the stake is returned together with the payout. If invalid, the stake is forfeited to pay for triage costs. This is intended to prevent spam where participants classify all submissions as high-priority to take a shot at the higher payout.

    For high-priority submissions, Aave’s designated security team members are instantly notified via Telegram and Slack to respond immediately. The lower-priority submissions are assessed by an AI program working alongside human reviewers. Only the reports deemed higher-quality will be submitted for review.

    Image courtesy of Aave Labs.

    Aave Labs conceded that while the 250 $USDC staking will reduce spam, it could put off some genuine researchers from submitting high-priority security concerns. To mitigate, it intends to keep the medium-priority tier free and to prioritize experienced researchers using this tier.

    It also acknowledged that by barring the re-classification of medium submissions to high-priority, it would punish misclassified submissions. It intends to publish an extensive guide as part of the program launch materials.

    The proposal comes weeks after a dispute between Aave Labs and BGD Labs imploded, with the latter announcing its departure at the end of this month. BGD, which was contracted by the Aave DAO to cater to security and technical issues, says the Labs has frustrated its efforts to advance the protocol.

  • Binance Responds to Inquiry Letter from the U.S. Senate

    Binance Responds to Inquiry Letter from the U.S. Senate

    Binance, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, has officially responded to an inquiry letter sent by US Senator Richard Blumenthal, denying recent allegations of sanctions violations.

    The company argued that the media reports were based on misunderstandings and that its compliance processes were among the strongest in the industry.

    In its response to a Senate hearing on February 24, Binance stated that the allegations, first raised by The Wall Street Journal, were “defamatory.” The company said that the claims of sanctions non-compliance in the news reports were untrue and that its operations were misinterpreted.

    Binance stated, “We take these allegations seriously. However, they misrepresent both our daily operations and the significant progress we’ve made in building one of the strongest compliance programs in the industry.”

    The exchange claimed that strict KYC (Know Your Customer) and sanctions controls are implemented on the platform. According to Binance, users from Iran are banned from accessing the platform, and accounts deemed risky during investigations conducted by security forces are removed from the platform.

    The company also stated that accounts are reviewed when credible risk information emerges, closed when necessary, and shared with relevant authorities. Binance argued that its compliance mechanism “worked effectively” in the incidents mentioned in the Senate letter.

    Binance stated that its compliance program is constantly being strengthened and that the platform’s security standards are high, adding that more than 300 million users worldwide trust the platform.

    Binance also stated that its response to the Senate was prepared based on the information available and that it could provide additional information if necessary.

    *This is not investment advice.