Auteur Sujet: rloe Leaving The Payments Status Quo Behind  (Lu 11 fois)

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rloe Leaving The Payments Status Quo Behind
« le: Août 06, 2025, 07:07:02 am »
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 Bitcoin mining could grow abundantly in Latin America, research from data analysis firm Arcane Research predicts, according to Investing.The Monday  Jan. 3  report suggests that cryptos hashrate will continue to grow in geographical distribution in 2022, partly as a result of Chinas crackdown on mining in the middle of last year. Now, many miners are moving elsewhere, proliferating in the U.S., Kazakhstan, Russia, Canada and Iran, among others.Meanwhile, Argentinas government is looking at cracking down on bitcoin mining as a way to stave off the energy crisis in the country, CVBJ reported Sunday  Jan. 2 .Argentina saw several power outages last week, and the state wants to make sure it does not happen again.Per the report, Argentin stanley cup romania a is looking to increase rates on bitcoin mining farms to discourage it from happening, while also looking at infrastructural investments to help sustain the large demand bitcoin mining represents.In other news, Convex Finance has gotten over $20 billion in total value locked as of Sunday  Jan. 2 , just after it became the second-largest dcentralized finance  DeFi  protocol by total value locked  TVL , according to CoinDesk.DeFi Llama data shows Convex Finance locked in $68 million after launching in  stanley polska May 2021, and took a month to get $1 billion. After five months, it got to $10 billion. Because of the strong demand, the project got another $10 billion in liquidity as of the last few months.Further, Jordan Fish, a proli stanley mug fic crypto trader operating un Wunm How SaaS CFOs Can Be Collaborative Guides To The Enterprise
 New research shows that 38 percent of public-sector entities will suffer a ransomware attack stanley mugs  this year, up from 31 percent last year and 13 percent in 2016.A report in聽The Wall Street Journal revealed that聽cyberattacks on municipal systems across the U.S. appear to be rising faster than those in the private sector, according to the Ponemon Institute, a Traverse City, MI, research company focused on information security. Were right at the front end of this,  said Marshall Davies, executive director of the Alexandria, VA-based Public Risk Management Association. Hackers are  just now coming after the public entities stanley france . Theyve been hitting the businesses for years. Those attacks can be costly to local governments as they spend money to recover data, upgrade systems, take out cybersecurity insurance and, in some cases, to pay the hackers if they cant restore files on their own.Hackers attacking cities are often cybercriminals who demand ran stanley hrnek soms in poorly written English and typically demand to be paid in bitcoin. But the Federal Bureau of Investigation advises against giving in to ransom demands, warning that  some individuals or organizations are never provided with decryption keys after paying a ransom. However, compared with private companies, local governments are usually less prepared for an attack 鈥?mainly because they cant afford to attract top-notch cybersecurity talent. Information-security analysts salaries average $100,000 a year, and private-sector employers pay more th