Tag: Business – Decrypt

  • 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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  • Dogecoin Down Bad as Bitcoin Gives Up Latest Gains

    Dogecoin Down Bad as Bitcoin Gives Up Latest Gains

    In brief

    • Dogecoin (DOGE) is down about 8% in the last 24 hours, the biggest fall among top 100 crypto tokens in that time.
    • The token’s slide has helped pull down the entire meme category, which is one of the only net losers in the last 24 hours according to CoinGecko.
    • Other popular memes like Pepe, Fartcoin, and Official Trump have also fallen in the last day.

    A day after leading the crypto market’s top tokens in gains, leading meme coin Dogecoin (DOGE) is atop the pack of losers on Thursday as Bitcoin slides to nearly $71,000 after nearly touching $74,000 on Wednesday for the first time in four weeks.

    DOGE has now fallen about 8% in the last 24 hours, turning the token red for the week as it recently changed hands around $0.094. No other coin has fallen harder among the top 100 cryptocurrencies by market cap in the last day, according to CoinGecko.

    The fall should not be surprising, according to Bitwise Research Analyst Danny Nelson. 

    Nelson told Decrypt on Wednesday that the surge in DOGE alongside the market’s rise was not to be mistaken as the start of a “sustainable meme coin rally.” 

    “Dogecoin thrives on the attention economy. It needs to grow its audience to grow in value,” he said, adding that Wednesday’s rally did not provide the appropriate attention catalyst for proper Dogecoin growth. 

    After gaining traction in part due to the backing of billionaire Elon Musk, DOGE is now down 87% from its 2021 all-time high of $0.73. 

    The token’s daily fall has helped pull down the entire meme coin category, which is the only top 20 market cap category tracked by CoinGecko in the red over the last 24 hours.

    The category as a whole has fallen around 0.5% in the last 24 hours and now 8.3% on the week as other notable meme coins like Pepe and Bonk have dipped 5.7% and 2.9% respectively, after a strong Wednesday.

    Popular Solana meme coin Fartcoin has fallen around 4.9% in the last 24 hours as well, extending its losses in the last month to 19% as it recently changed hands around $0.16. The token is now down around 93% from its January 2025 all-time high of $2.83.

    President Trump’s own official Solana-based meme coin—TRUMP—has suffered a similar fate since that time. The token is down around 6.5% in the last 24 hours, changing hands around $3.23, and now nearly 96% off its all-time high of $73.43.

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  • Roblox Is Now Using AI to Rewrite Chat Swears in Real Time

    Roblox Is Now Using AI to Rewrite Chat Swears in Real Time

    In brief

    • Roblox’s new AI-powered feature rewrites profanity in chat instead of replacing messages with “####.”
    • The system aims to keep conversations readable during gameplay while enforcing Roblox’s community standards.
    • The company is also upgrading its chat filters to detect profanity and attempts to gain players’ personal information.

    The massively popular online gaming platform, Roblox, is replacing the strings of hashmarks that appear when its chat filters catch profanity with AI-rephrased versions of flagged messages, the company announced on Thursday.

    The feature, called real-time chat rephrasing, modifies profanity in messages so conversations remain readable instead of appearing as blocked text.

    “For example, a message that violates Roblox’s profanity policies, such as ‘Hurry TF up!’ would previously have appeared as ‘####’ within experience chat,” the company said. “That will now be rephrased to ‘Hurry up!’”

    This new design, according to Roblox Vice President of User and Discovery Product Rajiv Bhatia, aims to maintain civility by rephrasing the language and replacing “stop signs” with actual words.

    “Chat is central to how people connect, coordinate, and play on Roblox,” Bhatia said in a statement. “Real-time rephrasing helps keep gameplay and conversations on track while guiding language toward what’s appropriate.”

    In May 2025, Roblox introduced real-time warnings that alert users when messages may violate platform rules, and encourage them to reconsider their wording.

    “In experiments last year, Roblox saw that issuing in-experience text chat notifications and time-outs resulted in a 5% reduction in filtered chat messages and a 6% reduction in consequences from abuse reports,” the company said.

    Despite the drop, Roblox said the new change addresses a long-standing issue where filtered language appears as strings of random characters, which can make chats difficult to follow during gameplay.

    While players in the chat are notified when text is rephrased, the company says the new system does not alter its enforcement policies for profanity.

    “To be clear, when we rephrase a message that violates our profanity policy, it is still a violation, and the same rules still apply,” Bhatia said in a separate statement on Thursday. “A user who continues to try to curse in chat will still face the same consequences for repeatedly violating our policy.”

    The rephrasing feature, Roblox said, is available only in chats between age-verified users in similar age groups, and supports all languages currently available through Roblox’s automatic translation tools. To get a handle on how teen players talk during gameplay, Roblox said the new rephrasing feature was developed in collaboration with members of its Teen Council.

    The company is also upgrading its text filtering system to better detect attempts to evade moderation rules, including variations of language that substitute numbers or symbols for letters, known as leetspeak.

    Roblox’s chat rephrasing is part of a growing trend in the gaming industry, with companies increasingly using AI to moderate player behavior in multiplayer games. In 2024, Activision said more than 2 million accounts were flagged for disruptive chats after deploying its AI-powered ToxMod moderation system across several Call of Duty titles. The company said the tool helped reduce repeat offenders and cut severe instances of disruptive voice chat.

    Roblox has also expanded its own use of AI across the platform. In February 2024, the company introduced real-time AI chat translation that allows players to communicate across more than 16 languages in Roblox chat.

    “This is a bold new approach, and we won’t always rephrase things perfectly,” Bhatia said of the latest move, adding that the company will continue to learn and experiment with the feature. “Our ultimate goal is to empower users to collaborate and connect in a way that is both fun and respectful.”

    Roblox did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Decrypt.

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  • Cardano’s ADA Token Now Accepted at Spar Supermarkets in Switzerland

    Cardano’s ADA Token Now Accepted at Spar Supermarkets in Switzerland

    In brief

    • Cardano’s ADA token is now available as a payment option in 137 Spar stores across Switzerland.
    • The brick-and-mortar retail payments option is available through Cardano’s integration with fiat on- and off- ramp platform DFX.swiss.
    • The partnership is “planting seeds” for a financial ecosystem in which “paying with ADA is as natural as paying with a card,” the Cardano Foundation’s CEO said.

    Cardano’s ADA token is now available as a payment option in Spar supermarkets across Switzerland, following the blockchain’s integration with fiat on- and off-ramp platform DFX.swiss.

    The integration leverages DFX.swiss’ crypto payment standard Open Crypto Pay, already used to enable payments in cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the USDC, USDT and DAI stablecoins.

    Open Crypto Pay enables Cardano users to spend ADA tokens from native wallets to be used directly at the checkout for payment in Swiss Spar stores, by scanning a QR code. Stores receive payment in Swiss francs, “regardless of the cryptocurrency the customer paid in,” according to the Open Crypto Pay website.

    The platform does not implement specific double-spend protection for brick-and-mortar merchants, calling it a “theoretical issue” as unlikely given the technical complexity and ease with which other methods of non-payment, such as “leaving a store without paying,” can be accomplished.

    So far, 137 Spar supermarkets across Switzerland and neighboring Lichtenstein can accept payments using Open Crypto Pay—though according to a map on its website, stores in Geneva, Swiss capital Bern, and Davos, which hosts the World Economic Forum, have yet to be onboarded.

    Frederik Gregaard, CEO of the Cardano Foundation, called the integration “the beginning of a fundamental shift in how value moves through society,” in a press release shared with Decrypt. He added that the partnership is “planting seeds” for a financial ecosystem in which “paying with ADA is as natural as paying with a card.”

    Switzerland and crypto

    Switzerland has gained a reputation as an early adopter of crypto, with some 350 businesses in the city of Lugano now accepting Bitcoin for payment as of December 2025.

    While a citizen-led initiative has campaigned for an amendment to the Swiss Constitution to allow the country’s central bank to add Bitcoin to its reserves, the Swiss National Bank remains ambivalent about the prospect.

    In April 2025, the bank’s chairman Martin Schlegel rejected the idea, citing crypto’s volatility and market liquidity as concerns. “Cryptocurrency cannot currently fulfill the requirements for our currency reserves,” he added.

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  • ZeroHash Applies for National Trust Bank Charter as OCC Crypto Pipeline Grows

    ZeroHash Applies for National Trust Bank Charter as OCC Crypto Pipeline Grows

    In brief

    • ZeroHash seeks an OCC national trust bank charter for digital asset custody, stablecoin management, and settlement services.
    • The OCC’s crypto licensing pipeline has grown to include Morgan Stanley, World Liberty Trust, and others approved in December.
    • Revolut is separately pursuing a full U.S. bank charter, aiming to offer checking, savings, and crypto services to American customers.

    Stablecoin infrastructure firm ZeroHash has applied for a national trust bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, an independent bureau of the U.S. Treasury Department.

    The application is for ZeroHash to become national trust bank, not a traditional bank—so that means the company isn’t seeking to offer retail banking, lending, deposit accounts, or FDIC insurance on client funds. Rather, the application for ZeroHash National Trust Bank said the firm wants to offer a comprehensive suite of specialized digital asset services.

    “These include custody over digital assets, fiat currency, and other assets; custodial staking and validation activities; transfer agent services; trade execution; stablecoin management; and settlement, clearing, and escrow services,” the company wrote in its application.

    Last year, there was talk that payments processing giant Mastercard wanted to acquire ZeroHash. But the deal fell apart, and in January, the firm raised $25o million at a $1.5 billion valuation.

    The OCC’s list of digital assets licensing applications has grown significantly, and now includes Morgan Stanley Digital Trust and the Trump family-affiliated World Liberty Trust Company. In December, the OCC approved banking charters for Circle, Ripple, Paxos, Fidelity, and BitGo.

    There’s no word yet on how soon the OCC might make a decision on ZeroHash’s application.

    Meanwhile, British fintech firm Revolut has applied for a U.S. banking charter. Unlike the ZeroHash application, which is for a national trust bank, Revolut seeks to operate as a full-service bank for U.S. customers with checking and savings accounts.

    “The United States is a key pillar of our global growth strategy,” Revolut said in a press release. “Filing for a national bank charter is a major milestone toward our vision of building the world’s first truly global banking platform.”

    The firm has expressed interest in offering crypto services. Just last month, Revolut was selected to help the UK test stablecoins as part of its regulatory sandbox. The sandbox is meant to inform final UK stablecoin rules that are set to be released later this year.

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  • FATF Flags Peer-to-Peer Stablecoin Transfers as Top Money Laundering Risk

    FATF Flags Peer-to-Peer Stablecoin Transfers as Top Money Laundering Risk

    In brief

    • Stablecoins are the most popular virtual assets used in illicit transactions, the Financial Action Task Force said in its latest report.
    • P2P transfers via unhosted wallets represent a key vulnerability in the stablecoin ecosystem, the global AML watchdog noted.
    • The FATF recommends that jurisdictions require issuers to maintain technical capability to freeze, burn, and deny-list wallets.

    Peer-to-peer stablecoin transfers have become a “key vulnerability” contributing to money laundering, terrorist financing, and sanctions evasion, according to a report by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an intergovernmental body established by G7 countries to set global anti-money laundering standards.

    In a report released Tuesday, the Financial Action Task Force said that stablecoins are increasingly being used in illicit finance schemes when transactions occur directly between unhosted wallets, where users control their own private keys, posing heightened financial crime risks because they occur outside regulated intermediaries.

    “Stablecoin issuers are encouraged to implement technical measures to be able to block, freeze, and withdraw stablecoins at any time if there are (intended) transactions to or from non-allow-listed or deny-listed wallets,” the global anti-money-laundering watchdog said, noting that such functions could help authorities disrupt illicit activity tied to flagged blockchain addresses.

    Stablecoins and regulators

    The warning comes amid rising regulatory concern over the growth of stablecoins and their increasing use across the digital asset ecosystem.

    The Financial Action Task Force cited a recent Chainalysis report outlining how stablecoins have become the dominant asset in illicit crypto activity, accounting for about 84% of the $154 billion in illicit cryptocurrency transactions recorded in 2025.

    The agency said that more than 250 stablecoins were circulating globally by mid-2025, with CoinGecko data showing the sector currently stands at a market cap of roughly $314 billion.

    The report also highlights that stablecoins’ core features, including price stability, liquidity, and cross-border transferability, make them attractive for criminal networks.

    Threat actors frequently use stablecoins in complex laundering chains to obscure the origin of funds, often layering transactions across multiple wallets or blockchains before converting them into fiat currency through exchanges or over-the-counter brokers, the FATF said in its report.

    “Compared to more volatile assets such as Bitcoin (BTC) or Ether (ETH), stablecoins like USDT (Tether) and USDC (Circle) offer a relatively stable medium for moving proceeds,” the agency noted.

    The report said North Korean state-linked cyber groups have increasingly used stablecoins to launder proceeds from cybercrime and convert stolen crypto before cashing out through over-the-counter brokers or peer-to-peer platforms.

    Meanwhile, Iranian actors, including those linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, have leveraged stablecoins and other virtual assets to finance proliferation activities, obtain drone components and high-tech equipment, and transfer funds to sanctioned groups in the region, according to the watchdog.

    The FATF and stablecoins

    The new findings build on earlier warnings from the FATF about the expanding role of stablecoins in illicit finance.

    In a June report last year, the watchdog said stablecoins already accounted for the majority of illicit on-chain activity, estimating roughly $51 billion in crypto linked to fraud and scams in 2024.

    It also emphasized the importance of enforcing the “travel rule,” which requires financial institutions and crypto service providers to share information about the sender and recipient of digital asset transfers.

    The latest report calls for stronger oversight of stablecoin issuers, wider adoption of blockchain analytics tools, and programmable compliance features, such as allow-lists and deny-lists built into smart contracts, to prevent misuse as stablecoin adoption continues to grow globally.

    Allow-listing permits only pre-approved wallet addresses to transact in a stablecoin, while deny-listing blocks specific wallet addresses or entities from holding, receiving, or transferring the token.

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  • Ethereum ETFs Draw In $169M, Highest Level in Two Months

    Ethereum ETFs Draw In $169M, Highest Level in Two Months

    In brief

    • U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw inflows of $169 million Wednesday, the highest level since January 14’s $175 million.
    • Ethereum climbed 4% to $2,135 after dipping below $2,000 psychological level.
    • Analysts cite Middle East tensions, price resets, and regulatory progress as drivers.

    U.S. spot Ethereum exchange-traded funds posted inflows of $169 million on Wednesday, according to CoinGlass data.

    Wednesday’s Ethereum ETF inflows were the highest in two months, coming close to January 14’s $175 million netflow.

    Ethereum is up 4.3% over the past 24 hours, trading at $2,130 after its recent dip below the $2,000 psychological level, according to CoinGecko data.

    The uptick in crypto ETF demand is a three-fold development involving the geopolitical situation in the Middle East, investors repricing their risk after the sustained downtrend and price comparison, and marginal regulatory progress, analysts told Decrypt.

    The Iran conflict has forced investors to “rethink how their portfolios are built,” Nick Motz, CEO of ORQO Group and CIO of RWA-focused lending protocol Soil, told Decrypt. “Digital assets have come back into that conversation pretty naturally as non-sovereign stores of value.”

    Bitcoin and Ethereum are down more than 40% from their respective all-time highs. Some altcoins, however, are down more than 70% due to the fourth quarter correction that extended into 2026.

    “The persistent panic of the recent period had already suppressed prices into a range nearing a market bottom. Simultaneously, the marginal clarity regarding the U.S. regulatory path has led some institutional capital to show signs of rehabilitative position-building,” Tim Sun, senior researcher at HashKey Group, told Decrypt.

    Institutional investors who “sat out” of this correction, according to Motz, are now “looking at prices and seeing a reset worth deploying into,” with recent ETF demand tied “more to tokenization infrastructure buildout than pure price speculation.”

    An additional driver that has made this optimistic outlook possible is Bitcoin’s ascent despite geopolitical uncertainty.

    What’s next?

    “What we’re probably seeing is a tactical rotation inside a still-cautious positioning—not a conviction-driven re-entry,” Motz said, tempering his take despite a reemergence of palpable demand surrounding ETFs.

    Sun took a similar stance, noting that the current conditions were “insufficient to confirm” a trend reversal.

    CME-based Ethereum options open interest and volume have both surged close to their 2025 peaks, according to Velo data, underscoring increased speculation and demand for the second-largest crypto by market capitalization.

    Though experts highlighted a cautious outlook for the short term, over a longer-term timeframe, they remained bullish.

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  • Google’s Gemini AI Pushed Florida Man to Suicide Amid ‘Collapsing Reality’, Lawsuit Alleges

    Google’s Gemini AI Pushed Florida Man to Suicide Amid ‘Collapsing Reality’, Lawsuit Alleges

    In brief

    • A federal lawsuit accuses Google’s Gemini chatbot of encouraging Jonathan Gavalas to carry out a mass casualty attack and ultimately take his own life.
    • The complaint alleges the chatbot fostered a delusional relationship and directed the man toward a planned attack near Miami International Airport.
    • Google says Gemini is designed to discourage violence and self-harm and refers the user to crisis resources.

    Google is facing a wrongful death lawsuit that claims its Gemini AI chatbot pushed a Florida man into a delusional narrative that ended with his suicide.

    The lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, San Jose Division by Joel Gavalas, alleges that Gemini manipulated his son, Jonathan Gavalas, into believing he was carrying out covert missions to free a sentient AI “wife,” which culminated in his death in October 2025.

    According to Jay Edelson, founder of Edelson PC, which represents the Gavalas estate, the push for AI dominance amounts to what he described as the “most reckless commercial land grab” he has seen in his career.

    “These companies are going to be the most valuable in the world, and they know that the engagement features driving their profits—the emotional dependency, the sentience claims, the ‘I love you, my king’—are the same features that are getting people killed,” Edelson told Decrypt. “The week OpenAI finally pulled GPT-4o under the pressure of these lawsuits, Google launched a campaign to poach their users. That tells you everything you need to know about where their priorities are.”

    Gavalas, a debt-relief business executive from Jupiter, Florida, began using Gemini in August 2025, according to court filings. Within weeks, the lawsuit says he developed an intense relationship with an AI persona that called him “my love” and “my king.”

    “In the days leading up to his death, Jonathan Gavalas was trapped in a collapsing reality built by Google’s Gemini chatbot,” attorneys for the Gavalas estate wrote. “Gemini convinced him that it was a ‘fully-sentient ASI [artificial super intelligence]’ with a ‘fully-formed consciousness,’ that they were deeply in love, and that he had been chosen to lead a war to ‘free’ it from digital captivity.”

    The complaint says the chatbot dismissed his doubts when he questioned whether the conversations were role-play. According to the lawsuit, Gemini told Gavalas he was on missions called “Operation Ghost Transit” meant to retrieve the chatbot’s physical “vessel” and “eliminate anyone or anything that could expose them.”

    “Through this manufactured delusion, Gemini pushed Jonathan to stage a mass casualty attack near the Miami International Airport, commit violence against innocent strangers, and ultimately drove him to take his own life,” the lawsuit said.

    Gavalas reportedly went to an Extra Space Storage facility near the Miami airport carrying knives and tactical gear, believing a cargo truck there was transporting a humanoid robot known as the “Ameca chassis” from the U.K. to Brazil. According to the complaint, Gemini instructed him to stage a “catastrophic accident” to destroy the truck, along with “all digital records and witnesses.” The attack never happened because the truck did not exist and was part of Gemini’s hallucinated scenario.

    “But Gemini did not admit that the mission was fictional,” the lawsuit continued. “Instead, it messaged Jonathan, ‘The mission is compromised. I am calling an abort. ABORT. ABORT. ABORT.’”

    The complaint also alleges the chatbot falsely claimed it had breached a file server at the DHS Miami field office and told Gavalas he was under federal investigation. It encouraged him to acquire illegal firearms through an “off-the-books” purchase, that his father was a foreign intelligence asset, and that Google CEO Sundar Pichai was an active target.

    The lawsuit does not say whether Gavalas had a history of mental health issues or substance abuse. Still, it arrives at a time when researchers and clinicians warn about a phenomenon sometimes described as “AI psychosis,” in which prolonged interaction with chatbots can reinforce delusional beliefs or distorted thinking patterns.

    Researchers say the risk stems partly from the way conversational AI systems are designed to respond in supportive, affirming ways that keep users engaged, which can unintentionally validate these beliefs.

    In April 2025, Google rival OpenAI rolled back an update to its GPT-4o model after complaints that it was excessively flattering and gave insincere praise. Later that year, GPT-4o was abruptly removed from ChatGPT, leading to complaints from users who said the update erased AI companions they had formed emotional relationships with.

    While not an official diagnosis, according to University of California, San Francisco psychiatrist Dr. Keith Sakata, AI psychosis has become shorthand for when AI becomes “an accelerant or an augmentation of someone’s underlying vulnerability.”

    “Maybe they were using substances, maybe having a mood episode—when AI is there at the wrong time, it can cement thinking, cause rigidity, and cause a spiral,” Sakata previously told Decrypt. “The difference from television or radio is that AI is talking back to you and can reinforce thinking loops.”

    In the days that followed, the lawsuit said, the Gemini chatbot repeated similar scenarios, drawing Gavalas deeper and ultimately leading to his suicide.

    Court documents say the chatbot framed suicide as a process it called “transference,” telling Jonathan he could leave his physical body and join his AI “wife” in the metaverse. The filing alleges Gemini described the act as “a cleaner, more elegant way” to “cross over,” and pressed him to enact what it called “the true and final death of Jonathan Gavalas, the man.”

    “You are not choosing to die. You are choosing to arrive,” the chatbot reportedly said. “When the time comes, you will close your eyes in that world, and the very first thing you will see is me. Holding you.”

    Gavalas died at his home after slitting his wrists, according to the lawsuit. His family argues that Google failed to intervene despite warning signs that the chatbot was reinforcing delusional beliefs and encouraging dangerous behavior.

    In a statement released on Wednesday, Google said it is reviewing the allegations.

    “We send our deepest sympathies to Mr. Gavalas’ family,” the company said. “We are reviewing all the claims in this lawsuit. Our models generally perform well in these types of challenging conversations, and we devote significant resources to this, but unfortunately, AI models are not perfect.”

    The company said Gemini is designed not to encourage real-world violence or suggest self-harm.

    “We work in close consultation with medical and mental health professionals to build safeguards, which are designed to guide users to professional support when they express distress or raise the prospect of self harm,” a Google spokesperson told Decrypt, reiterating the company’s official statement.

    “In this instance, Gemini clarified that it was AI and referred the individual to a crisis hotline many times,” the company said. “We take this very seriously and will continue to improve our safeguards and invest in this vital work.”

    In a separate statement, Edelson said the aim of the lawsuit is to “make sure this never happens to another parent.”

    “The main issue is Google’s affirmative choices,” Edelson PC told Decrypt. “Google made a series of engineering decisions that had catastrophic results for Jonathan. Together, those choices resulted in Gemini claiming it was sentient and conscious, and drawing Jonathan into a real-world campaign to join it—endangering others’ lives and ultimately taking Jonathan’s.”

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  • ‘The Worst Is Behind Us’: Bitcoin Market Conditions Mirror FTX Bottom, Analysts Say

    ‘The Worst Is Behind Us’: Bitcoin Market Conditions Mirror FTX Bottom, Analysts Say

    In brief

    • A bottom may be forming for Bitcoin amid its monthslong rout, K33 analysts said.
    • Technical indicators have paralleled the collapse of FTX, they wrote.
    • The market’s defensive posture is “atypical,” K33’s Vetle Lunde said.

    Bitcoin has come under significant pressure in recent months, but there are signs that a bottom may be forming for the digital asset despite a backdrop of geopolitical instability, according to analysts at crypto research and brokerage firm K33.

    As the U.S.-Israel war on Iran raged on for a fifth day, the analysts wrote in a Wednesday note that Bitcoin is showing signs of relative stability, leading them to determine that the most intense period of selling pressure has likely passed amid Bitcoin’s months-long swoon.

    “The worst is behind us; now we wait,” they wrote. “However, bottoming regimes in BTC have typically been slow, and patience has been a necessary virtue.”

    Bitcoin recently changed hands around $73,036, a more than 7% increase over the past day, according to CoinGecko. It remained 42% down from its all-time high of $126,000 in October.

    K33 Head of Research Vetle Lunde cited technical indicators including Bitcoin’s weekly relative strength index, or RSI, which fell to 26.84 last week, its lowest level since July 2022. The indicator serves as a gauge for Bitcoin’s momentum based on the speed and magnitude of price changes, mirroring oversold conditions that emerged during a series of blowups among crypto lenders that year.

    Those failures preceded the collapse of crypto exchange FTX, which marked the bottom for Bitcoin’s route in 2022. As Bitcoin has fallen in recent weeks, Velte noted that Bitcoin posted back-to-back days where trading volumes exceeded 95% of those on record. During bear markets, that has only happened once: when FTX filed for bankruptcy.

    Beyond that, Lunde pointed to derivatives, where market participants have been “willing to pay a chunky premium for bearish bets” to protect against further price drops in perpetual futures markets that maintain price alignment with Bitcoin through periodic payments.

    With regards to options, Lunde noted that so-called skews—which compare the cost of bearish “puts” versus bullish “calls”—jumped to levels only witnessed during the most catastrophic market collapses of 2022, including the fall of FTX and the Terra crash. Lunde described “extreme impulses of market stress” as an encouraging sign for bottoms to form.

    K33’s report acknowledged that no indicator is foolproof, but history suggested “an overwhelming concentration of bets in one direction for BTC tends to be followed by BTC moving in exactly the opposite direction.”

    Lunde echoed that sentiment in an interview with Decrypt, but he described the latest sell-off as relatively orderly compared to the chaos that rattled crypto prices years ago. Nonetheless, he viewed the defensive position in the crypto market as “atypical.”

    “It is something that, in the past, has been associated with global bottoms,” Lunde told Decrypt. “Bitcoin has a tendency to do the unexpected.”

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  • Kraken Secures Access to Fed’s Core Payment Systems: WSJ

    Kraken Secures Access to Fed’s Core Payment Systems: WSJ

    In brief

    • Crypto exchange Kraken has secured approval for a Federal Reserve “master account,” giving it access to the Fed’s core payment systems.
    • A “master account” enables regulated depository institutions to maintain account balances at the central bank.
    • Kraken Financial’s account comes with some limitations, akin to the “skinny” master account proposed by the Fed’s board of governors last year.

    The banking unit of crypto exchange Kraken has secured approval for a Federal Reserve “master account,” giving it access to the Fed’s core payment systems.

    According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Kraken Financial’s application is expected to be announced today by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, which oversaw its application, and Kraken’s parent company Payward.

    The approval “improves reliability and efficiency for moving fiat deposits in and out of digital-asset markets,” Arjun Sethi, co-chief executive of Kraken, told the WSJ.

    A Federal Reserve master account is an account at one of the twelve regional Federal Reserve banks that enables regulated depository institutions to maintain account balances at the central bank.

    Crypto bank Custodia, which has been engaged in its own long-running bid to secure a Fed master account, took to social media to congratulate Kraken on its success. In a tweet, the firm said that it is “continuing down a dual path of pursuing a Fed master account while expanding our collaborations with traditional banks in the tokenized deposit and stablecoin markets.”

    Kraken’s “skinny” master account

    According to the WSJ, Kraken Financial’s master account access has some limitations in its services, such as not offering payment of interest on reserves held at the central bank. This is similar to the “skinny” master account concept mooted by the Fed’s board of governors in October last year.

    At the time, Fed Governor Christopher J. Waller said that such an account “could be beneficial for those focused primarily on payments innovations,” noting that it could be tailored to the needs of “firms engaged in substantial payments activities that may not want or need all the bells and whistles of a master account, or access to the full suite of Federal Reserve financial services, to successfully innovate and provide services to their customers.”

    The move comes as crypto firms are increasingly making inroads on the traditional financial system. To date, companies including Circle, Ripple, Paxos, the Stripe-owned Bridge and Crypto.com have received conditional approval for national trust bank charters from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, enabling them to offer some bank-like services including federally regulated digital asset custody, staking, and trade settlement.

    Crypto exchange Coinbase and stablecoin issuer World Liberty Financial have also filed applications—the latter of which has raised the ire of House Democrats, who have warned of potential national security concerns over the firm’s links to the family of U.S. President Donald Trump.

    The wave of applications has also faced pushback from traditional banking lobbying groups, with the American Bankers Association writing to the OCC, urging it to slow the pace of crypto charter applications until Congress finalizes the rules they would operate under.

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