1. Home
  2. Shopify

Shopify

Dvision Network to Launch the Third Land Sale on Shopify Utilizing Both Polygon Network and BNB Chain

Dvision Network to Launch the Third Land Sale on Shopify Utilizing Both Polygon Network and BNB ChainPRESS RELEASE. Dvision Network has announced the third LAND Sale to be conducted on both the Polygon Network and the BNB Chain. The most exciting aspect of the third LAND Sale is that 50% of the available LAND NFTs will be sold through the Shopify Marketplace. Moreover, the LAND NFTs pre-minted on Polygon Network will […]

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Lightning to strike Shopify merchants with addition of BTC payments

Jack Mallers announced the new integration today at the Bitcoin 2022 conference and hopes to give more people access to what he sees as a better monetary system.

Chicago-based payment app Strike has integrated with global e-commerce giant Shopify so merchants can accept Bitcoin payments via the Bitcoin Lightning Network.

The Lightning Network (LN) is a Layer-2 scaling solution for Bitcoin designed to facilitate faster and cheaper transactions.

Strike CEO Jack Mallers revealed the new integration on stage at Miami's Bitcoin 2022 conference today. The move could allow Shopify’s almost two million global merchants to accept Bitcoin payments denominated in USD. However the only merchant partner cited in Strike's official release was Warren Lotas, an LA based streetwear brand — and that site was down at the time of writing.

Shopify is the world’s 18th largest ecommerce company with about $4.6 billion in annual revenue according to market research site Macrotrends. Its service enables merchants to set up an online store in 175 different countries.

The Bitcoin 2022 official Twitter account stated the integration was already live and quoted Mallers chiding the modern payments system which started in 1949 with the Diners Club card:

“Any online merchant that uses Shopify can accept payments without the 1949 boomer network, receive it instantly, cash final, no intermediary no 3% fee.”

According to Mallers one of the main advantages to using Bitcoin via Lightning is that payments settle nearly instantly as opposed to the “late, two to 15 day settlement” he cited as a drawback of existing common electronic payment methods. He added that instant settlements help both consumers and merchants complete accounting work and know their exact balances faster.

Mallers also revealed Strike’s partnership with the Blackhawk payment network, reportedly the largest point of sale supplier in the world. The company draws $2.5 billion in annual revenue  and its website states it has products at over 400,000 storefronts in 28 countries.

Related: Samson Mow introduces new nation-state adoption for crypto in Bitcoin 2022

Bitcoin 2022 is already a hotbed of buzz, not just for the Bitcoin ‘Miami Bull’ that was unveiled ahead of the opening events, but for Robinhood announcing the launch of its long-awaited crypto wallet to two million waitlisted clients. The wallet will also integrate LN.

The conference has not sparked a move in BTC price yet, as the largest crypto by market cap is up just 0.54% over the last 24 hours, trading at $43,594 according to Cointelegraph data.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Shopify facing another lawsuit from crypto holders over Ledger data breach

The e-commerce giant is in the hot seat again for its alleged role in making the hacked Ledger user data available to malicious actors.

Global e-commerce platform Shopify and hardware wallet maker Ledger face a major legal hurdle as a group of Ledger users have filed a class-action lawsuit for its part in failing to prevent a massive data breach in 2020.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court of Delaware on Apr. 1 and alleges that Shopify “repeatedly and profoundly failed to protect its customers’ identities.”

Shopify and its third-party data consultant TaskUs are being held responsible by complainants for leaking personally identifiable information (PII) of Ledger buyers despite marketing promises assuring the full security of the Shopify platform.

The plaintiffs claim Shopify and TaskUs were aware of the data breach for over a week before notifying customers. They are asking for the exact type of information leaked to be disclosed by Ledger and Shopify and for a monetary reward that covers actual and punitive damages.

A class action suit has been filed against Shopify and Ledger.

France-based Ledger is also included as a defendant in the case for its marketing claims promising customer security. The complaint states that Ledger “initially denied that any compromise of PII had occurred,” but later had to backtrack and refer to the leak and to Shopify in an email notification. The complaint stated:

"Despite the repeated promises and worldwide advertising campaign touting unmatched security for its customers, Ledger—and its data processing vendors, Shopify and TaskUs—repeatedly and profoundly failed to protect its customers’ identities, causing targeted attacks on thousands of customers’ crypto-assets and causing Class members to receive far less security than they thought they had purchased with their Ledger Wallets."

Hardware wallets, otherwise known as cold wallets, are physical devices that provide crypto users with added security for their private keys and seed phrases. They are marketed to be more secure than hot wallets.

As the complaint alleges, Ledger used Shopify to run its website’s online store. As a result of that relationship, Shopify had direct access to the PII of customers on Ledger’s database. Shopify uses TaskUs to provide customer support services, and therefore it also had access to Ledger’s customer data.

Hackers made off with personal information from about 272,000 Ledger users and over 1 million email subscribers to Ledger’s newsletter in 2020. A massive phishing and intimidation campaign targeting Ledger owners followed resulting in some victims losing crypto assets.

Related: Ledger partners with The Sandbox to promote crypto education in the metaverse

This is not the first class-action suit filed against both Ledger and Shopify regarding the data breach. In April 2021, a different group of complainants filed suit in California. That complaint made allegations similar to the recent Delaware filing that Shopify and Ledger “negligently allowed, recklessly ignored, and then intentionally sought to cover up.”

On April 2, hardware wallet maker Trezor was the subject of a phishing attack that targeted its users through the MailChimp marketing service provider. On April 3, Trezor confirmed in a tweet that there had been a data breach. The company warned users that it would stop communicating via the newsletter, and had shut down three of its domains.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Tobias Lütke, CEO of Shopify, to join Coinbase Board of Directors

By Brian Armstrong, CEO and Co-Founder

Commerce pioneer and respected open-source programmer, Lütke will bring his global experience and perspective to bear as Coinbase seeks to expand its international footprint and build new products

I’m excited to share that Tobias “Tobi” Lütke, CEO and founder of Shopify, will join Coinbase’s Board of Directors*.

Tobi brings a wide variety of skills and expertise to the Coinbase board. First and foremost, he is a tremendous entrepreneur, building Shopify from the ground up into a global commerce leader. He also deeply believes in the power of crypto and was an early adopter of crypto through Shopify’s integration with Coinbase Commerce. Serving millions of merchants in more than 175 countries, Shopify sits at the nexus of three important areas that crypto seeks to revolutionize: Finance and payments, web applications, and the internet itself.

A builder at heart, Tobi began writing computer code in his early teens. He soon became an active member of the open source community, contributing to projects such as Ruby on Rails, Liquid and ActiveMerchant. Building on his experience developing open source projects, Tobi launched an ecommerce platform in 2004 focused on selling snowboarding equipment. This online store soon grew into what we know today as Shopify. Tobi’s experience as a founder & CEO, scaling his business from a small, niche online marketplace into what has become a critical backbone of global ecommerce will help guide Coinbase as we seek to bring crypto to more people and businesses around the world.

“The concepts of decentralized finance and entrepreneurship exemplify the promise of Web3 where opportunity exists for the many, not the few,” said Tobi Lutke. “Coinbase and Shopify share this like-minded vision, and I am excited to join the Board to support the future that Brian and the Coinbase team are building.”

Shopify put a powerful, yet simplified platform into the hands of millions of merchants across the globe, and in the process changed the lives of billions of people. With his guidance, we hope to unlock crypto’s potential to increase economic freedom in the same way Shopify democratized online commerce.

I look forward to working with and learning from Tobi as we work to grow the cryptoeconomy.

*Subject to formal Board confirmation later this week.


Tobias Lütke, CEO of Shopify, to join Coinbase Board of Directors was originally published in The Coinbase Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Chicago Bulls team up with Shopify to launch NFT series

The Chicago Bulls have launched an NFT drop via Shopify, with the e-commerce platform having recently integrated Sweet's NFT marketplace.

The NBA’s Chicago Bulls have launched NFTs depicting six championship wins from the 1990s via leading e-commerce platform Shopify.

Shopify is a multinational firm that provides website-based storefronts and payments infrastructure. Shopify president, Harley Finklestein, announced the NFT drop on Twitter earlier today.

According to Finklestein, the Chicago Bulls franchise is one Shopify's first partners to launch an NFT storefront on the platform, with Shopify's president noting the service will only be available to a “select few” in its formative stages.

Shopify integrated Sweet’s NFT marketplace in May, allowing its customers to issue and sell nonfungible tokens directly through the popular e-commerce interface. Sweet supports NFTs issued via Ethereum’s ERC-721 standard, Simple Ledger Protocol’s SLP token standard, and Dapper Labs’ Flow blockchain.

The Chicago Bulls’ NFTs were minted on Flow, which also hosts the officially licensed NBA Topshot tokenized highlight collectibles.

The “Bulls Legacy Collection” will be released over six drops, with each token celebrating the team’s six iconic championship wins between 1991 and 1998. The first NFT was launched on July 26 and has already sold out, with the second token slated for launch later today. The remaining four NFTs scheduled for launch over the next four days.

The Bulls Legacy Collection, Drop 1: nft.bulls.com

Related: The future of art? World-famous artists delve into NFTs

Despite the NFT sector recently cooling off, NFT sales surpassed $2.5 billion for the first half of 2021.

On July 21, Cointelegraph reported that popular NFT marketplace, OpenSea, had closed a $100 million Series B funding round led by venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz at a valuation of $1.5 billion — indicating VC investors remain bullish on the nonfungible sector.

Retail investors still appear eager to get their hands on prized NFTs too, with Tyson Fury’s first NFT launch seeing a single token fetch almost $1 million in a July 16 auction, while more than 32,000 people signed up to participate in contemporary artist Damien Hirst’s latest NFT drop last week.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Ledger faces class action from phishing scam victims

Ledger and Shopify are facing a class-action lawsuit over sensitive information regarding 270,000 of Ledger's customers' that was stolen by Shopify employees.

Ledger and Shopify have been hit by a class action lawsuit over a major data breach that saw the personal data of 270,000 hard wallet customers stolen between April and June 2020,

Phishing scam victims John Chu and Edward Baton filed the lawsuit in California against the crypto wallet provider and its e-commerce partner Shopify on April 6.

The Plaintiffs alleged that the firms “negligently allowed, recklessly ignored, and then intentionally sought to cover up” the data breach. The data was stolen when rogue employees of Shopify accessed the company’s e-commerce and marketing database for Ledger, with the hackers then selling the data on the dark web.

“Had Ledger acted responsibly during this period, much of that loss could have been avoided,” they claim.

The pair are seeking redress for the damages caused by the breach, requesting “all relief allowed by law, including injunctive relief.” Chu lost $267,000 worth of BTC and ETH, and Baton lost $75,000 worth of XLM in phishing scams that impersonated correspondence from the firms.

The data, spanning full names, email, phone numbers, and shipping addresses, was eventually posted on the website RaidForums in late December. The lawsuit accuses Ledger in particular of failing to “individually notify every affected customer or admit to the full scope of the breach.”

“Ledgers and Shopify’s misconduct has made targets of Ledger customers, with their identities known or available to every hacker in the world. Ledger’s persistently deficient response compounded the harm. In failing to individually notify every affected customer or admit to the full scope of the breach.”

While it has yet to be proven if the firm knew the full scope initially, it published a blog post in July 2020 stating that 9500 users had their data leaked at the time.

Ledger fully acknowledged the data leak on January 13, in a blog post that confirmed that access to their user database had been a result of the Shopify hack, while announcing changes to how they store data, communicate with customers, and also offered a 10 BTC bounty fund for information leading to successful arrest and prosecution of the hackers.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions

Shopify CEO Exploring DeFi Integration to E-Commerce Empire

The CEO of Shopify is considering integrating decentralized finance (DeFi) into the firm’s e-commerce platform. As the DeFi industry continues to balloon, growing from a $26 billion market cap at the start of 2021 to a $106 billion market cap as of writing, Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke reveals on Twitter that he is interested in […]

The post Shopify CEO Exploring DeFi Integration to E-Commerce Empire appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Tether and Chainalysis roll out USDT monitoring solution to counter illicit transactions