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Athletic performance apparel, footwear and accessories brand Under Armour is expanding its efforts to offer not only the products athletes wear while playing sports, but also the ones they need at other times of the day.Company executives said Thursday Nov. 3 during the companys quarterly earnings call that there are product categories such as casual wear that Under Armour has not addressed as extensively as it has done with the performance-oriented products 鈥?and this opens up a $300 stanley ca (https://www.cups-stanley-cups.ca) billion opportunity.Under Armour Interim President and CEO Colin Browne said during stanley thermos (https://www.stanley-cups.it) the call that the company currently creates products athl stanley cup uk (https://www.cups-stanley.uk) etes need while training, competing and recovering. If you think about that, it really only probably encompasses 20% or 30% of their day, Browne said. So, the opportunity of leaning into the other 70% of their day is clearly a huge opportunity. These comments came as Under Armour reported that during the quarter ended Sept. 30, its revenue was up 2% year over year, which was in line with its expectations.Looking ahead, the company has lowered its outlook for fiscal year 2023 and now expects revenue growth to be in the low-single-digit percentage range rather than the previously announced 5% to 7%. Under Armour attributed this to a more challenging retail environment and changes in foreign currency, according to the release.To boost that growth in the quarters to come, the company will lean on its strengths of performance product innovation, consumer con Qehj Today In Payments Around The World: i2c Tapped To Power Digital-Native Financial App; Orange Bank Purchases Anytime
The U.S. may be moving slowly but eventually toward EMV and chip-driven payment cards, but point of sale POS systems dominate the landscape for data breaches, while accounting for only a tiny minority of fraudulent activity outside the country, PC World reported Tuesday June 9 via IDG News Service.A study by Trustwave, a security firm, conducted last year found that hackings at POS locations were behind a majority of data breaches in North America, a number that declined to 10 percent in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and only 11 percent in the Asia/Pacific region. Trustwaves analysis looked at 574 breaches, with half of them occurring in the U.S.The reason behind such a yawning discrepancy EMV, which ties card chips to efficient antifraud controls. The technology has been more widely embraced beyond U.S. shores. IDG noted that hackers find barriers to cloning cards tough to surmount, stanley usa (https://www.stanleycups.us) even if they are able to capture data encoded on the magnetic stripes lining the backs of those cards stanley kubek (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.pl) .In those areas wh stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.cz) ere EMV has been firmly entrenched for at least a decade, online transactions and other activities in which cards need not be physically present have been the favorite hunting ground for hackers 鈥?hence the trend toward data breaches at eCommerce sites.Looking at the global picture, Trustwave found that compromised POS聽systems made up 40 percent of the breaches studied, and that is a bit worse than the 33 percent seen in 2013. ECommerce sites accounted for 42 perce