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Criminals will react to the EU legislation by changing their modus operandi, says Nets' Sune Gabelgard.
January 17
Nets -
The agency issued a fair housing proposal last month that would perpetuate segregation and make it harder to detect discrimination.
January 17
George Washington University -
European Union privacy watchdogs are gearing up to police digital assistants after revelations that Amazon.com Inc. workers listened in on people’s conversations with their Alexa digital assistants.
January 17 -
While not as large as the U.S. both in number of people and number of credit card owners, the U.K. remains a very lucrative market for issuing banks and card networks, as well as a host of alternative financial service providers catering to younger, underserved consumers.
January 17 -
The fintech Sezzle has finally received its point-of-sale lending license in California after agreeing to refund consumers in the state and pay a penalty for previously making illegal loans there, the California Department of Business Oversight said Thursday.
January 17 -
Terrorism financing schemes using cryptocurrencies are growing in sophistication, according to researcher Chainalysis Inc., which helps law enforcement track digital-coin transactions.
January 17 -
Terrorism financing schemes using cryptocurrencies are growing in sophistication, according to researcher Chainalysis, which helps law enforcement track digital-coin transactions.
January 17 -
The fintech Sezzle received its license after agreeing to refund customers and pay a fine for previously making loans that state regulators had deemed illegal.
January 17 -
The company will pay $24 million in cash for Central Federal Bancshares.
January 17 -
Roughly a decade after being burned by the most punishing financial crisis since the onset of the Great Depression, it's increasingly clear that the nation's largest lenders are targeting a narrower slice of consumers: The wealthy and those with excellent credit.
January 17




