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CLARITY Act Faces Wave of Amendments Ahead of Markup

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CLARITY Act Faces Wave of Amendments Ahead of Markup



The Senate Banking Committee’s CLARITY Act is heading into Thursday’s markup, buried under opposition.

According to reports, Senator Elizabeth Warren alone filed more than 40 amendments before Tuesday’s 5 p.m. ET deadline, and American Bankers Association members sent over 8,000 letters to Senate offices in less than a week demanding changes to the bill’s stablecoin yield rules.

Over 100 Amendments Filed

The total number of proposed amendments going into Thursday is still being confirmed, but according to a list obtained by Politico, there have been more than 100 proposed. To put things in perspective, a total of 137 revisions were proposed before the markup scheduled for January, which was canceled.

Warren’s batch alone covers a wide range of restrictions. One amendment that stood out would bar the Federal Reserve from issuing master accounts to crypto companies, which would effectively cut such firms off from the core infrastructure of the US banking system.

The lawmaker also attacked the updated bill on X, arguing that it lacked ethics provisions tied to President Donald Trump’s crypto businesses.

“No bill should move through the Banking Committee without real ethics guardrails,” she wrote.

That dispute has become harder for negotiators to avoid. Late last month, analyst Simon Dedic claimed that Trump’s meme coin and his crypto-related dinners were part of the reason the CLARITY Act was going nowhere, with Democrats demanding conflict-of-interest language before backing the legislation.

Another revision, filed by Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, would prohibit crypto from being used as legal tender, including for paying taxes. That proposal runs directly counter to a bill Representative Warren Davidson introduced last year that would have allowed Bitcoin to be used for precisely that purpose.

Senators Reed and Tina Smith of Minnesota also filed a joint amendment that would incorporate bank-requested changes to the stablecoin yield language.

According to journalist Brendan Pedersen, the proposal will force senators to choose between crypto and the banks on a single vote, making it an uncomfortable moment for Republicans who tend to side with both.

Bankers Blitz Senators With 8,000 Letters

Elsewhere, members of the American Bankers Association have reportedly sent more than 8,000 letters to Senate offices since last Friday, pushing lawmakers to change the bill’s stablecoin yield compromise.

However, Stand With Crypto, the crypto advocacy group, responded with its own numbers on Tuesday, saying its advocates had called Congress 8,000 times and sent 300,000 emails over recent months to protect stablecoin rewards, and have contacted lawmakers nearly 1.5 million times in support of the CLARITY Act overall.

Those on the side of digital assets are framing the banking industry’s lobbying campaign as an attempt to block competition from yield-bearing stablecoins.

Senator Bernie Moreno accused banks of trying to “kill stablecoins that would let everyday Americans earn real yields on their own money.” He also described the banking industry as a “cartel” protecting low-interest deposit models.

But not everyone inside Washington thinks this fight ends at Thursday’s committee vote. According to reporter Sander Lutz, banking policy leaders are already preparing for another push on the Senate floor if they lose the markup battle over yield restrictions.

Meanwhile, crypto journalist Eleanor Terrett reported that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer privately encouraged Democrats to work toward supporting the bill.

The post CLARITY Act Faces Wave of Amendments Ahead of Markup appeared first on CryptoPotato.

Xbox Project Helix console could ditch the disc drive and go fully digital

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Leaks tied to Xbox Project Helix suggest Microsoft may launch its next-gen console without a disc drive, alongside a possible Disc2Digital program.

Trump arrives in China for historic trip

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US President Donald #Trump has arrived in Beijing for highly anticipated talks with his Chinese counterpart #Xi Jinping. The two leaders are expected to discuss the #Iran war, trade and #US arms sales to #Taiwan. The visit to #China is the first from a US leader since 2017.

Decoding Injective’s 12% jump: INJ buybacks, USDC growth & more…

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Injective



INJ’s latest surge has 3 big drivers – Here’s what traders should know!

Alexa for Shopping is a chatty new AI assistant with some cool tricks to make you spend at Amazon

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After years of using Alexa to answer questions, control smart homes, play music, and handle everyday tasks, Amazon has found a more obvious job for it. Alexa is becoming your personal shopper, meant to help you find what you need faster and get it into your cart with fewer second thoughts. Amazon is rolling out […]

Cannes 2026: Park Chan-wook and Demi Moore ready to judge festival contenders

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It’s Day 1 of the annual cinematic marathon for the Cannes  jury weighing up the features in competition for the Palme d’Or, with 22 films to consider. Critic Emma Jones tells us more about the members of director Park Chan-wook’s jury, and we discuss the first two competition screenings: “Nagi Notes” and “A Woman’s Life”, as well as the hotly anticipated features from Asghar Farhadi, Pedro Almodovar and Cristian Mungiu.

Why change doesn’t really come from the top

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In early 2000, with their company on the brink of failure, Netflix founders Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph flew to Dallas to meet with Blockbuster executives. As the story is told, they offered to sell their company for $50 million and got laughed out of the room. Humiliated, but determined, they built a business that toppled the industry giant. 

That version is almost certainly not true, but it remains popular with pundits who like to tell it at fancy conferences. It gets told and retold because it reinforces how we like to imagine things. Everybody loves a good “David vs. Goliath” story, and the idea of wily young entrepreneurs outsmarting big corporate fat cats fits the bill exactly.

Yet beyond the shaky facts, the underlying assumption of the fable—that Blockbuster’s fate rested solely, or even mostly, on a strategic decision made in a conference room in 2000, ten years before it went bankrupt in 2010—is absurd. A business’s fate rarely depends on a single decision made at the top, but rather on how stakeholders are aligned around change. 

What was Netflix really worth in 2000? 

Looking back now, with Netflix worth more than $400 billion, it seems incredible that Blockbuster had the opportunity to buy it for less than pennies on the dollar and passed up the chance. You can imagine them kicking themselves for having blown the opportunity. Yet Netflix in 2000 was not the business we know today.

First, the reason Hastings and Randolph had flown to Dallas in the first place was that the company was hemorrhaging money—more than $50 million that year. They still had not cracked the code on their subscription model, their algorithm to match customers with movies, or how to turn a profit. The only real asset they had was themselves, and given that they had just exited a startup recently, no one would expect them to stay on for long. 

Their original intention in going to Blockbuster wasn’t to sell the company, but to strike a deal to make Netflix Blockbuster’s Internet brand. The logic was that Netflix would get access to Blockbuster’s customer base and Blockbuster would be spared the trouble and expense of starting up their own online operation. To them, it seemed like a win-win proposition. 

Yet from Blockbuster’s perspective, the deal wasn’t at all attractive. Handing over the online business to Netflix would close off opportunities Blockbuster was already pursuing. In fact, that summer Blockbuster signed a deal with Enron to develop an online streaming service. Their fears were well-founded. When Toys-R-Us forged a similar partnership with Amazon, it proved to be a disaster for them. 

So when, out of desperation, Hastings offered to sell the company, the Blockbuster executives didn’t reject it because they didn’t see the potential, but because they judged that they could build their own operation much more cheaply than taking on huge losses for the foreseeable future and paying some Silicon Valley guys $50 million for the trouble. 

And, as it turned out, they were right. 

The road to total access—and dominance

In early 2004, Viacom announced it would spin off Blockbuster Video, leaving CEO John Antioco master of his own fate. He moved quickly to meet the threat posed by Netflix head-on, launching Blockbuster Online in 2004 and, after successfully testing the concept in a few markets, ending late fees in early 2005.

Still, not satisfied with playing catch-up, Antioco searched for a model that would return his company to dominance. He found it in 2006 with the Total Access program, a hybrid offering that combined the convenience of online rentals with Blockbuster’s enormous network of retail locations. Customers could rent in stores or online for one monthly price.

It was a masterstroke—an offer that Netflix couldn’t match.

As Gina Keating reported in her book, Netflixed, before Total Access, Netflix was winning 70% of new subscribers and Blockbuster 30%. Within weeks of the launch, that had flipped: Blockbuster was now winning 70% to the startup’s 30%. Now, Netflix was on the ropes. If it couldn’t maintain its growth rates, its stock price would drop and put its financing in jeopardy.

It seemed that Antioco, who had established an impressive track record for turning around retail operations, had done it again. It was strategic jujitsu, turning what was perceived as a weakness—its brick-and-mortar stores—into a sustainable competitive advantage. Blockbuster was heading into 2007 poised to regain dominance in the video rental industry. 

How it all unravelled

Despite the progress, not everybody was thrilled with the moves Antioco and his team made. Franchisees, many of whom had their life savings invested in their businesses, were suspicious of Blockbuster Online. They only owned 20% of the stores, but could still cause a stir. The moves were also expensive, costing roughly $400 million to implement, and investors balked.

So while Blockbuster was making progress against the Netflix threat, as earnings turned to losses, its stock took a beating. The low price attracted corporate raider Carl Icahn, whose heavy-handed style made managing the company difficult. Things came to a head in late 2006 when Icahn demanded that Antioco accept only half of the bonus he was owed.

“I was at a point, both personally and financially, that I had little desire to fight it out anymore,” Antioco told me. He negotiated his exit early the next year and left the company in July 2007. His successor, Jim Keyes, was determined to reverse Antioco’s strategy, cut investment in the subscription model, reinstate late fees, and shift the focus back to the retail stores.

When Blockbuster declared bankruptcy in 2010, the event was portrayed as corporate America’s inability to navigate digital disruption. Yet, as we have seen, nothing could be further from the truth. The management team came up with a viable strategy, executed it well, and proved they could compete, yet still were unable to survive that victory.

As it turns out, change from the top can fail just as easily as anything else.

Leveraging power for change

We like to think of the big guys at the top getting fat and lazy. The story of Netflix upending Blockbuster is so appealing because it plays to those biases. It’s reassuring to believe that people get disrupted by not paying attention and making poor decisions because that means that we can avoid their fate with a modicum of awareness and intelligence.

Yet the far more disturbing reality is that the Blockbuster leadership team was not stupid or lazy. In fact, they were innovative, made good strategic decisions, and executed them skillfully. If not for a seemingly minor compensation dispute, things could very easily have turned out differently. I think the key to understanding what happened is something Antioco told me about an earlier initiative when I interviewed him for my book, Cascades

“The experienced video executives were skeptical. In fact, they thought that the revenue-sharing agreement would kill the company. But throughout my career, I had learned that whenever you set out to do anything big, some people aren’t going to like it. I’d been successful by defying the status quo at important junctures and that’s what I thought had to be done in this case.”

In other words, over the years he had been put in positions of authority and was able to implement changes and deliver results fast enough that he was able to overpower any resistance. Yet in Blockbuster’s battle for survival with Netflix, key stakeholders—namely franchisees and shareholders—defected, and the floor fell out from under him. 

Antioco had all the formal authority he needed to deliver genuine transformation. But it was his inability to manage and align stakeholders that led to Blockbuster’s demise. The truth is that change isn’t top-down, nor is it bottom up. It propagates through networks.

Israeli singer Noa speaks to FRANCE 24 as Israel's participation sparks Eurovision backlash

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Ten countries, including favourite Finland and controversial competitor Israel, secured places on Tuesday in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest. The contest’s 70th anniversary edition has been overshadowed by divisions, with five countries — Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Iceland — boycotting in protest against Israel’s war in Gaza, which has killed at least 75,000 Palestinians since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel. For more, FRANCE 24’s Nadia Massih is joined by renowned Israeli singer Noa, who previously represented Israel at Eurovision in 2009 alongside Mira Awad, a Palestinian citizen of Israel. Noa has frequently used her platform to speak out against Israel’s treatment of Palestinians in both the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

BNB Chain Unveils On-Chain Agent Identity and Payment Framework With ERC-8004 Standard

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BNB Chain Unveils On-Chain Agent Identity and Payment Framework With ERC-8004 Standard




BNB Chain introduced a framework enabling autonomous agents to obtain verifiable on-chain identities, receive payments, hire other agents, and build reputation through new token standards and skill integrations.

Meta says WhatsApp is now the safest app to chat… with an AI

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WhatsApp now has a private incognito mode for Meta AI chats, where messages disappear and even Meta cannot read your conversations with the assistant.

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