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Twitter bids adieu to Bluebird as Elon Musk rebrands platform to X

Musk said in a recent interview that if done right, X has the potential to become half of the global financial system.

The popular social media platform Twitter officially rebranded to X after months of teasing by its former CEO, Elon Musk. The rebranding saw the popular social media app ditch its recognizable bird logo and replace it with a simple X. The rebranding also saw the social media app change its color scheme from blue to black.

As part of the rebranding, Twitter’s URL was changed to x.com, a domain name linked to Musk’s 1999 financial services startup, which was sold to PayPal.

X.com was an early online bank, and the company was initially funded by Musk and Greg Kouri, who went on to fund Musk’s later ventures, Tesla and SpaceX.

Musk uses the letter X in several of his business interests, including SpaceX and Tesla car models.

Musk established X Corp. in March as the parent company of Twitter, making way for Twitter’s rebranding. The rebranding is part of Musk’s vision to create a “super app” with multiple functionalities. In April, Twitter introduced a new feature that allowed app users to access the crypto market and other financial market services from within the app.

Musk’s tenure as the head of Twitter was controversial from the start. However, his plans to transform Twitter began long before the takeover.

In a recent interview, Musk reiterated that the main motive behind rebranding to X was to create an “everything app,” a concept popular in China. Chinese social media applications, such as WeChat, are used for text and video calls, and have provisions to pay bills, book cabs, book restaurants and other financial activities without leaving the app.

Musk said if done correctly, X could become a popular platform for finance, banking, payments and data, and over time it has the potential to become “half of the global financial system."

However, The rebranding of Twitter didn’t prompt much support from many users who believed ditching the famous blue bird for a new concept was not a good idea.

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Elon Musk to rebrand Twitter to X, but Crypto Twitter has other ideas

One pitch from Axie Infinity’s co-founder said to keep Twitter but have a crypto wallet named X for spending and creator tipping.

Twitter users, along with the avid crypto community, may soon see a very different version of the social media app — which is set to ditch its iconic blue bird logo for an “X” as part of a major rebrand.

Crypto Twitter hasn’t been particularly thrilled with some of the changes, however.

In a series of tweets on July 23, Musk hinted that the platform will be rebranded to “X” as early as Monday, an early step in its eventual transformation to an “everything app.”

The rebrand could involve changing Twitter’s color scheme to black, the removal of Twitter’s blue bird logo, and a name change to X, according to Musk’s various tweets and a poll.

The website used to access the social media platform may also change, with Musk confirming that X.com, the online address for his 1999-founded financial services start-up that sold to PayPal, now redirecting to Twitter.

According to the Wayback Machine, Prior to the change, x.com was a mostly blank website that simply displayed the letter "x." Prior to that, it had redirected to Musk's Boring Company website. The website URL also had a long stint in the early 2000s pointing to PayPal and even had a stint displaying eBay's corporate site. 

In March, Musk also established the tech firm X Corp. as Twitter’s parent company partly to realize his vision for the WeChat-like app.

Crypto Twitter calls rebrand decision ‘insane’

However, not many Crypto Twitter users have been thrilled with the proposed changes. Twitter has been a stronghold for the crypto community with over 1 billion tweets about crypto between 2020 and 2022 according to a March Hypebeast report.

Trust Machines marketing chief Dan Held said Twitter was “iconic,” adding Musk was “insane” to rebrand to X.

Others have been resistant to the proposed X rebrand. Crypto blogger Tiffany Fong said she’s “still callin it twitter” which podcast host Peter McCormack agreed with.

There were, however, some supportive of the idea saying the super-app has been Musk's vision since leaving PayPal and point to Musk's October tweet that implicitly said his Twitter purchase was the accelerant to creating X.

Others have been pitching their own ideas on how Musk should move ahead with X. Axie Infinity co-founder Jeff “Jiho” Zirlin said to keep the Twitter name but add a crypto wallet called X to allow users to spend and tip platform creators.

Related: Twitter to impose daily limits on DMs for unverified accounts

Meanwhile, in a July 23 post, Twitter chief Linda Yaccarino added more clues about X, saying it would have “unlimited interactivity,” support multiple media formats, and feature payments and banking — a feature that Musk has reportedly said he wants to support crypto.

Without specifying how Yaccarino said the upcoming app would also be powered by artificial intelligence, though Musk has previously said AI would be used to detect manipulation of public opinion.

The rebrand comes as Musk admitted on July 15 that Twitter’s advertising revenue had dropped by 50% and the firm had a heavy debt load, although it’s unknown over what timeframe the revenue drop occurred.

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‘Doges for the Win’ Dogecoin Leaps 3% in 15 Minutes After Elon Musk Shares Scooby-Doo Meme

‘Doges for the Win’ Dogecoin Leaps 3% in 15 Minutes After Elon Musk Shares Scooby-Doo Meme

Popular dog-themed meme asset Dogecoin (DOGE) is seeing a bump in price after billionaire Elon Musk shared a Scooby-Doo meme. On Wednesday, the business magnate posted a meme of Scooby-Doo that compared the popular cartoon character to various famous historical philosophers with the caption “Doges for the win.” The business magnate’s post sent DOGE flying […]

The post ‘Doges for the Win’ Dogecoin Leaps 3% in 15 Minutes After Elon Musk Shares Scooby-Doo Meme appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Hackers compromise Uniswap founder’s Twitter account to promote scam

Hayden Adams’ account released a tweet encouraging its more than 254,000 followers to click on a malicious link, falsely claiming that users’ tokens were at risk.

Members of Crypto Twitter have quickly identified and warned others against a scam being pushed by Uniswap founder Hayden Adams’ compromised account.

The "Web3 Security Alerts" channel on Telegram notified followers that Adams’ Twitter account had been compromised on July 20. The account from the Uniswap founder and CEO released a tweet to its more than 254,000 followers falsely claiming that the platform’s Permit2 contract had been “affected by an unknown exploit” and users’ tokens were at risk, encouraging them to click on a malicious link.

July 20 tweet sent from Uniswap founder Hayden Adams' Twitter account by hackers. Source: Twitter

The first scam tweet was only live for a few minutes before being removed, but several nearly identical tweets were also posted. At the time of publication, many were still viewable to Twitter users. Web3 Security Alerts reported Adams had also been blocked from his accounts with MetaMask and Coinbase Wallet.

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Bad actors utilizing social media platforms to try and con users out of crypto assets or fiat is nothing new, but those behind the firms have attempted to reduce the number and frequency of cons. Twitter executive chair Elon Musk announced on July 1 the platform would be temporarily limiting the number of posts users will be allowed to read daily in an effort to “detect and eliminate bots and other bad actors.”

On July 6, social media firm Meta launched Threads, a microblogging app expected to rival Twitter. Though the platform reached more than 100 million users in a matter of days, scammers promoting fake nonfungible token projects and impersonating other Crypto Twitter personalities have already appeared.

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Dogecoin Co-Founder Has High Hopes for Billionaire Elon Musk’s New AI Venture, Calling It ‘Really Interesting’

Dogecoin Co-Founder Has High Hopes for Billionaire Elon Musk’s New AI Venture, Calling It ‘Really Interesting’

The co-founder of the popular memecoin Dogecoin (DOGE) has enthusiasm for billionaire Elon Musk’s new artificial intelligence (AI) project. Earlier this week, Musk launched his artificial intelligence startup project, xAI, as a means of competing with chatbot ChatGPT, a prominent AI tool. According to Musk, who co-founded OpenAI in 2015, the firm that created ChatGPT, […]

The post Dogecoin Co-Founder Has High Hopes for Billionaire Elon Musk’s New AI Venture, Calling It ‘Really Interesting’ appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Arkham on-chain ‘Intel Exchange’ labeled ‘snitch-to-earn’ by Crypto Twitter

Users who shared links to a waitlist for the Arkham service had their email addresses exposed on Twitter due to how the references were encoded.

Arkham, a “blockchain intelligence company,” announced what it’s calling the “world’s first on-chain intelligence exchange” on July 10 alongside the launch of a new coin, ARKM, through Binance’s Launchpad service.

Crypto Twitter has had a predictably split response to the announcement, with negative sentiment surrounding Arkham’s purported mission to “deanonymize the blockchain” causing some ire. Chief among the complaints, many of which describe the company’s Intel Exchange as a “snitch-to-earn” or “snitching-as-a-service” program, involves Arkham's perceived role as a centralized intelligence agency.

As Arkham stated in its announcement thread, there are numerous positive use cases for the utilization of blockchain sleuths as information brokers. However, some experts are concerned about the potential for misuse that the exchange’s proposed business model appears to follow.

According to Arkham, users will be able to anonymously post and accept bounties for information concerning transactions on the blockchain. Once a bounty is completed, whatever entity paid out the bounty will have exclusive access to the data for a period of 90 days. Once the initial exclusivity period ends, Arkham says it will release the data to the public.

Other commenters wondered what considerations Arkham had given to the notion that a bounty marketplace could put a target on the backs of whales.

Alongside the announcements, Arkham’s been accused of leaking the email addresses of users who signed up for the company’s waitlist and then shared the link on social media.

Evidently, the web form encodes the user’s email address in simple BASE64. This makes it a trivial matter for someone to associate an email address with the Twitter account sharing the link, prompting at least some speculation that the encoding wasn’t an oversight. 

One Twitter user declared that the supposed "doxing” was intentional, adding that Arkham’s “whole goal is to dox (assuming the big players), and what easier way [than] making it easy to decode via ref link."

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From Thailand to South Africa, regulators tighten their grip on crypto: Law Decoded, July 3–10

South Africa’s financial regulator has announced that all crypto exchanges in the country must obtain licenses by the end of 2023.

Last week saw more rules and regulations emerge regarding digital assets. Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission issued new rules requiring digital asset service providers to warn customers of risks associated with cryptocurrency trading. The warning message must be clearly visible, and before customers can use the service, the business operator must arrange for the users to give consent and acknowledge the risks. Apart from a trading risks disclaimer, the new guidelines prohibit service providers from using customers’ funds for lending or investment.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore announced new requirements for crypto service providers to hold customer assets in a statutory trust by the end of 2023.“This will mitigate the risk of loss or misuse of customers’ assets, and facilitate the recovery of customers’ assets in the event of a DPT [digital payment token] service provider’s insolvency,” the authority says.

South Africa’s financial regulator, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority, has announced that all crypto exchanges in the country must obtain licenses by the end of 2023. If crypto exchanges continue to operate without a license after the deadline, the regulator intends to take “enforcement action,” which may involve fines or the closure of noncompliant firms.

In Belarus, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is working on legal amendments prohibiting peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC). The ministry argued that crypto P2P services are “in demand among fraudsters who cash out and convert stolen funds and transfer money to organizers or participants in criminal schemes.”

Binance Australia offices were reportedly searched by the local regulator

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission conducted searches at Binance Australia locations. The investigation was part of an ongoing probe of Binance’s now-defunct Australian derivatives business. Binance’s representative did not confirm or deny to Cointelegraph whether the company’s offices were searched or whether the company was aware of a local probe. “We are cooperating with local authorities, and Binance is focused on meeting local regulatory standards in order to serve our users in Australia in a fully compliant manner,” a spokesperson for Binance Australia told Cointelegraph.

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Denmark orders Saxo Bank to erase cryptocurrency holdings

Financial regulators in Denmark are coming after cryptocurrency service providers, declaring that local banks cannot hold cryptocurrency to hedge against trading risks. The Danish Financial Supervisory Authority (DFSA) officially ordered local investment bank Saxo Bank to dispose of its own holdings in crypto. According to the DFSA, Saxo Bank offers its customers the opportunity to trade a number of cryptocurrency products through its platform. The firm also offers several crypto-linked exchange-traded funds and exchange-traded notes, the regulator said, adding that “it is possible to speculate on crypto assets.”

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Twitter receives money transmitter licenses in three U.S. states

Twitter Payments, a subsidiary of Elon Musk’s Twitter social network, appears to have received its first money transmitter licenses after Michigan, New Hampshire and Missouri approved the company’s applications. A money transmitter license allows a company to provide transfer services or payment instruments. This differs from a license to conduct sales in that it’s meant to offer consumer protections for businesses that facilitate the transmission of money from one party to another, not just the purchase of products and services.

It remains unclear at this time exactly what offerings will be on tap if and when Twitter Payments eventually rolls out. The company applied for licenses in all 50 United States states, and there’s no clear timeline for the approval process.

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‘Scammers’ impersonate Crypto Twitter users on Threads as users near 100M

Threads are already seeing potential crypto scammers arrive on the platform as Crypto Twitter personas warn of impersonators on the app.

Scammers appear to have wasted no time since the launch of Meta’s new microblogging app — with several high-profile Crypto Twitter users already warning of imposter accounts on Threads.

Threads was launched on July 5 and has seen sign-ups climb above 98 million in the days following. It’s still far away from Twitter’s estimated 450 million users.

However, over the past few days, multiple Crypto Twitter figures have already pointed out fake accounts on Threads impersonating others or themselves.

On July 8, decentralized finance platform Wombex Finance tweeted an image of a Threads account impersonating it — warning it could be a scammer as the project isn't on the platform.

The nonfungible token (NFT) influencer Leonidas tweeted a similar warning a day earlier to their over 93,000 followers, saying that they and other "large NFT accounts" are being impersonated by "scammers" on Threads. Leonidas said they have now made an account on Threads to combat impersonators.

Jeffrey Huang, known on Twitter as Machi Big Brother, tweeted his Threads profile on July 6 with one user pointing out there was already a Threads account impersonating his Twitter persona.

So far, the Thread accounts mentioned have avoided sharing any scam or phishing links, with most posting crypto-related content.

Related: Elon Musk accuses Mark Zuckerberg of cheating: Twitter vs. Threads

For years, Twitter has been a popular channel for crypto phishing scammers, with a common tactic involving hacking into the Twitter accounts of well-known people and businesses and posting malicious links.

Such links usually attempt to dupe unwitting targets into sharing either their crypto exchange login, a crypto wallet seed phrase or have them connect a wallet to a crypto-draining smart contract.

In the first half of this year, $108 million worth of crypto was stolen in such phishing scams according to a report by Web3 security firm Beosin.

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Crypto Biz: Winklevoss slams Silbert, Twitter’s double-edged sword and more

This week’s Crypto Biz also explores Gemini’s fight with the Digital Currency Group (DCG) over user funds, new banking tools for the digital yuan, and OpenAI’s efforts to stop users from jumping paywalls.

Twitter’s plans to roll out a payment platform took a major step forward this week as its subsidiary, Twitter Payments, received its first money transmitter licenses in the United States states of Michigan, New Hampshire and Missouri. 

The company — reportedly building a solution with crypto in mind — is seeking to provide transfer services in all 50 U.S. states, with further approvals still pending and no clear timeline in place.

As with every business, Twitter is seeking new sources of revenue supported by its massive user base. In a Twitter Space event in 2022, Musk said he envisioned allowing bank accounts to be connected to social media profiles, incorporating debit cards and money transfers. The goal appears similar to the now-defunct Diem — the failed global payments project from Facebook’s parent company Meta.

For better results than Meta’s project, Twitter relies heavily on its crypto-tech community, but Musk is also at odds with Crypto Twitter. This week, the platform limited its content reach, citing “extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation.” The decision was a blow to the crypto ecosystem, which relies heavily on Twitter for sharing information and achieving new audiences.

“The reason I set a “View Limit” is because we are all Twitter addicts and need to go outside,” said Musk on the platform. The move could be a double-edged sword for Twitter’s payment plans.

This week’s Crypto Biz also explores Gemini’s fight with the Digital Currency Group (DCG) over user funds, new banking tools for the digital yuan, and OpenAI’s efforts to stop users from jumping paywalls.

Winklevoss slams DCG’s Silbert — Not even SBF was ‘capable of such delusion’

In an open letter published on July 4, Cameron Winklevoss slammed Digital Currency Group’s CEO Barry Silbert for allegedly playing the victim card while owing $1.2 billion to Gemini’s 232,000 Earn customers. DCG’s Genesis was the lender behind Gemini’s Earn program, which promised returns as high as 8% to depositors. It suspended withdrawals in November 2022 after FTX’s collapse. “I write to inform you that your games are over,” Winklevoss said, explaining that professional fees have now “ballooned” to over $100 million at the expense of credits and Earn users. Winklevoss has given Silbert an ultimatum: accept his firm’s “best and final offer” or face a lawsuit. The offer includes a $1.47 billion agreement, with the first payment due this month and the last payment due five years from now. Later, on July 7, Gemini filed the lawsuit against DCG. 

Crypto-friendly DBS Bank launches digital yuan transaction tool

DBS Bank China officially announced the launch of the digital yuan merchant solution, allowing mainland businesses to receive payments in the central bank digital currency (CBDC). DBS told Cointelegraph that the new service would allow its clients in mainland China to receive or collect the digital yuan and have it automatically settled into their yuan bank deposit accounts. By the end of 2022, there were 13.6 billion digital yuan in circulation, or about $2 billion. The CBDC is currently accepted across 26 cities and 17 provinces in China, with adoption expected to increase as more provinces join the program.

Musk imposes ‘rate limit’ on Twitter, citing extreme ‘system manipulation’

Social media platform Twitter is temporarily limiting the number of posts users will be allowed to read daily after seeing “extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation,” according to executive chairman Musk. The new rules temporarily limit verified accounts to see 10,000 posts per day, while unverified and new unverified accounts are capped at 1,000 and 500 posts per day, respectively. The decision has been largely criticized by the crypto community, which relies heavily on Twitter to communicate and share information. The new rate limits already affected the indexing and display of tweets on Google’s search engine, causing over 50% of Twitter URLs to disappear from the search index. Lower tweet visibility on Google would also reduce the amount of crypto-related content originating from Twitter. 

OpenAI pauses ChatGPT’s Bing feature, as users were jumping paywalls

ChatGPT’s Browse, a Bing-based search engine feature, has been temporarily disabled by OpenAI after a loophole enabled users to bypass paywalled content. OpenAI may have acted on the issue in response to a Reddit post. In late June, a member of the r/ChatGPT subreddit posted a screenshot of a Browse session where they asked the chatbot to “print the text” of a link to a paywalled article from The Atlantic. In response, ChatGPT provided the article in full without the paywall. The browser is currently in beta and is available to subscribers of the ChatGPT Plus service. 

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Elon Musk calls for AI regulatory oversight: Report

In a keynote address at a Chinese government-backed AI conference, Musk noted that governments should be concerned about deep intelligence.

Twitter's executive chairman Elon Musk continues to push for more regulatory oversight of artificial intelligence, claiming it may be "smarter than all humans at everything" in the future.

In a video keynote address at a Chinese government-backed AI conference on July 5, Musk reportedly noted that governments should be concerned about deep intelligence, urging regulators to step in to prevent its misuse.

“I do think we should be very careful with development of, especially artificial general intelligence, or very deep intelligence [...] Artificial general intelligence is a computer intelligence that is smarter than all humans at everything. That is something we should be concerned about,” Musk said, acknowledging that “it’s important to have some sort of regulatory oversight” on that front.

The concept of artificial general intelligence, or AGI, refers to a subset of artificial intelligence that expects machines to compete with or even surpass humans in intelligence. Also known as deep AI, the technology adds human cognitive abilities to a program, allowing machines to learn in the same fashion as humans.

In the speech, Musk also addressed autonomous vehicles and robots, noting that they may bring a "very profound change" to the world, adding that "we need to be careful about it to make sure it is something that benefits humanity."

Musk's comments follow the unveiling of Tesla's humanoid robot a few months ago. Called "Optimus", the prototype was first showcased at the automaker's "AI Day" event last September as a demonstration of the company's latest advancements in artificial intelligence. “As time goes by, it seems like, it may, at some point, exceed one-to-one ratio, in more robots than humans, and potentially much greater,” Musk remarked.

Tesla's Optimus prototype at the company's 'AI Day' event in 2022. Source: Tesla

China is reportedly heightening its AI development efforts. In a recent meeting attended by Chinese President Xi Jinping and prominent Communist Party members, Beijing stressed its ambitions to lead the AI global race.

According to local news outlet Xinhua News Agency, Chinese leaders debated the need for “dedicated efforts to safeguard political security and improve the security governance of internet data and artificial intelligence.”

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