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The Stellar Development Foundation  SDF  has made a $550,000 strategic investment to go toward SatoshiPay 8216  development of a B2B cross-border payments solution and its digital wallets, according to a press release.SDF   investment came by way of convertible loan notes and was the third investment the foundation has made in SatoshiPay. The convertible loan notes will likely convert at the time of SatoshiPay   next funding round, the release states.London-based SatoshiPay is currently testing its solution and will likely have a public beta launch in the fourth quarter this year, the company said in the release.The solution will particularly focus on the commercial payments market, which the press release states generates 170 billion euros  $188.3 billion  in annual transaction fees.Meinhard Benn, SatoshiPay CEO, said the new developments came from the increasing demand for B2B solutions.With a surge in demand for instant B2B payments, and blockchain maturing and enabling a payments revolution, we believe we have a head start through our proven, scalable blockchain business model, he said, according to the release. Our growth over the years wouldn ;t have been possible without SDF, who has been an essential partner to us in the development of our technology which continues today with this inv <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca>stanley ca</a> estment. 8221 <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us>stanley us</a> ;SatoshiPay was among the first businesses to use Stellar   ledger network commerci <a href=https://www.stanleycups.pl>stanley cup</a> ally, and it has processed 650,000 euros  $ Sakr Bitcoin 鈥? It   s Like Punk Rock
Tomorrow marks a sea change in payments and commerce, and in data in general.As the wo <a href=https://www.stanleycup.pl>stanley termos</a> rld 鈥?and likely  hopefully   you 鈥?knows by now, the General Data Protection Regulation  GDPR  goes into effect on May 25.The regulation, which traces its gestation to Europe, ushers in what might be seen as a new mindset 鈥?here, or to come 鈥?as companies deal with consumers data.If the aim is to give EU-based consumers power over who has their information and how it is used, by giving them the choice to demand their information be deleted from corporate databases, the questions remain for companies:聽What happens when that demand to delete is, in fact, actually demanded And, how can c <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.de>stanley quencher</a> ompanies make sure the one requesting the deletion is on the up and up  Identity theft is out there, in eCommerce and beyond, and GDPR throws light on another avenue for fraud.In an interview with Karen Webster, Trulioo general manager Zac Cohen provided <a href=https://www.stanleycup.pl>stanley kubek</a>  insight into how companies can authenticate users ahead of deleting data sets.The mandate to delete brings with it a host of issues that may not have been front and center for firms, as they may not know where all the data resides within the confines of their operations.聽They may not know whether they can in fact delete that data for regulatory or compliance reasons  especially germane for financial institutions, amid KYC and AML regulations .In seeking out and dealing with reams of information, or perhaps less than fulsome information 鈥?or when users simply wa
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