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Now Facebook is allowing anyone to look you up using your security phone number

Now Facebook is allowing anyone to look you up using your security phone number

 

                

And I mean, geez,

stuff like this with Facebook just isn’t a surprise anymore, is it? For years social media Big Brother had been pestering its users to secure their account with two-factor authentication (2FA) by prompting them to enter their phone number so they could get a text with a security code login when logging into their account from a new device for the first time.

On the surface, Facebook prompting people to enable 2FA was a good thing–if you have 2FA enabled it’s much harder for someone who isn’t you to log in to your account. But this being Facebook, they’re not just going to do something that is only good for the user, are they?

Last year it came to light that Facebook was using the phone numbers people submitted to the company solely so they could protect their accounts with 2FA for targeted advertising. And now, as security researcher and New York Times columnist Zeynep Tufekci pointed out, Facebook is allowing anyone to look up a user by their phone number, the same phone number that was supposed to be for security purposes only.

Oh, and Facebook won’t let users opt out of this privacy violation they never opted in to. The most you can now do is limit who can look you up with the phone number you provided to “Friends,” but you can’t hide it entirely. And remember, by default Facebook allows the whole world to find out who you are by entering your phone number.

In response to the growing outrage over Facebook’s latest data misuse scandal, a company spokesperson told TechCrunch, “We appreciate the feedback we’ve received about these settings and will take it into account.” Sigh. Sure you will. If users want to try to claw back some of their privacy from Facebook’s latest data grab, go into the Settings of your Facebook account, click Privacy, then click “How People Find and Contact You.” Then click “Who can look you up using the phone number you provided?” and change the dropdown box from “Everyone” to “Friends.”

Article Produced By
Michael Grothaus

Michael Grothaus is a novelist, journalist, and former screenwriter represented worldwide by Marjacq Scripts Ltd?. His debut novel EPIPHANY JONES is out now from Orenda Books. Contact his agent at Marjacq Scripts Ltd?. You can also read more about him at MichaelGrothaus.com. You can also follow him on Twitter.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90314763/now-facebook-is-allowing-anyone-to-look-you-up-using-your-security-phone-number

David https://markethive.com/david-ogden

Gibraltar Stock Exchange Launches Listings of Blockchain-Based Securities

Gibraltar Stock Exchange Launches Listings of Blockchain-Based Securities

                                  

The Gibraltar Stock Exchange (GSX) is launching listings

of blockchain-powered securities on its practical listing venue GSX Global Market, the firm announced on April 9. Today, the GSX starts listing a number of new products known as digital, smart or tokenized securities such as corporate bonds, convertible bonds, asset-backed securities, derivative securities, open-ended funds and closed-ended funds, the announcement says.

By applying distributed ledger technology (DLT), the GSX intends to enable greater liquidity pools and facilitate democratizing the capital markets, the firm noted in the press release. In contrast to the GSX Main Market, GSX Global Market provides a lighter reporting scheme and disclosure framework, which will purportedly enable issuers with reduced timelines and listing costs. As a recognized stock exchange regulated in the European Economic Area (EEA), GSX Global Market does not require debt issuers with securities listed on the market to withhold tax on coupons under British law, as the press release notes.

The new listings come on the heels of the partnership of an integrated tokenized securities exchange product by GSX Group’s subsidiary Hashtacs and STO Global-X on April 5. The project enables stock exchanges and other qualified financial institutions to tokenize assets and boost the trading, clearing and settling of digital securities. In March 2019, the GSX successfully deployed a GSX Digital Stock Exchange Prototype on the Securities Trading Asset Classification Settlement (STACS) blockchain, and issued a demo bond on its basis. Developed along with Singapore-based blockchain firm Hashstacs, the STACS-enabled project enables listings of digital representations of funds and debts on blockchain.

Article Produced By
Helen Partz

Helen is passionate about learning languages, cultures and the Internet. She has years of experience working at international online advertising projects. Growing interested in Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies in late 2017, she joined Cointelegraph as a writer.

https://cointelegraph.com/news/gibraltar-stock-exchange-launches-listings-of-blockchain-based-securities

David https://markethive.com/david-ogden

Bitmain Says Now-Lapsed IPO Made Firm More Transparent, Reveals Appointment of New CEO

Bitmain Says Now-Lapsed IPO Made Firm More Transparent, Reveals Appointment of New CEO

            

Chinese crypto mining titan Bitmain’s filing to list an initial public offering (IPO)

on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx) has officially expired, according to an updated list of now-lapsed applications on the HKEx website on March 26. In a blog post published the same day, the company acknowledged that its IPO application was now inactive, and simultaneously revealed the appointment of a new CEO, Mr. Haichao Wang. As reported yesterday, Bitmain’s IPO filing — published in English and Chinese on Sept. 26, 2018 — was set to imminently reach the end of a six-month validity window, pursuant to HKEx listing rules.

These rules provide a window for a given application to proceed to a closed-door hearing before the exchange’s Listing Committee, which is tasked with giving the final approval or disapproval of the offering. Should this fail to happen within this time frame, the listing formally lapses. In its statement, Bitmain confirmed the expiration, emphasizing that it remains committed to realizing the “huge potential of the cryptocurrency and blockchain industry,” which it noted “remains a relatively young industry which is proving its value.”

The statement added:

“We hope regulatory authorities, media, and the general public can be more inclusive to this young industry. We will restart the listing application work at an appropriate time in the future.”

At the same time, Bitmain claimed that undergoing the HKEx listing route has “made the company more transparent and standardized,” adding that the “process of rationalization and optimization” has heightened the company’s focus on the core elements of its mission.

The company outlines the range of measures it has taken to streamline and rationalize its operations, revealing the appointment of Mr. Wang as CEO, who is reportedly a veteran of the chip manufacturing industry and has already successfully headed several units within Bitmain.

As reported, this January Jihan Wu and Micree Zhan Ketuan had stepped aside as co-CEOs: today’s post confirms they will remain on as directors of the firm. The post also alludes to the numerous contractions Bitmain has this year made to its global business — along with cuts to its workforce — noting that “it was a difficult but necessary decision as we continue to build a long-term, sustainable and scalable business.”

As part of its strategy to weather the market downturn, Bitmain outlines that it has established  “clear business divisions for mining hardware, AI, mining farms and mining pools,” and “ integrated the resource lines for chip design, hardware and software to provide more effective support for our key business lines and to allocate premium resources to our major and key projects.” As previously reported, the extensive earnings disclosures that Bitmain submitted in line with the IPO listing requirements had revealed the firm was shouldering hefty losses amid the bear market. Financial, legal, and regulatory difficulties appeared likely to imperil its IPO application, as a Cointelegraph analysis outlined this January.

Article Produced By
Marie Huillet

Marie Huillet is an independent filmmaker, with a background in journalism and publishing. Nomadic by nature, she’s lived in five different countries this decade. She’s fascinated by Blockchain technologies’ potential to reshape all aspects of our lives.

https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitmain-says-now-lapsed-ipo-made-firm-more-transparent-reveals-appointment-of-new-ceo

David https://markethive.com/david-ogden