The overview of the weekend news feed from February 17 to 19

The overview of the weekend news feed from February 17 to 19

The overview of the weekend news from February 17 to 19 on cryptocurrency, iGaming, and business industries. 🔵 Bitcoin's price reached its 6-month high on Friday. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalisation is now up more than 55 percent since its November low of 15,600 dollars after the FTX collapse capped a string of high-profile bankruptcies among significant industry players. Learn more. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2328) 🔵 The two largest creditors of the former Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange Mt.Gox have agreed to receive compensation in bitcoin. Mt. Gox was handling over 70 percent of all bitcoin transactions worldwide by early 2014. The continuation is here. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2329) 🔵 The Australian economy is reviving after the pandemic. The world's sixth-largest country saw a surge in inflation, which reached 7.8 percent last year. The country's 50 richest combined wealth grew to around 213 billion dollars, a 70 percent jump from 2019. Find more details here. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2325) 🔵 According to the Financial Times, the Iranian-American billionaire Jahm Najafi is preparing a bid to buy Tottenham Hotspur. The billionaire is assembling a consortium led by MSP Sports Capital to make a 3.1 billion euro takeover bid for the north London club. Click here for more. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2327) 🔵 The new AI technology launched by Microsoft is receiving negative feedback during its public testing. Users testing it are disappointed and are calling Microsoft to shut down chat GPT in Bing. Elon Musk has joined others calling for Microsoft to shut down ChatGPT in Bing, as it is not safe yet. The full article is here. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2323) 🔵 According to a former Google employee, the tech giant has four problems: no mission, no urgency, delusions of exceptionalism, and mismanagement. According to him, the culture of endless growth and hiring without a clear vision was the cause of the company's decision to cut over 12,000 jobs in January. Read more. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2324) 🔵 American adults prefer casino gaming for entertainment in record numbers. The US commercial gaming revenue amounted to 60 billion dollars breaking its annual record for a second consecutive year. Check out for more insights. (https://www.spring.news/articles/2330)