A player communication reviewed by FinTelegram raises a serious compliance question for Revolut: did the fintech initially tell a customer that Mastercard chargebacks had been raised and finally decided, only to later admit that no chargebacks had been submitted at all? Against the backdrop of FinTelegram’s long-running investigations into illegal offshore casino payment rails, the case sharpens a broader issue.
A U.S. federal judge in Manhattan sentenced Terraform Labs founder Do Kwon to 15 years in prison, concluding that the TerraUSD/LUNA implosion was not a bad-product accident but a fraud that wiped out roughly $40 billion in market value and devastated real victims. The sentence lands as a defining “Startup on Trial” moment for crypto’s algorithmic-stablecoin era.
ESMA has now said the quiet part out loud: many derivatives marketed as crypto perpetuals are likely CFDs in the EU. For Hyperliquid and front ends like AXIOM, that raises major questions around leverage, retail targeting, appropriateness, and investor protection.
An investigation by Investigative Europe has exposed how high-profile YouTube and Twitch personalities across at least seven European countries are acting as de facto distribution agents for blacklisted, unlicensed online casinos — earning revenue-share commissions from the very losses of their followers. For compliance analysts and financial regulators, this is not a marketing story. It is a systemic liability chain spanning operators, technology platforms, and individual influencers that demands urgent enforcement attention.
Over the past year, financial influencers (“FinFluencers”) have become increasingly prominent on social media, particularly on TikTok and X (formerly Twitter). These platforms have evolved in their content dynamics, user engagement, and regulatory environment, making them central to the dissemination of financial advice and market sentiment. This report analyzes the roles, reach, and key trends of finfluencers on TikTok and X
A Financial Times video interview with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman unexpectedly turned into a viral marketing miracle for a small olive oil brand called Graza. Altman was seen cooking with Graza’s “Drizzle” olive oil—meant for finishing, not cooking—sparking an online debate and catapulting the brand into global awareness. It’s a case study in how digitally native consumer brands can hijack moments.
In a remote interview with Tucker Carlson on March 5, 2025, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), the convicted FTX founder, reframed his $10 billion fraud as a mere liquidity crisis, denying criminal intent while playing chess with Sean 'Diddy' Combs in prison. As he hints at GOP leanings and a potential pardon, SBF’s narrative sparks debate: a bid for redemption or a refusal to face the fallout?
The topic of Ukraine or Ukrainian individuals selling U.S. and Western arms supplies on the black market has been a subject of both documented incidents and widespread speculation, often amplified by rumors and disinformation. The US media personality Tucker Carlson is one of the main sources in the respective headlines. Here’s a breakdown of known information and rumors:
The French Supreme Court (Cour de Cassation) has just recently firmly established the liability of payment processors like WorldPay and Seroph Holding (AlgoCharge) for facilitating unauthorized binary options schemes. As restitution payouts loom, this critical ruling sets a formidable due diligence standard that could ripple across the EU, offering renewed hope for victims pursuing institutional giants like ING's Payvision.
Unlicensed offshore casinos increasingly hide behind Cyprus‑based “payment agents” that sit between players, dubious Anjouan or Curacao operators, and EU‑regulated banks and fintechs. Super Spin and Rolly Spin, allegedly run by Comentive LTD in Belize under a low‑credibility Anjouan license, explicitly use Norvelic Limited in Cyprus as their EU payment agent.