Category: KB

  • MIL-OSI: 11th.com and Orion Announce Integration to Automate Investor Fund Recovery for RIAs

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    OMAHA, NE, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — 11th.com, the leading automated investor claim recovery platform, today announced a strategic integration with Orion, a premier provider of transformative wealthtech solutions for financial advisors and the enterprise firms that serve them. The integration embeds 11th.com’s class action recovery engine directly within Orion’s advisor technology ecosystem, enabling over 2,400 wealth managers, RIAs, and financial planners, who collectively service more than $4.7 trillion in assets, to recover client funds without added complexity or operational lift. 

    11th.com and Orion Announce Integration to Automate Investor Fund Recovery for RIAs

    The integration allows advisors using Orion to automatically identify eligible claims, submit filings, and route recovered funds directly to client accounts—all without the paperwork, legal coordination, or manual tracking traditionally associated with class action participation. By bringing 11th.com’s automation into the native advisor workflow, the integration transforms what was once a burdensome, overlooked process into a streamlined, value-enhancing solution.

    “Advisors shouldn’t have to choose between growth and compliance,” said Stan Vick, Founder & CEO of 11th.com. “With this integration, claim recovery becomes as seamless as billing or rebalancing—automated, reliable, and built into the platforms advisors already use.”
      
    For advisors, the benefits are both operational and fiduciary. The solution ensures no eligible funds are left behind, while reinforcing an advisor’s duty to act in their clients’ best interests. By removing friction from an otherwise neglected area of practice, the partnership helps advisors demonstrate added value and deepen trust with clients.

    “This integration with 11th.com is a great example of how Orion’s real-time data sharing through AWS Redshift can unlock powerful new capabilities for advisors,” said Reed Colley, President of Orion Advisor Technology. “By streamlining access to accurate, up-to-date data, we’re enabling advisors to automate class action claim recovery without adding operational complexity. This delivers real value to clients while keeping the advisor experience seamless.” 

    This announcement reflects a broader trend toward embedded recovery solutions that add tangible value without increasing advisor workload.

    About 11th.com
    11th.com is the first platform to automate the recovery of funds owed to investors from securities class actions, regulatory settlements, and shareholder programs. Designed for both retail and institutional clients, it transforms a traditionally manual, overlooked process into a seamless, secure, and scalable recovery engine.

    About Orion
    Orion is a premier provider of the tech-enabled fiduciary process that transforms the advisor-client relationship by enabling financial advisors to Prospect, Plan, Invest, and Achieve within a single, connected, technology-driven experience. Combined, our brand entities, Orion Advisor Tech, Orion Portfolio Solutions, Brinker Capital Investments, Redtail Technology, and Orion OCIO create a complete offering that empowers firms to attract new clients seamlessly, connect goals more meaningfully to investment strategies and outcomes, and ultimately track progress toward each investor’s unique definition of financial success. Orion services $4.7 trillion in assets under administration and $98.6 billion of wealth management platform assets (as of March 31, 2025) and supports over 7.3 million technology accounts and thousands of independent advisory firms. Today, 17 out of the Top 20 Barron’s RIA firms1 rely on Orion’s technology to power their businesses and win for investors. Learn more at Orion.com.

    Wealth Management Assets Under Management include assets managed on a discretionary and non-discretionary basis by Orion Portfolio Solutions, LLC (“OPS”) and TownSquare Capital, LLC (“TSC”) on their proprietary platforms, assets in proprietary and third-party models made available through OPS’s Communities platform, and assets in OPS’s proprietary models managed on third-party platforms.

    1 Source: 2024 Top 100 RIA Firms, Barron’s, 2024.
    1634-U-25162

    Press Inquiries

    On Orion’s behalf:
    StreetCred PR
    orion@streetcredpr.com

    Natalie O’Dell
    natalie@streetcredpr.com
    717-818-2116

    On 11th.com behalf:
    Stan Vick
    pr@11th.com
    302-261-8626

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: MEF Extends its Automation Lifecycle Service Orchestration Portfolio to Internet Broadband Access

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MEF, a global industry association of enterprises and network, cloud, security, and technology providers accelerating enterprise digital transformation, today announced a major enhancement to its Internet Access and Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO) API portfolio with the addition of Layer 2 over Broadband support, including a new MEF standard and payload. This production-ready capability builds on MEF’s proven LSO API framework with more than 165 leading service providers engaged in the adoption lifecycle, and enables the automated buying, selling, and management of wholesale internet broadband access at scale.

    Layer 2 over Broadband joins MEF’s growing suite of standardized services aimed at streamlining inter-provider operations and accelerating adoption of Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) offerings. It supports a wide range of use cases, including Ethernet access (Access E-Line) over consumer internet broadband, triple play services, and business connectivity across multi-operator environments and is now available on the MEF LSO Marketplace.

    MEF’s LSO APIs are proven and globally adopted, with implementations across services such as Carrier Ethernet and Internet Access, and growing support for additional payloads like SD-WAN and Layer 2 over Broadband. This expansion reflects MEF’s ongoing commitment to delivering practical, standards-based solutions that enable real-world interoperability.

    “By adding Layer 2 over Broadband to our Internet Access services and LSO API portfolio, we’re not just introducing a new capability, we’re reinforcing a platform that is powering automated, carrier-grade services across the global ecosystem,” said Pascal Menezes, CTO, MEF. “As the industry increasingly embraces open, standards-based automation, MEF is leading the way through collaboration, real-world implementations, and trusted frameworks.”

    Layer 2 over Broadband extends MEF’s comprehensive Internet Access Portfolio, which includes:

    The portfolio also includes an extensive suite of LSO APIs now supporting Layer 2 over Broadband, enabling seamless automation across the full service lifecycle:

    LSO Business APIs:

    • Address Validation & Site Query
    • Product Catalog & Product Offering Qualification
    • Quote, Availability, and Price Discovery
    • Product Order & Inventory
    • Billing, Settlement, Trouble Ticketing & Incident Management

    LSO Operational APIs:

    • Appointment & Work Order
    • Service Order & Catalog
    • Service Inventory & Function Testing
    • Service Performance Monitoring
    • Service Fault Management

    The new Layer 2 over Broadband capabilities will be introduced in MEF’s upcoming LSO Janis release, expanding support for consumer and business broadband-based services with carrier-grade performance.

    MEF’s standardized LSO APIs reduce onboarding time from months to minutes, enabling a true on-demand experience. The new capabilities introduced in this release enable revenue-generating service opportunities across wholesale, retail, and multi-operator environments, while reducing integration overhead and accelerating time to market.

    To learn more about MEF’s Internet Access Portfolio visit https://www.mef.net and the LSO Marketplace at https://lso.mef.net.

    About MEF

    MEF is a global consortium of enterprise and service, cloud, cybersecurity, and technology providers collaborating to accelerate enterprise digital transformation. It delivers standards-based frameworks, services, technologies, APIs, and certification programs to enable Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) across an automated ecosystem. MEF is the defining authority for certified Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO) business and operational APIs and Carrier Ethernet, SASE, SD-WAN, Zero Trust, and Security Service Edge (SSE) technologies and services. MEF’s Global NaaS Event (GNE) convenes industry leaders building and delivering the next generation of NaaS solutions. For more information about MEF, visit MEF.net and follow us on LinkedIn and YouTube

    Media Contact:
    Melissa Power
    MEF
    pr@mef.net 

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/64975284-88f8-41d5-814a-2a7047bbd879

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: MEF Extends its Automation Lifecycle Service Orchestration Portfolio to Internet Broadband Access

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MEF, a global industry association of enterprises and network, cloud, security, and technology providers accelerating enterprise digital transformation, today announced a major enhancement to its Internet Access and Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO) API portfolio with the addition of Layer 2 over Broadband support, including a new MEF standard and payload. This production-ready capability builds on MEF’s proven LSO API framework with more than 165 leading service providers engaged in the adoption lifecycle, and enables the automated buying, selling, and management of wholesale internet broadband access at scale.

    Layer 2 over Broadband joins MEF’s growing suite of standardized services aimed at streamlining inter-provider operations and accelerating adoption of Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) offerings. It supports a wide range of use cases, including Ethernet access (Access E-Line) over consumer internet broadband, triple play services, and business connectivity across multi-operator environments and is now available on the MEF LSO Marketplace.

    MEF’s LSO APIs are proven and globally adopted, with implementations across services such as Carrier Ethernet and Internet Access, and growing support for additional payloads like SD-WAN and Layer 2 over Broadband. This expansion reflects MEF’s ongoing commitment to delivering practical, standards-based solutions that enable real-world interoperability.

    “By adding Layer 2 over Broadband to our Internet Access services and LSO API portfolio, we’re not just introducing a new capability, we’re reinforcing a platform that is powering automated, carrier-grade services across the global ecosystem,” said Pascal Menezes, CTO, MEF. “As the industry increasingly embraces open, standards-based automation, MEF is leading the way through collaboration, real-world implementations, and trusted frameworks.”

    Layer 2 over Broadband extends MEF’s comprehensive Internet Access Portfolio, which includes:

    The portfolio also includes an extensive suite of LSO APIs now supporting Layer 2 over Broadband, enabling seamless automation across the full service lifecycle:

    LSO Business APIs:

    • Address Validation & Site Query
    • Product Catalog & Product Offering Qualification
    • Quote, Availability, and Price Discovery
    • Product Order & Inventory
    • Billing, Settlement, Trouble Ticketing & Incident Management

    LSO Operational APIs:

    • Appointment & Work Order
    • Service Order & Catalog
    • Service Inventory & Function Testing
    • Service Performance Monitoring
    • Service Fault Management

    The new Layer 2 over Broadband capabilities will be introduced in MEF’s upcoming LSO Janis release, expanding support for consumer and business broadband-based services with carrier-grade performance.

    MEF’s standardized LSO APIs reduce onboarding time from months to minutes, enabling a true on-demand experience. The new capabilities introduced in this release enable revenue-generating service opportunities across wholesale, retail, and multi-operator environments, while reducing integration overhead and accelerating time to market.

    To learn more about MEF’s Internet Access Portfolio visit https://www.mef.net and the LSO Marketplace at https://lso.mef.net.

    About MEF

    MEF is a global consortium of enterprise and service, cloud, cybersecurity, and technology providers collaborating to accelerate enterprise digital transformation. It delivers standards-based frameworks, services, technologies, APIs, and certification programs to enable Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) across an automated ecosystem. MEF is the defining authority for certified Lifecycle Service Orchestration (LSO) business and operational APIs and Carrier Ethernet, SASE, SD-WAN, Zero Trust, and Security Service Edge (SSE) technologies and services. MEF’s Global NaaS Event (GNE) convenes industry leaders building and delivering the next generation of NaaS solutions. For more information about MEF, visit MEF.net and follow us on LinkedIn and YouTube

    Media Contact:
    Melissa Power
    MEF
    pr@mef.net 

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/64975284-88f8-41d5-814a-2a7047bbd879

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Law enforcement representatives from Ukraine build knowledge around Advance Passenger Information and passenger data systems during OSCE study visit to the United Kingdom

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: Law enforcement representatives from Ukraine build knowledge around Advance Passenger Information and passenger data systems during OSCE study visit to the United Kingdom

    Law enforcement representatives from Ukraine build knowledge around Advance Passenger Information and passenger data systems during OSCE study visit to the United Kingdom | OSCE

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  • TRAI partners with RBI and banks for pilot project to enhance digital consent management

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Monday has launched a pioneering pilot project in collaboration with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and select banks to tackle the persistent issue of spam calls and messages. Announced on June 16, by the Press Information Bureau (PIB), this initiative aims to establish a robust digital consent management system under the Telecom Commercial Communications Customer Preference Regulations (TCCCPR), 2018.

    TRAI has noted a surge in consumer complaints about unsolicited commercial communications from businesses claiming prior consent. Often, these consents are obtained through offline or unverifiable methods, raising concerns about misrepresentation, deception, or unauthorized data sharing. To address this, TRAI has introduced a framework requiring businesses to acquire and register consumer consent digitally in a secure, interoperable registry maintained by Telecom Service Providers (TSPs).

    The pilot project, launched under a Regulatory Sandbox framework, prioritizes the banking sector due to the sensitivity of financial transactions and the prevalence of spam-related fraud. On June 13, 2025, TRAI issued a directive to all TSPs, mandating their collaboration with banks to test the Consent Registration Function (CRF). This initiative will validate the operational, technical, and regulatory aspects of the system, paving the way for a nationwide rollout across various sectors.

    TRAI’s efforts build on previous measures to curb spam, including enabling complaint registration against unregistered telemarketers (UTMs) without prior Do Not Disturb (DND) registration and disconnecting telecom resources misused for spamming. The new digital consent framework aims to enhance transparency and verifiability, ensuring only legitimate communications reach consumers.

  • TRAI partners with RBI and banks for pilot project to enhance digital consent management

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Monday has launched a pioneering pilot project in collaboration with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and select banks to tackle the persistent issue of spam calls and messages. Announced on June 16, by the Press Information Bureau (PIB), this initiative aims to establish a robust digital consent management system under the Telecom Commercial Communications Customer Preference Regulations (TCCCPR), 2018.

    TRAI has noted a surge in consumer complaints about unsolicited commercial communications from businesses claiming prior consent. Often, these consents are obtained through offline or unverifiable methods, raising concerns about misrepresentation, deception, or unauthorized data sharing. To address this, TRAI has introduced a framework requiring businesses to acquire and register consumer consent digitally in a secure, interoperable registry maintained by Telecom Service Providers (TSPs).

    The pilot project, launched under a Regulatory Sandbox framework, prioritizes the banking sector due to the sensitivity of financial transactions and the prevalence of spam-related fraud. On June 13, 2025, TRAI issued a directive to all TSPs, mandating their collaboration with banks to test the Consent Registration Function (CRF). This initiative will validate the operational, technical, and regulatory aspects of the system, paving the way for a nationwide rollout across various sectors.

    TRAI’s efforts build on previous measures to curb spam, including enabling complaint registration against unregistered telemarketers (UTMs) without prior Do Not Disturb (DND) registration and disconnecting telecom resources misused for spamming. The new digital consent framework aims to enhance transparency and verifiability, ensuring only legitimate communications reach consumers.

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Klaas Knot: Remarks for the 93rd G30 Plenary

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    It is a pleasure to be here today to reflect on the critical intersection of financial innovation and stability. I would like to share some thoughts from my perspective as Chair of the Financial Stability Board.

    A fundamental principle that guides the FSB’s work is that we do not pick winners. Our focus is on ensuring that innovation develops safely and responsibly, within the boundaries of our public policy objectives.

    When considering the relationship between innovation and stability, two aspects stand out. First, the speed at which new technologies can be adopted – and how quickly that can translate into systemic implications. Second, the cross-border nature of many of these innovations, which can amplify their impact and complicate regulatory responses.

    A striking example that highlights both of these dimensions is the case of Libra. In 2019, Facebook announced plans to launch a blockchain-based stablecoin payment system. Although it never actually launched, the announcement alone triggered a strong response by the global regulatory community. The potential systemic and cross-border implications of a widely adopted global stablecoin were immediately apparent. This episode also fuelled a broader conversation on improving the end-user experience in cross-border payments.

    The FSB has played a central role in shaping the global response to these questions.

    The global response: building foundations for stability 

    The global response had two pillars.

    The first pillar was the development of high-level recommendations for stablecoins, published in 2020 and then revised in 2023. These recommendations set clear expectations for the design and operation of stablecoins to ensure they do not undermine financial stability.

    The second pillar was, arguably, the G20 Cross-Border Payments Roadmap. This G20 initiative recognised the need to enhance the user experience for cross-border payments. This roadmap emerged at a time when traditional financial systems were de-risking, creating gaps that new technologies and players sought to fill. 

    Stablecoins have the potential to address some of the challenges in cross-border payments, but they also introduce new risks. Importantly, they are not the only solution. Innovations in domestic payment system, such as mobile payments, instant or fast payments, and the exploration of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and tokenised deposits – potentially through a single “ledger” or interoperable ledgers – also have the potential to reshape the payments landscape. 

    Looking ahead: balancing innovation and stability

    As we look to the future, a key question stands out: will stablecoins replace traditional bank-based cross-border payments, or will they remain a niche solution in a fragmented global payments ecosystem? While the answer is unclear, the potential risks are not. 

    Let’s start with a fundamental question: how different is a stablecoin from e-money or a bank deposit? At first glance, stablecoins appear to be a novel technological innovation, promising faster, cheaper, and more efficient payments. However, their core functions-storing value and enabling payments-are not fundamentally different from traditional financial instruments.

    A stablecoin backed by high-quality liquid assets mirrors the structure of e-money issuers. Similarly, a stablecoin issued by a private entity with claims on an issuer resembles a bank deposit. Yet, despite these similarities, stablecoins often operate outside the regulatory frameworks that govern bank deposits and other products that are similar to bank deposits, like money market funds.

    This highlights the importance of the principle “same activity, same risk, same regulation.” If stablecoins perform the same economic functions as traditional instruments, they should adhere to equivalent regulatory and supervisory standards. This is not about stifling innovation but about safeguarding financial stability.

    Consider a stablecoin issuer promising 1:1 backing with high-quality reserves. Without strict oversight, could these reserves fund riskier ventures, with stablecoins acting as conduits for leveraging the financial system? This scenario is not hypothetical. We have seen how loosely regulated financial instruments can amplify risks rather than mitigate them. The potential for runs on large stablecoins could have financial stability implications given their large-scale investments in the short-term funding markets. The interconnectedness between stablecoins and traditional financial systems has grown rapidly.

    To address these risks, the FSB has set guardrails for the regulation, supervision, and oversight of stablecoins. These guardrails ensure robust standards for transparency, governance, and risk management. However, if we want to prevent regulatory arbitrage, consistent implementation across jurisdictions is critical. We should not allow stablecoins to exploit gaps in oversight to gain a competitive advantage or to introduce hidden risks into the financial system.

    Strengthening Cross-Border Payments 

    Beyond stablecoins, cross-border payments remain a focus area for the FSB. We work to bring the G20’s goal of making cross-border payments faster, cheaper, more accessible and more transparent to fruition. Cross border payments mostly rely on domestic payments systems. But unlike domestic payment systems, there is no over-arching global governance framework for cross-border payments. Despite innovation in cross-border payments, inefficiencies, high costs, and delays in processing payments persist. 

    To address this, the FSB, in collaboration with the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) and other stakeholders, has been working to align technical standards, as well as legal, regulatory, and supervisory frameworks. This work is essential no matter what technology is used.

    Conclusion

    As we navigate this complex landscape, our task is to strike the right balance between fostering innovation and safeguarding financial stability. The likely route for the evolution of global payments remains uncertain. If that comes by the spread of new payment rails, such as stablecoin, or if it comes by the improved efficiency of long-established payment mechanisms should be something we are agnostic on. But what is certain is that fostering innovation must not come at the expense of stability.

    Continued global coordination and vigilance is therefore crucial. We must address the risks posed by stablecoins and other fintech innovations while ensuring that payments systems provide good value for consumers. Improving the user experience is not just a matter of convenience; it is essential to prevent the proliferation of unregulated or less-regulated alternatives. 

    Authorities must work together to build a financial system that embraces innovation while ensuring resilience, inclusivity, and trust. By applying the principle of “same activity, same risk, same regulation”, we can foster a payments ecosystem that is both forward-looking and fundamentally sound.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Klaas Knot: How is the water? Continuing our work to preserve financial stability

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Thank you. I want to start by telling you a little story. Some of you may know it.

    There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way. The older fish nods at them and says “Morning, boys. How’s the water?” And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and says “What the hell is water?”

    This parable was famously used by the American writer David Foster Wallace in a commencement speech in 2005. Now, just like Wallace, I don’t plan to present myself here as the wise, older fish explaining to you what water is. The point of the fish story is merely that, like he said: ‘the most obvious, important realities are often the ones that are hardest to see and talk about.’

    Now, Wallace was speaking to a class of graduates about the benefits of a liberal arts education in life. To have his idea being used by some central bank technocrat at a conference on financial stability would probably be his worst nightmare come true. But although it may seem a stretch, I think his idea applies to our world too. Because financial stability is an obvious and important reality. Its impact is universal. Financial stability affects households, businesses, governments-and ultimately, the trust that underpins our economies. It’s the basis of everything in economic life.

    Because of its universal impact, financial stability seems like a natural state. We take out our phone and we pay. And the bread that we buy costs the same as it did last week. And when we wake up in the morning our savings are still in our bank account. Financial stability is something that seems to be just there, unconditionally. But it really isn’t. It is something we must continuously work for. It demands vigilance, coordination, and above all, the political will to act before the crisis hits. I know that you are aware of this. But many people tend to forget.

    As this is my last address in my capacity as Chair of the FSB, let me take this opportunity to look back a bit, take stock. And ask: where do we stand? How is the water?

    In truth, it has been anything but calm. Over the past years, we have experienced quite some waves in the financial system: the dash for cash during the onset of the Covid pandemic, the commodity market turmoil following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the failure of Archegos Capital Management in March 2021, and the market volatility associated with the recent trade tariff announcements. Central banks had to intervene in some of these episodes to support market functioning and the supply of credit to the economy. And in each case, parts of the non-bank financial sector played a central role in amplifying the stress.

    Non-bank financial intermediation, or NBFI, has grown into a critical part of the financial system. Its rise has been driven by regulatory shifts, search for yield, technological innovation, and demographic trends leading to asset accumulation.

    The NBFI sector brings real benefits. NBFIs offer a diversified source of funding and much needed competition for banks. But they also have vulnerabilities-liquidity mismatches and the inability of some market players to prepare for them, leverage, and growing interconnectedness with banks. Historically, regulation of this sector focused on investor protection, market integrity, and other mandates. But those don’t fully capture the systemic risks. We needed a financial stability lens.

    That’s what the FSB brought to the table. Our work to date has included policy recommendations to enhance money market fund resilience, to address structural liquidity mismatch in open-ended funds, and to enhance liquidity preparedness for margin calls. Later this month, we will deliver policy recommendations to the G20 to address financial stability risks arising from leverage in NBFI.

    Have we made a difference? The recent bout of tariff-related volatility in global markets could serve as a test. We saw a global sell-off in equity markets and historic trading volumes. Typical correlations between certain asset classes broke down. We saw some deleveraging and large margin and collateral calls. Yet – the system held. That is encouraging. But let’s be honest: we can’t credit our reforms just yet. Because the FSB’s recommendations have not yet been implemented in full. And recommendations alone don’t reduce systemic risk. Implementation does. That means authorities must not only put them into national laws and regulations, they must also have the capacity to operationalise them.

    One of the biggest challenges we face in NBFI is data. We need better data. More data. And better use of that data. There is a reason why the non-bank sector was formerly called “shadow banking”. It’s opaque. There are gaps. And those gaps mean we often don’t see the vulnerabilities-until it’s too late. The quality and timeliness of non-bank data are essential for identifying and assessing vulnerabilities and for designing and calibrating effective policies. We must address these data challenges. We can’t keep relying on crises to reveal what we should have seen coming.

    That’s why a high-level group within the FSB is now exploring how to close those data gaps-to support risk monitoring, policy design and implementation, and cross-border cooperation.

    And let’s be clear: we can’t just copy-paste banking rules onto the NBFI sector. It’s too diverse and different from banks. We need to look at both non-bank entities and activities. But our goal should be clear: a level playing field across the financial system. Not by weakening bank rules-but by strengthening the resilience of the non-bank sector.

    Which brings me to the banking sector. During my tenure as FSB Chair, we witnessed something unprecedented: the failure of a global systemically important bank. The demise of Credit Suisse, together with the failure of three US regional banks, was a stark reminder that bank failures are not relics of the past. It brought lessons for banks and financial authorities. In some areas, our work to make the banking sector more resilient is not yet complete. Take the final Basel III standards. These are designed to strengthen the resilience of banks to withstand losses. And yet-they still have not been implemented in many jurisdictions. The Credit Suisse case also highlighted that more than 15 years after the Global Financial Crisis, authorities still face challenges in dealing with failing banks.

    So yes, we’ve made progress. But we’re not done. And in the meantime, we must protect what we’ve already built.

    Because let’s not forget: during all the recent episodes of financial stress the banking system held up. In fact, during the pandemic, banks acted as shock absorbers. Not shock amplifiers. They absorbed losses. They kept credit flowing. They helped keep the economy afloat. That’s no small feat.

    And I believe that is largely thanks to the reforms we put in place after the global financial crisis. The years of hard work. The tough decisions. The commitment to resilience.

    But now, more than 15 years later, we’re hearing familiar calls again-for deregulation. But also calls for simplification. And let me be clear: those two are not the same.

    I understand the desire to simplify. Banking regulation and supervision has become overly complex. Over the past 15 years, a great deal of regulation has been introduced from various angles -global, EU, national. Micro and macro. New risks added, old ones rarely removed. There’s overlap. There’s friction. And yes, sometimes, there’s a lack of supervisory proportionality for smaller institutions. That’s worth looking into.

    But keep in mind that, beyond some point, simple rules are less risk-sensitive. And that means they have to be stricter. You want simpler rules? Sure, but those rules must then be calibrated at a more prudent level. That is the general thinking behind the standardised approach of Basel III. That is also the thinking behind the leverage ratio.

    Most importantly, what we must avoid is confusing simplification with deregulation. Deregulation means effectively lowering buffers by relaxing the rules. That would both reduce resilience in the banking system and increase the likelihood of financial crises. We cannot afford to undo the progress we have made. Especially not now, in this time of unusually high uncertainty, both on the economic and political front. That would be a big mistake. As the late Rudiger Dornbusch used to say: ‘The crisis takes a much longer time coming than you think, and then it happens much faster than you would have thought.’

    Which brings me to my next point. The developments in both the bank and non-bank sectors are unfolding against a backdrop of major structural shifts-shifts that could reshape financial stability as we know it. I am talking here about technology, about payments, and climate risk.

    Technological innovation is transforming the financial sector. It’s adding new layers of complexity. And it’s doing so at speed.

    The period leading up to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis was marked by balance sheet expansion and financial product innovation. But over the past 15 years, the focus has shifted toward technological innovation. The FSB has been watching this closely. It’s our job to harness the benefits while mitigating the risks.

    And yes, the benefits are real. Technology has made financial services faster, more accessible, more efficient. And in some areas, like AI, we have only started to see its full impact. But it also brings new risks. Why? Because of the speed and scale of adoption. For example in cyberattacks. Because of the growing interconnections with the traditional financial system. Because of the concentration of services in a few key providers.

    Technology creates new interdependencies. And it can accelerate the pace at which a crisis unfolds. Technological innovation is perhaps most visible in the payments space, where new platforms and digital assets are rapidly reshaping how value moves across borders and between users.

    These dynamics are most visible in crypto-assets. This fast-growing market has seen more than its fair share of bankruptcies, liquidity crises and outright fraud, even as its links with traditional finance continue to grow. At the FSB, we have long maintained that crypto does not yet pose a systemic risk, but recent developments suggest we may be approaching a tipping point. Barriers for retail users have dropped significantly, particularly with the introduction of crypto ETFs. The interlinkages with the traditional financial system continue to grow. Stablecoin issuers, for example, now hold substantial amounts of U.S. Treasuries. This is a segment we must monitor closely.

    The crypto ecosystem will continue to evolve-and so must our regulatory frameworks. Jurisdictions are actively developing these, and the FSB’s recommendations offer a common foundation. This is especially important given the inherently cross-border nature of crypto. Effective implementation must extend beyond the G20, supported by strong regulatory and supervisory cooperation.

    Now, part of crypto’s rise can be traced to the shortcomings of cross-border payments. This is a complex, technical issue. But solving it has real-world benefits-for people, for businesses, for economies. This is the goal of the G20 Roadmap for Enhancing Cross-Border Payments. The aim of the roadmap is to bring about cheaper, faster and more transparent and inclusive cross-border payment services for the benefit of citizens and businesses worldwide.

    We’ve made progress. The FSB, the CPMI, and others have done a lot of work. However, our goals are ambitious. And while they have driven changes by both the private and public sectors, we continue to see significant challenges, particularly in certain regions and payment corridors. As we move toward crafting a strategy for the next phase of work, we are seeking to clarify the issues that continue to impede progress. We will continue to work with the private sector to get it done.

    Next to technology and payments, we face another growing challenge-one that’s no longer on the horizon, but right at our doorstep. I’m talking about climate change. Now, climate change may originate outside the financial sector-but its impact on financial stability is very real.

    Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent. And as they occur, the risks to financial systems continue to rise. These events test the ability of financial institutions to manage risk and maintain services-especially in the most vulnerable regions. That’s why we must keep strengthening risk management practices. And why we must build resilience-across the entire global financial system.

    The FSB’s Climate Roadmap, launched in 2021 and endorsed by the G20, gives us a coordinated path forward. It focuses on four key areas: firm-level disclosures, data, vulnerability analysis, and regulatory and supervisory tools.

    These four pillars are not standalone. They’re connected. They build on each other.

    For example: consistent, reliable corporate disclosures are the foundation. They help close data gaps. They help firms-and authorities-understand climate-related risks. Better data leads to better analysis. And better analysis leads to better policy.

    And we are making progress. More jurisdictions and companies are adopting climate-related disclosures. New global standards on sustainability assurance are boosting trust in those disclosures. Tools like climate risk dashboards and scenario analyses help us understand vulnerabilities. International bodies are issuing guidance on how to integrate climate risks into existing regulatory and supervisory frameworks. And across the global financial community, we’re seeing knowledge shared, capacity built, and good practices identified.

    But let’s be honest-challenges remain. Especially when it comes to implementation. The groundwork is there. But now, the focus must shift to action-by firms and by authorities. We still lack reliable, granular, and comparable data. That makes it hard to fully assess and manage climate-related risks.

    And let’s face it-traditional financial stability tools weren’t built for this. They’re not always fit for purpose when it comes to forward-looking, long-horizon risks like climate change. That’s why developing robust, climate-specific analytical approaches must remain a top priority.

    Because climate risk isn’t just an environmental issue. It’s a financial one. And it’s one we can’t afford to ignore.

    Let me wrap up.

    Financial stability is an international public good. Every single issue I have mentioned today – NBFI, banking, crypto, payments, climate – they all cross borders. And so must our response be.

    If we want to meet today’s challenges to financial stability, we have to continue to work together. And we need to stay committed to the international bodies we have built to underpin that cooperation, such as the Basel Committee and the FSB. In a fragmented world, global cooperation is harder. But it is also more essential. During the global financial crisis, policymakers acted swiftly and in unison. We must preserve that capacity.

    Because for society, financial stability is like what water is for fish. We barely notice it-until it’s gone. Preserving financial stability is continuous hard work. It is complicated, it is technical, it is not glamorous. Calibrating risk weights for banks doesn’t make headlines. It doesn’t fill the streets with protestors. Therefore, it doesn’t always get the attention it deserves from policy makers, among all the other issues they have on their plate.

    But make no mistake: a stable financial system is the foundation for almost all public policy. When financial stability is lost, everything else falls apart. Governments can’t focus on education, or healthcare, or climate. They’re too busy drawing up rescue plans for an economy in free fall.

    So we have to continue our work. Which means maintaining our ambition as policy makers to take the agreed policies all the way through to implementation. Let’s keep our eyes on the water. And let’s keep it safe and stable.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 59: UK Statement on the report of the Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    UN Human Rights Council 59: UK Statement on the report of the Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan

    UK Statement for the Enhanced Interactive Dialogue on the report of the Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan. Delivered by the UK’s Human Rights Ambassador, Eleanor Sanders.

    Thank you, Mr President.

    Special Rapporteur,

    We welcome your dedication to highlighting the grave human rights situation in Afghanistan. The UK fully supports your mandate.

    As you have outlined, as we approach the fourth anniversary of Taliban rule, women and girls are denied their right to education, employment, freedom of movement and expression.

    Discrimination against so many is compounded by the lack of accessible, affordable and impartial judicial institutions.

    The Taliban must reverse these inhumane restrictions to ensure a brighter future for all Afghans, including minorities such as LGBT+ individuals and people from ethnic Hazara communities.

    23 million Afghans are in need of humanitarian assistance. The UK continues to provide assistance, working with the UN and others.

    We remain committed to working constructively for an Afghanistan at peace with itself, its neighbours and the international community. Afghanistan cannot achieve long-term stability and prosperity while half its population is systematically excluded from society.

    The international community must remain united in ensuring accountability and in urging the Taliban to change direction.

    Special Rapporteur, what are the short and long-term consequences of this erosion of justice for Afghan society as a whole?

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 59: UK Statement for the Special Rapporteur on Eritrea

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    UN Human Rights Council 59: UK Statement for the Special Rapporteur on Eritrea

    UK Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on Eritrea. Delivered by the UK’s Human Rights Ambassador, Eleanor Sanders.

    Thank you Mr President,

    We thank the Special Rapporteur for his update and reiterate our ongoing support to his vital mandate. We remain concerned by Eritrea’s continued lack of engagement with the Special Rapporteur and minimal human rights scrutiny in the country.

    During Eritrea’s Universal Periodic Review in May 2024, the UK welcomed progress made in promoting economic, social and cultural rights, including an improvement in higher education opportunities. But more still needs to be done to ensure that the rights of Eritreans are fully promoted and protected.

    Meaningful change is urgently needed.

    The system of national service needs a comprehensive evaluation to help stem the flow of young people leaving the country in search of freedoms and opportunities they cannot access in Eritrea.

    Furthermore, those arbitrarily detained for political reasons, or for their religion or belief, must be released.

    Special Rapporteur,

    How can this Council further support your mandate, including by facilitating visits to the region?

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Situation in the Middle East: E3 Statement at the IAEA Extraordinary Board, 16 June 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Speech

    Situation in the Middle East: E3 Statement at the IAEA Extraordinary Board, 16 June 2025

    Joint statement by Ambassador Corinne Kitsell, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, on behalf of France, Germany and the UK (E3) at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Extraordinary Board of Governors meeting on 16 June 2025.

    Chair,

    The E3 are concerned about  the ongoing escalation of tensions in the Middle East, following Israeli strikes against targets in Iran and Iran’s response. The E3 reiterate their commitment to the region’s stability and call on all sides to abide by international law, show restraint and refrain from taking further steps which could lead to serious consequences such as potential radioactive release. Escalation is in the interest of no one in the region.

    We reiterate our full support to the IAEA’s independent and impartial mandate and thank the DG for his recent update to the UNSC.

    The E3 have repeatedly expressed their deep concern about Iran’s accelerating and expanding enrichment activities without any plausible civilian justification. The E3 are also worried by recent statements by high-ranking officials on Iran’s willingness to take new and special measures to protect nuclear materials and equipment that would not be declared to the IAEA. As a state party to the NPT and its nuclear safeguards regime, Iran is obliged to declare and put all nuclear material located in Iran under IAEA safeguards. Such statements are concerning and exacerbate the IAEA Comprehensive Report’s findings of Iran’s continued noncompliance with its safeguards agreement and that the IAEA is not in a capacity to verify that Iran’s nuclear program is exclusively peaceful.

    Manipulative attempts to link this crisis with the resolution passed by the Board is an unjustified and irresponsible narrative politicising the IAEA and the safeguards system. The resolution this Board adopted last week was a necessary and long-overdue step to hold Iran into account for its failure to cooperate sufficiently with the Agency over the past six years. It was measured and gave Iran a final opportunity to resolve the outstanding safeguards issues. Iran’s full cooperation with the IAEA and full implementation of its safeguards agreement are a legal obligation and a necessary foundation for any enduring agreement.

    The E3 have repeatedly expressed our commitment to a diplomatic solution to Iran’s nuclear programme and the security of the state of Israel. We have supported recent US diplomatic efforts to reach a diplomatic agreement. We regret Iran’s decision not to participate in talks scheduled this Sunday in Oman. We will spare no efforts to contribute to a negotiated solution, in coordination with the United States.

    Thank you, Chair.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: From an idea to a forum for 3,200 people: how HSE students are building the business environment of the future

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    On May 31, the Higher School of Economics hosted the fifth, anniversary Forum of the HSE Business Club — the largest student entrepreneurial event in the country. In five years, students have transformed it from a local initiative into a large-scale platform uniting market leaders, investors, aspiring entrepreneurs and anyone who wants to build a business while still studying.

    Entirely organized by students, the forum became living proof: entrepreneurship at HSE is already working. In 2025, the event attracted a record 3,200 registrations and was supported by 20 partner companies. The online broadcast attracted thousands of views. VTB Bank acted as the general partner of the event.

    Dmitry Shminke

    Deputy Vice-Rector of the National Research University Higher School of Economics

    — The HSE Business Club Forum is a shining example of what our students are capable of when they have an idea, a team, and a desire to do truly meaningful things. This event is the result of colossal work, created entirely by the hands of students, and this is its main value.

    They don’t just listen to lectures, they create big events, learn in the process, take responsibility and leave the university with real management and project experience. Such initiatives show that studying at HSE is not about later, but about now. And this is inspiring.

    The forum also gives students a unique opportunity to meet with current entrepreneurs – ask questions, discuss their ideas and simply see what business looks like from the inside. Live communication with people who have already gone from idea to business.

    Dmitry Palchikov

    President of the HSE Business Club

    — At the Business Club, we believe that entrepreneurship begins with initiative — with the ability to take responsibility, assemble a team, negotiate, attract people, form an idea and bring it to fruition.

    And every year we are convinced: the forum is a tool with which we form a new generation of leaders and entrepreneurs. Those who will build businesses, create teams, make important decisions. And it is important for us that this generation has the right values, the right thinking and the right ambitions. Ambition not just to do big, but to do significant. Not just to earn, but to create. Not just to talk, but to take responsibility.

    It is important for us not only to inspire, but also to show that the entrepreneurial path is closer than it seems. Everything starts with a simple dialogue, with a desire to learn more, with the first idea. The forum is a space where you can take this first step. We want each participant to leave with a new question, a new contact or an idea that will launch something important.

    Thank you, HSE, for freedom and trust. And thank you to everyone who came: you are creating the future of entrepreneurship today.

    Investments in ideas: how the round table went

    One of the key events was the round table “The Future of Business: Investments in Youth Entrepreneurship”, organized jointly with the ANO “Development of Human Capital”. Representatives of investment funds, the venture industry, the university and the Business Club took part in the discussion.

    The discussion focused on early investments in student startups, criteria for their attractiveness to investors, and the role of universities in supporting young entrepreneurs. Participants discussed how the university environment can become a catalyst for the development of startup ecosystems and which mechanisms work most effectively.

    Pitch session: from words to deeds

    The forum became a real platform for testing student ideas. Nine student teams spoke at the pitch session, presenting their projects to investors and industry experts. The startups included an AR atlas, infusion devices, an AI interior designer, gaming PCs, a fitness community, and AI applications for mental support.

    Participants received not only feedback, but also the opportunity to attract partners, clients and mentors.

    Managing the Future: Insights from Industry Leaders

    The speakers at the forum were the country’s leading entrepreneurs, each of whom shared not only their experience, but also a strategic view on business development.

    Stanislav Bliznyuk, President of T-Technologies, spoke about digital transformation and the role of young people in the development of ecosystems. According to him, more than 40% of the company’s employees are recent graduates. The company operates on the “Test and Learn” principle: successful solutions are implemented instantly, mistakes are part of the process, the main thing is not to scale failures.

    Vladimir Yevtushenkov, founder of AFK Sistema, gave a speech on leadership in a crisis. The main thesis is the ability to maintain composure in conditions of uncertainty: “If a person is overcome by panic, consider that he has lost.”

    Oleg Zherebtsov, founder of the Lenta chain and Solopharm, shared his approach to creating effective operating models. The focus is on eliminating unnecessary links, focusing on speed and a strong team, digitalization and customer focus.

    Mikhail Grebenyuk, founder of the consulting company Resulting, presented a 20-point checklist that allows you to evaluate a business idea at the concept stage. The company’s portfolio includes more than 1,000 built sales departments and an annual revenue of 2 billion rubles.

    Other speakers at the forum include Ivan Tavrin (Kismet Capital Group), Dmitry Chuiko (Whoosh), Rinat Aliyev (Educate Online), Alexander Dubovenko (GOOD WOOD), Anton Makarov (divan.ru), Viktor Kuznetsov (VseInstrumenty.ru), Sergey Lebedev (CHICKO), Amiran Mutsoev (Dream Island).

    Education in practice

    The forum gave HSE students not only knowledge, but also the opportunity to apply it in practice. Organizing a large-scale event, working with partners, logistics, moderating platforms, managing teams – all this became part of the real experience of the Business Club participants.

    In parallel with the main speeches, practical workshops were held in the Small Hall: how to build a team, what to do with conflicts and how to develop a business in conditions of uncertainty. Semyon Shimichev, the founder of the Mates coffee chain, also spoke about his path – he opened his first outlet at the age of 19.

    General partner of the forum: VTB Partners: Sber, Ozon, Alfa-Bank, X5 Group, SBS Consulting, Domodedovo, Kept, Axenix, Future Today, FRII, Changellenge, Rosselkhozbank, HSE Business Incubator, Promsvyazbank, Svyatoy Istochnik and others.

    June 16

    “Vyshka” in Telegram

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Choose Canada this summer with the new Canada Strong Pass

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    OTTAWA, June 16, 2025

    This summer, Canadians can enjoy the very best Canada has to offer with the Canada Strong Pass. From museums and railroads to national parks and camping spots, the federal government is making it easier for families to choose Canada as they make their summer plans—and enjoy the places and experiences that bring us together and make Canada strong.

    From June 20 to September 2, 2025, the Canada Strong Pass will offer expanded access to Canada’s nature and culture across the country, helping families discover and celebrate Canada throughout the summer.

    The Pass includes:

    • Parks Canada: Free admission for all visitors to national historic sites, national parks and national marine conservation areas administered by Parks Canada and a 25% discount on camping fees.
    • National museums and the Plains of Abraham Museum: Free admission for children aged 17 and under and a 50% discount for young adults aged 18 to 24.
    • VIA Rail: Free travel for children aged 17 and under when accompanied by an adult and a 25% discount for young adults aged 18 to 24.
    • Selected participating provincial and territorial museums and galleries: Free admission for children and a 50% discount for young adults aged 18 to 24.

    By making these experiences more accessible, the Pass enables Canadians to connect with what unites us, discover our country’s diversity, take pride in our shared Canadian identity, and immerse ourselves in the stories and landscapes that shape who we are.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Security: NATO participates in EU European Youth Event in Strasbourg

    Source: NATO

    “What if Google Maps was a game?” This question was brought to a whole new level when NATO’s Public Diplomacy Division presented an Alliance-themed Geoguessr game at the biennial European Youth Event (EYE) on 14 June 2025.

    Hosted at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France and attended by various European Union (EU) institutions, international organisations, civil society and youth organisations, the EYE brings together thousands of 16- to 30-year-olds from across the European Union, and beyond. It provides a platform for young people to exchange views and debate with European parliamentarians and other influential decision-makers.

    For the first time, the event included a dedicated session on NATO and provided European youth with the opportunity to learn more about how the Alliance works to ensure peace and security for one billion people across Europe and North America. The briefing covered an introduction to NATO, a panel session in which young Europeans were able to ask questions to experts about the Alliance’s core business, and a fast-paced location-guessing challenge with a French professional Geoguessr, Bastel.

    Geoguessr is an online game in which players are dropped in a random location somewhere in the world. Using a 360-degree image from Google Street View, they must guess where they have landed based on the scenery, geographical features, or local elements specific to certain locations. To help educate young people about the Alliance, a specific version of the game was created with 35 significant locations from NATO’s history, such as the Palais de Chaillot, opposite the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, where NATO’s Headquarters was based from 1952 to 1959. By playing along with Bastel and NATO staff, the more-than-150 attendees were able to learn more about the origins and relevance of the Alliance in a fun and engaging manner.

    The event concluded with an open conversation between the young audience members and NATO experts. Questions centred around today’s security challenges, NATO-EU unity in the context of defence, and how young people can help contribute to the Alliance’s mission.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: ROTH to Host 15th Annual London Conference on June 24-26, 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via IBN – Roth Capital Partners, LLC (“ROTH”), www.roth.com, will host the 15th Annual Roth London Conference on June 24-26, 2025, at the Four Seasons Hotel London at Park Lane in London, UK.

    This event offers institutional investors an exclusive opportunity to engage directly with C-suite leaders and senior executives from approximately 80 companies with a strong focus on the Sustainability and Technology sectors. Designed to foster meaningful dialogue, the conference facilitates 1-on-1 and small group meetings in an intimate setting allowing investors to evaluate various businesses, assess market trends, and identify compelling investment opportunities.

    Throughout the event, ROTH’s team of Senior Research Analysts will be on hand to offer expert insights and facilitate introductions. Participating analysts include:  

    Sustainability: Justin Clare, CFA; Craig Irwin; Chip Moore, CFA; Philip Shen; Gerry Sweeney.

    Technology: Darren Aftahi; Richard Baldry, CFA; Suji DeSilva, CFA; Rohit Kulkarni; and Scott Searle, CFA.

    On June 25th, during the lunch session, Michael Darda, ROTH’s Chief Economist and Macro Strategist, will lead a discussion on Markets and Economics, covering key topics such as the US business cycle, inflation, interest rates, and asset allocation strategies across equities and fixed income.

    This will be followed by the Keynote Presentation by Dan Shugar, CEO and Founder of Nextracker, Inc. (NXT), exploring the technological, policy, and cost dynamics driving PV adoption. The session will be moderated by Philip Shen.

    Later that day, Suji DeSilva, CFA, will moderate a fireside chat with Alan Baratz, CEO of D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS). The discussion will focus on D-Wave’s approach to quantum computing, its unique technology platform, and the growing market opportunities as AI compute accelerates industry demand.

    On June 26th, Suji DeSilva, CFA, will return to moderate a fireside chat with Waseem Shiraz, SVP of Strategic Initiatives & Chief of Staff at Quantinuum (PRIVATE). The conversation will cover Quantinuum’s advancements in quantum computing, the competitive landscape, and the anticipated impact of quantum technologies on AI and enterprise applications.

    Following will be JC O’Hara, CAIA, CMT, ROTH’s Chief Technical Strategist, presenting insights on portfolio allocation in a globally connected yet increasingly fragmented world.

    “We look forward to hosting the 15th edition of our flagship London conference,” said Byron Roth, Executive Chairman of ROTH. “This event creates a unique environment for our corporate clients to engage directly with international financial professionals on a personal level.”

    Sagar Sheth, CEO of ROTH, added, “Given the current macroeconomic headwinds and geopolitical tensions, this year’s conference is especially timely. We’re proud to present nearly 80 innovative spanning sustainability, technology, media, and the consumer sector, each addressing some of today’s most critical global challenges.”

    AGENDA

    TUESDAY | June 24, 2025 – All Times are listed in British Summer Time (BST)
    4:00pm – 6:00pm – Pre-Conference Registration
    6:00pm – 10:00pm – ROTH Summer Social  

    WEDNESDAY | June 25, 2025
    8:00am – 9:00am – Registration and Morning Coffee
    9:00am – 12:00pm – 1-on-1 / Small Group Meetings
    12:00pm – 1:30pm – Lunch

    12:15pm – 12:45pmMarket Overview with Michael Darda – ROTH Chief Economist and Macro Strategist

    12:45pm – 1:25pmKeynote Presentation with Dan Shugar – CEO and Founder of Nextracker, Inc. (NXT)

    1:30pm – 5:15pm – 1-on-1 / Small Group Meetings
    4:30pm – 5:10pmFireside Chat with D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS) by Suji DeSilva, CFA – ROTH Senior Research Analyst

    6:00pm – Cocktail Soiree 

    THURSDAY | June 26, 2025

    8:00am – 9:00am – Registration and Morning Coffee
    8:45am – 12:30pm – 1-on-1 / Small Group Meetings
    10:15am – 10:55amFireside Chat with Quantinuum (PRIVATE) by Suji DeSilva, CFA – ROTH Senior Research Analyst
    12:30pm – 1:25pm – Lunch
    12:45pm – 1:15pmPresentation – Portfolio Allocation in a Connected yet Divided Global Landscape by JC O’Hara, CAIA, CMT – ROTH Chief Technical Strategist

    1:30pm – 3:40pm – 1-on-1 / Small Group Meetings

    Participating Companies & Sectors (As of 06/12/2025 – subject to change)
    This is not an offer or solicitation of the securities herein.

    ACM Research, Inc. (ACMR) – Technology & Media
    Allot Ltd. (ALLT) – Technology & Media
    Ameresco, Inc. (AMRC) – Sustainability
    American Superconductor Corporation (AMSC) – Sustainability
    Angel Studios (PRIVATE) – Technology & Media
    Applied Digital Corporation (APLD) – Technology & Media
    Arbe Robotics Ltd. (ARBE) – Technology & Media
    Arq, Inc. (ARQ) – Sustainability
    Array Technologies, Inc. (ARRY) – Sustainability
    Bitdeer Technologies Group (BTDR) – Technology & Media
    Blue Bird Corporation (BLBD) – Sustainability
    Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. (BWMN) – Engineering & Construction
    Byrna Technologies, Inc. (BYRN) – Consumer
    Cadiz, Inc. (CDZI) – Sustainability
    Canadian Solar (CSIQ) – Sustainability
    CECO Environmental Corp. (CECO) – Sustainability
    Ceragon Networks Ltd. (CRNT) – Technology & Media
    CEVA Inc. (CEVA) – Technology & Media
    ChargePoint Holdings, Inc. (CHPT) – Sustainability
    Cognyte Software Ltd. (CGNT) – Technology & Media
    CPI Card Group Inc. (PMTS) – Financial Technology
    Credo Technology Group Holding Ltd (CRDO) – Technology & Media
    CSG Systems International, Inc. (CSGS) – Technology & Media
    D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS) – Technology & Media
    Drilling Tools International Corporation (DTI) – Energy (Oil & Gas)
    Electrovaya Inc. (ELVA) – Sustainability
    Energy Vault Holdings, Inc. (NRGV) – Sustainability
    EnerSys (ENS) – Sustainability
    Enphase Energy, Inc. (ENPH) – Sustainability
    EVgo Inc. (EVGO) – Sustainability
    EZCORP, Inc. (EZPW) – Technology & Media
    FingerMotion, Inc. (FNGR) – Technology & Media
    First Solar, Inc. (FSLR) – Sustainability
    FTC Solar, Inc. (FTCI) – Sustainability
    Gambling.com Group Limited (GAMB) – Technology & Media
    Genius Sports Limited (GENI) – Technology & Media
    GigaCloud Technology Inc. (GCT) – Consumer
    Green Plains, Inc. (GPRE) – Sustainability
    HealWell AI Inc. (TSX:AIDX) – Technology & Media
    Hudson Technologies, Inc. (HDSN) – Sustainability
    indie Semiconductor, Inc. (INDI) – Technology & Media
    Innventure, Inc. (INV) – Sustainability
    InterDigital, Inc. (IDCC) – Technology & Media
    IREN (IREN) – Technology & Media
    KITS Eye Care Ltd.  (TSX:KITS) – Consumer
    Lakeland Industries, Inc. (LAKE) – Sustainability
    Magnachip Semiconductor Corp. (MX) – Technology & Media
    Marti Technologies, Inc. (MRT) – Technology & Media
    Nextracker Inc. (NXT) – Sustainability
    Niagen Bioscience, Inc. (NAGE) – Consumer
    Odysight.ai Inc. (ODYS) – Technology & Media
    Opera Limited (OPRA) – Technology & Media
    Ormat Technologies, Inc. (ORA) – Sustainability
    Perpetua Resources Corp. (PPTA) – Metals & Mining
    Plug Power, Inc. (PLUG) – Sustainability
    Powell Industries, Inc. (POWL) – Sustainability
    Quantinuum (PRIVATE) – Technology & Media
    RedCloud Holdings (RCT) – Technology & Media
    Redwire Corporation (RDW) – Technology & Media
    Rezolve AI Limited (RZLV) – Technology & Media
    Rimini Street, Inc.  (RMNI) – Technology & Media
    Riot Platforms, Inc. (RIOT) – Technology & Media
    Roth Quantitative Survey Group (QSG) – QSG Research
    Sandisk Corporation (SNDK) – Technology & Media
    Shimmick Corporation (SHIM) – Sustainability
    Shoals Technologies Group, Inc. (SHLS) – Sustainability
    Sivers Semiconductors AB (OM:SIVE) – Technology & Media
    SolarEdge Technologies, Inc. (SEDG) – Sustainability
    SoundThinking, Inc. (SSTI) – Technology & Media
    Sunrun Inc. (RUN) – Sustainability
    Tecogen Inc (TGEN) – Sustainability
    TeraWulf Inc. (WULF) – Technology & Media
    Terra Innovatum / GSR III Acq. Corp. (GSRT) – Sustainability
    The Elmet Group (PRIVATE) – Sustainability
    USA Rare Earth, Inc. (USAR) – Technology & Media
    W&T Offshore, Inc. (WTI) – Energy (Oil & Gas)
    Willdan Group, Inc. (WLDN) – Sustainability

    B2I DIGITAL, Inc. is a marketing sponsor of the 15th Annual Roth London Conference. Company Profiles by b2i

    Thank you to the event sponsors:

    Lowenstein Sandler LLP
    The Blueshirt Group
    B2I DIGITAL, Inc.
    InvestorBrandNetwork

    NGO Sustainability
    PV Tech Research

    For more information and how to register, please visit: www.roth.com/london2025

    The conference is intended for qualified investors, companies, service providers, and members of the media/press related to ROTH.

    About ROTH:
    ROTH is a relationship-driven investment bank focused on serving growth companies and their investors. Our full-service platform provides capital raising, high impact equity research, macroeconomics, sales and trading, technical insights, derivatives strategies, M&A advisory, and corporate access. Headquartered in Newport Beach, California, ROTH is a privately held, employee-owned organization and maintains offices throughout the U.S. For more information on Roth, please visit www.roth.com.

    Investor Contact
    ROTH
    Isabel Mattson-Pain
    Managing Director, Chief Marketing Officer
    imattson-pain@roth.com | 949.720.7117

    Media Contact
    IBN
    Austin, Texas
    www.InvestorBrandNetwork.com
    512.354.7000 Office
    Editor@InvestorBrandNetwork.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Steijn: The AI assistant transforming meal planning for millions in the Netherlands

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Steijn: The AI assistant transforming meal planning for millions in the Netherlands

    Albert Heijn carries about 17,000 different products in its 1,200 stores, and it has a system of demand forecasting that makes as many as one billion predictions a day to ensure the best possible balance between supply and demand.

    A separate product team is responsible for the price labels on the electronic shelves in the stores.

    “There is an algorithm behind them that automatically calculates the best discounts every 15 minutes,” van Ameyden says. As products get closer to their expiration date, the discounts get bigger. “At the beginning of the day you might see 20% off, and it can go to 70%.”

    Willems, back at home in her kitchen in Nieuw-Vennep, said that as long as she’s been shopping for groceries, she’s been an Albert Heijn customer, and before Steijn appeared, she was using recipes she found in the app.

    Steijn has added a helpful twist, however, introducing new flavors – both by suggesting variations on favorite recipes and introducing new ones.

    “For example, lentils – I never used lentils for any of my recipes, but when I entered three ingredients in Steijn, it came up with a lentil soup, and we loved it,” she said. “Thanks to Steijn I’m now a big fan of lentils.”

    Van Straaten said Steijn has delivered both practical and unexpected benefits.

    “I think Steijn saves me about an hour and a half to two hours a week,” he said. “But I think what is even more important is that I provide my kids with healthier food and a better variety of food.”

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: We’ve operated in Europe for more than 40 years – and we have been and always will be a steadfast partner to Europe. With Microsoft Sovereign Cloud, we’re committed to offering the most comprehensive set of sovereignty solutions for customers across Sovereign Public Cloud, Sovereign Private Cloud and the National Partner Clouds operated by our European partners. Today, we are announcing new offerings that bring digital sovereignty to all European organizations in the public cloud and unlock new ways to run private sovereign clouds too…

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: We’ve operated in Europe for more than 40 years – and we have been and always will be a steadfast partner to Europe. With Microsoft Sovereign Cloud, we’re committed to offering the most comprehensive set of sovereignty solutions for customers across Sovereign Public Cloud, Sovereign Private Cloud and the National Partner Clouds operated by our European partners. Today, we are announcing new offerings that bring digital sovereignty to all European organizations in the public cloud and unlock new ways to run private sovereign clouds too…

    We’ve operated in Europe for more than 40 years – and we have been and always will be a steadfast partner to Europe. With Microsoft Sovereign Cloud, we’re committed to offering the most comprehensive set of sovereignty solutions for customers across Sovereign Public Cloud, Sovereign Private Cloud, and the National Partner Clouds operated by our European partners. Today, we are announcing new offerings that bring digital sovereignty to all European organizations in the public cloud and unlock new ways to run private sovereign clouds too: When it comes to the public cloud, we’re introducing Data Guardian, which ensures all remote access by our engineers to the systems that store and process customer data in Europe is approved and monitored by European resident personnel in real-time and logged in a tamper-evident ledger. As well as External Key Management for customer-controlled encryption, providing an additional guarantee of data protection. We’re also introducing Sovereign Private Cloud, which includes Microsoft 365 Local, which brings together our productivity server software into an Azure Local environment that can run entirely in a customer’s own datacenter, with full control on security, compliance and governance. These new offerings build on decades of pioneering work in sovereign cloud solutions by ourselves and our partners, and reflect our ongoing commitment to giving you more choice, control, and security. You can learn more here: https://lnkd.in/gNW2gd8V

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Announcing comprehensive sovereign solutions empowering European organizations

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Announcing comprehensive sovereign solutions empowering European organizations

    Today, we are taking the next step in strengthening our European Digital Commitments to empower our customers with greater choice, more control over their data privacy and the most robust digital resilience we have ever offered. Building on our 42-year history as a company in Europe, we are expanding our efforts with Microsoft Sovereign Cloud. This offer spans both public cloud and private digital infrastructure, ensuring our customers can choose the right balance of control, compliance and capability for their needs.

    With this expanded offering we are announcing Data Guardian for European operations, External Key Management for customer-controlled encryption, Regulated Environment Management for simplified configuration and Microsoft 365 Local for critical productivity services in private cloud environments.

    This brings together comprehensive productivity, security and cloud solutions designed to enable European organizations to grow, compete and lead on their own terms and with more control than ever before across Sovereign Public Cloud, Sovereign Private Cloud and National Partner Clouds.

    Building on our experience delivering sovereignty solutions that meet the needs of highly regulated customers and government agencies, our Sovereign Public Cloud is an evolution and expansion of the Microsoft Cloud for Sovereignty and will be offered across all existing European datacenter regions, for all European customers, across enterprise services such as Microsoft Azure, Microsoft 365, Microsoft Security and Power Platform. Sovereign Public Cloud ensures customer data stays in Europe, under European Law, with operations and access controlled by European personnel, and encryption is under full control of customers. This is enabled for all customer workloads running in our European datacenter regions requiring no migration.

    Microsoft’s new Sovereign Private Cloud will support critical collaboration, communication and virtualization services workloads on Azure Local. This solution now integrates Microsoft 365 Local and our security platform with Azure Local, providing consistent capabilities for hybrid or air-gapped environments to meet resiliency and business continuity requirements.

    In France and Germany, our National Partner Clouds offer comprehensive capabilities of Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Azure in an independently owned and operated environment. In France, we have an agreement with Bleu, a joint venture between Orange and Capgemini, for Bleu to operate a “cloud de confiance” for the French public sector, critical infrastructure providers and essential services providers that is designed to meet SecNumCloud requirements. In Germany, we have an agreement with Delos Cloud, an SAP subsidiary, for Delos Cloud to operate a sovereign cloud for the German public sector that is designed to meet the German government’s Cloud Platform Requirements.

    Across our Sovereign Public Cloud, Sovereign Private Cloud and support for National Partner Clouds, Microsoft Sovereign Cloud offers the most comprehensive set of sovereignty solutions in the industry for integrated productivity, security and cloud.

    Sovereign Public Cloud for all Microsoft Cloud customers in Europe

    Many technology providers have approached sovereignty as niche requirements for a unique set of customers that require a specific deployment approach that at times is at odds with the economics and innovation of public cloud systems. This often requires running duplicate systems and teams, migrating to separate environments and limiting access to cutting-edge technologies like AI. However, Microsoft’s Sovereign Public Cloud builds an evolving set of sovereign capabilities that can be configured to meet specific needs without sacrificing functionality or requiring migration to specialized datacenters. With Microsoft’s Sovereign Public Cloud currently in preview and set to be generally available in all European cloud regions later this year, we will introduce new features and solutions that reinforce this vision.

    Announcing Data Guardian

    Our EU Data Boundary already provides an industry-leading commitment to store and process your data on infrastructure located in Europe. Data Guardian will add an additional level of assurance by ensuring that only Microsoft personnel residing in Europe control remote access to these systems. Data Guardian adds additional human and technical oversight whenever engineers outside of Europe need access. All remote access by Microsoft engineers to the systems that store and process your data in Europe is approved and monitored by European resident personnel in real time and will be logged in a tamper-evident ledger.

    Announcing External Key Management to extend Azure Managed HSM

    Encryption under the full control of customers provides an additional guarantee of data protection. With external key management, customers can connect Azure to keys stored on their own Hardware Security Module (HSM) on-premises or hosted by a trusted third party. We’re working with major HSM manufacturers such as Futurex, Thales and Utimaco to ensure their support.

    Announcing Regulated Environment Management

    The Regulated Environment Management service will allow customers to easily manage all these features in one place (for instance, configuring Data Guardian policies or reviewing access log entries). Regulated Environment Management will be at the center of the customer experience for configuring, deploying and monitoring workloads in support of sovereign operations. Together, these tools will be at the center of the customer experience for configuring, deploying and monitoring workloads in the Sovereign Public Cloud.

    Sovereign Private Cloud with Azure Local and Microsoft 365 Local

    While strengthening sovereign controls in public cloud environments is critical, we also understand that some scenarios require certain workloads be run in a physical environment under full customer control to support business continuity risk mitigation. Azure Local delivers Microsoft cloud services in customer locations, enabling organizations to meet specific data residency and sovereignty requirements. It includes core Azure capabilities — such as compute, storage, networking and virtualization services — while providing a consistent management and developer experience. Azure Local is ideal for delivering services closer to where data is generated or regulated, whether in-country, on-premises or in partner-operated datacenters. Microsoft’s Sovereign Private Cloud solution is in preview today and will be generally available later this year.

    Announcing Microsoft 365 Local

    Microsoft 365 Local provides customers with additional choice by bringing together Microsoft’s productivity server software into an Azure Local environment that can run entirely in a customer’s own datacenter.

    This provides a simplified deployment and management framework for organizations to run Microsoft’s trusted productivity servers in environments they fully control. Built on our validated reference architecture and powered by Azure Local, Microsoft 365 Local enables customers to deploy Microsoft productivity workloads like Exchange Server and SharePoint Server in their own datacenters or sovereign cloud environments — with full control on security, compliance and governance.

    Private Sovereign Cloud is designed for governments, critical industries and regulated sectors that need to meet the highest standards of data residency, operational autonomy and disconnected access.

    Building a sovereign cloud and AI partner ecosystem for Europe

    To support European customers in implementing and operating sovereign solutions, we are also excited to preview a new Microsoft Sovereign Cloud specialization in the Microsoft AI Cloud Partner Program. This specialization will provide our European customers the ability to identify Partners who have differentiated themselves based on their demonstrated capabilities in supporting their Sovereign Cloud ambitions on Microsoft technology. Our preview partners include Accenture, Arvato Systems, Atea, Atos, Crayon, Capgemini, Dell Technologies, IBM, Inspark, Infosys, Lenovo, Leonardo, NTT Data, Orange, Telefonica and Vodafone.

    “The launch of Microsoft Sovereign Cloud marks a pivotal moment in empowering European institutions and industries with the control, compliance and innovation they need to thrive in today’s digital economy,” said Aiman Ezzat, CEO of Capgemini Group.

    “As a shareholder of Bleu, we have already set up a National Partner Cloud in France in order to deliver Microsoft technologies in a sovereign environment that respects the French State requirements. With decades of experience in Microsoft technologies and deep expertise in regulated sectors, we are uniquely positioned to help our clients harness the full power of Microsoft’s sovereign public and private cloud solutions. Together, we are enabling a trusted digital future for Europe.”

    Delivering on our digital commitments to Europe

    Together, Microsoft Sovereign Cloud is grounded in our European Digital Commitments and offers the best mix of choice, control and resilience for European customers. Microsoft is proud to offer the broadest set of sovereignty solutions available on the market today and we will constantly look for new ways to ensure our European customers have the options and assurances they need to operate with confidence.

    In a time of geopolitical volatility, we are committed to providing digital stability. With each step we take in this journey, we invite open dialogues with our customers, policymakers and regulators as we continue to innovate.

    Tags: Azure, Microsoft 365, Microsoft Sovereign Cloud, National Partner, Power Platform, Sovereign Private Cloud, Sovereign Public Cloud

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: You know AI is transformative when it’s at your dinner table. In the Netherlands today, I met the Albert Heijn team who are using Azure AI Foundry to help customers navigate everyday decisions, like what’s for dinner.

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: You know AI is transformative when it’s at your dinner table. In the Netherlands today, I met the Albert Heijn team who are using Azure AI Foundry to help customers navigate everyday decisions, like what’s for dinner.

    Really impressed by how Steijn tackles the problem with habit-driven user design – helping users within their existing decision-making flow rather than forcing new workflows. It’s a smart example of making AI feel seamless and intuitive. This is exactly where GenAI shines, not just through automation, but through contextual augmentation that enhances everyday choices. And we’re just scratching the surface with such applications, industries like healthcare, education, and logistics are next in line to benefit from similar personalized, AI-powered experiences.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: Rep. Hinson Joins The Signal Sitdown

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Ashley Hinson (IA-01)

    Washington, D.C. – Congresswoman Ashley Hinson (IA-02) joined Daily Signal’s Bradley Devlin on The Signal Sitdown podcast. The two discussed the media bias contributing to the cover-up of President Biden’s mental decline, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, countering the CCP’s illicit practices, and more.

    In case you missed it…

    Click here to watch the full episode of The Signal Sitdown.

    China Has Secret Police in the US. This Congresswoman Is Trying to Stop It.
    The Daily Signal
    Bradley Devlin
    June 12, 2025

    In December 2024, Chen Jinping, a 60-year-old Manhattan resident, pleaded guilty to opening and operating a secret Chinese police station for China’s Ministry of Public Security in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood. Chen was arrested with “Harry” Lu Jianwang in April 2023, following an FBI investigation into the outpost.

    Though these arrests were the first of their kind, according to Justice Department officials, American authorities suspect that China has these kinds of outposts all over the country. 

    And China’s nefarious activities in New York City hardly scratch the surface. For decades, Chinese operatives have infiltrated American universities and companies, smuggled drugs and human beings across America’s borders, and stolen American intellectual property and technology—even corn seeds from fields in Iowa.

    President Donald Trump was one of the first to see the threat of China clearly. Under the president’s leadership, Republicans in Congress are trying to prevent and punish this malign Chinese activity. This week, one of the House Republicans spearheading that effort, Rep. Ashley Hinson, R-Iowa, joins “The Signal Sitdown” to discuss.

    “My passion for this policy started in my district,” Hinson said. The aforementioned seed-stealing spies were operating in Hinson’s backyard. “There was actually a Chinese spy ring busted stealing seeds out of a cornfield in Dysart, Iowa.”

    “They wanted to take them back to China. They want to cheat,” Hinson explained. “It’s all about reverse engineering because there is so much R&D that has gone into seed technology so that we can grow the most resilient, best yielding plants in the world.”

    China’s unfair trade practices can often be more subtle than outright theft, however. “[The Chinese] are using tactics like transnational shipment,” Hinson told The Daily Signal.

    “So, especially in the auto-parts industry, for example,” Hinson explained, “something coming in from China is gonna be tariffed, so then they ship it through Singapore or Vietnam or someplace with a lesser tariff to get around our tariff laws.”

    “They’re economically cheating and getting a better deal,” Hinson continued. “Meanwhile, you’ve got American producers trying to play on that same playing field and it’s not level.”

    Hinson has introduced the Protecting American Industry and Labor from International Trade Crimes Act with Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party Chairman John Moolenaar, R-Mich., and Ranking Member Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., to provide federal law enforcement more capacity to crack down on these trade practices.

    “What we’re trying to do is make sure that President Trump’s Department of Justice… [will have] the resources and a specific task force to be able to go after these malign actors who are, again, intentionally cheating,” she explained.

    “We think this cost is hundreds of billions of dollars every year on the low end,” Hinson said. “This has been decades in the making, right? You’ve got entire industries that have been ceded and now China owns them.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Xi meets Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev 2025-06-16 21:47:21 Chinese President Xi Jinping met here Monday with Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev ahead of the second China-Central Asia Summit.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense

      ASTANA, June 16 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping met here Monday with Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev ahead of the second China-Central Asia Summit.

      Xi arrived in the Kazakh capital of Astana earlier Monday to attend the second China-Central Asia Summit

    loading…

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Samsung Debuts New Hotel TV Lineup at HITEC 2025 to Elevate the Connected Guest Journey

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung Electronics will showcase its upcoming 2025 Hospitality (HTV) lineup at the 2025 Hospitality Industry Technology Exposition and Conference (HITEC®), the world’s largest, longest-running hospitality technology event, in Indianapolis. At booth #4215, attendees can discover Samsung’s new generation of HTVs designed to empower hotel owners with dynamic management tools while providing guests with effortless streaming and seamless connectivity options.
    “Today’s travelers are no longer just looking for a room, they’re seeking personalized experiences that feel thoughtfully designed and engaging,” said Sara Grofcsik, Head of Sales, Samsung Electronics America. “Samsung is helping hotels meet these expectations by providing a connected ecosystem of in-room displays, entertainment options and intuitive content management tools that make it easy to create memorable guest journeys from check-in to check-out.”

    Premium picture, design and guest entertainment
    Samsung’s latest in-room HTVs deliver premium picture quality, modern design and intuitive features that elevate hotel stays. The 2025 lineup includes:

    HU8000F: Powered by Samsung’s Crystal Processor 4K, HDR10+, and Dynamic Crystal Color, the HU8000F HTV immerses guests in one billion shades of color with lifelike clarity and detail. Its sleek AirSlim design creates an elegant, nearly bezel-free look that complements any hotel space. The HU8000F also features adaptive sound technology, which provides real-time audio scene analysis and quality optimizations for any programming. (Available in 43-, 50-, 55-, 65-, 75- and 85-inch sizes)
    HU6000F: With Samsung’s Crystal Processor 4K, the ultra-high-definition HU6000F HTV automatically adjusts image brightness and contrast to optimal levels in every frame, allowing guests to enjoy their favorite content as it was meant to be viewed. The slim, bezel-less HTV adds comfort and sophistication to hotel rooms. (Available in 43-, 50-, 55-, 65-, and 75-inch sizes)
    HU701F: Designed for flexibility, the HU701F HTV delivers the same ultra-high-definition picture quality as the HU8000F and HU6000 models, paired with an innovative, ergonomic form factor. The slim, bezel-less HTV sits on an adjustable swivel stand that rotates 360 degrees for easy viewing from any angle. This rotating center stand makes the HU701F ideal for multi-room suites, allowing guests to enjoy a single HTV as they move throughout the suite. (Available in 43-, 50-, 55-, 65-, and 75-inch sizes)

    Attendees can also discover how Samsung’s award-winning The Frame (model name HL03F) transforms hotel interiors with stunning 4K QLED picture quality. Blending technology and art, The Frame features an innovative Art Mode that allows hotel managers to customize guest rooms by displaying curated collections of modern or classic artwork—or even tailored visuals such as hotel-branded imagery—when the TV is not in use. The Anti-Reflection Matte Display minimizes light interference for a gallery-like effect, while the Slim-Fit Wall Mount allows the TV to sit flush against the wall, serving as a true art piece.
    Hotel-ready features and integrated hospitality solutions
    Together with The Frame, Samsung’s new HU8000F and HU701F models expand guest entertainment options by adding Disney+ and Prime Video to the existing portfolio of OTT apps like Netflix and Samsung TV Plus. Guests can easily access these apps through the intuitive on-screen Smart Hub and enjoy a wide variety of streaming content during their stay.
    Samsung’s hospitality solutions also help hotels unlock new operational efficiencies and revenue streams. Samsung LYNK Cloud provides centralized remote management and actionable business insights, streamlining global hospitality operations while driving incremental revenue through targeted promotions. With the Visual eXperience Transformation (VXT) platform, operators can create, manage, and distribute content across all displays in a connected ecosystem. IoT connectivity through SmartThings Pro and the Multi-Code Remote further enable staff to personalize in-room experiences and ensure interference-free control, enhancing both convenience and guest satisfaction.
    Samsung will offer booth demonstrations showcasing how SmartThings Pro enables guests to control their hotel room temperature, lighting, shades and more using one central device.

    For hotels currently using the HBU8000, a software update will soon be available to enable Google Cast without interrupting service.1 Major properties participated in a successful pilot of this upgrade, and have recently selected Samsung LYNK Cloud as their preferred solution. These locations underwent simultaneous software updates of devices, demonstrating the scalability and reliability of the solution.
    Included in the streaming options is Apple AirPlay. Through casting solutions like AirPlay, Google Cast and OTT integration, Samsung HTVs deliver seamless viewing options and an optimized solution that enhances the overall guest experience.
    Samsung HTVs are also built with practical features tailored for hotel environments, including RJ12 connectors, bathroom speaker support and LAN out ports. Powered by the intuitive and secure Tizen platform, the latest lineup offers smooth navigation, enterprise-grade protection with Samsung Knox and flexible connectivity through multiple HDMI and USB ports.
    Samsung’s systems integrators create connected guest experience
    Within Samsung’s booth at HITEC, attendees will find hospitality solutions from leading system integrators including GuestTek, Moviebeam, Enseco, WorldVue and Sonifi. These partners will demonstrate how Samsung hospitality displays seamlessly connect with their dynamic platforms to create more personalized guest experiences and drive operational efficiency across the industry.
    Additional system integrators in Samsung’s booth include MCOMS, Uniguest and Allbridge.

    Samsung offers special savings this summer
    To kick off the summer travel season, Samsung is running special promotions in June and July on select displays. Hotel brands of all sizes can outfit their properties with displays, in key locations such as lobbies, restaurants, spas and guest rooms.
    Throughout the month of June, Samsung is offering up to $1,000 off its 105-inch 5K UHD Smart Signage and up to $500 off the Color E-Paper display. Additionally, Samsung is offering up to $400 off its LCD Video Walls, which create a virtually seamless large-format viewing experience to elevate any business setting, and up to $280 off the Samsung Kiosk, which meets the demands of any high-traffic self-service environment. Hotel owners can enjoy up to $200 off Samsung Pro TVs — which range from 43- to 85-inches — to match the screen size requirements of any location.
    From now until the end of July, customers can also take advantage of the buy one WAF Interactive Display, get one Samsung Pro TV free promotion.
    Samsung’s new lineup of HTVs will be available for early order starting at HITEC 2025. For more information about Samsung’s hospitality solutions, please visit www.samsung.com.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: The battle for TikTok is at the forefront of a deeper geopolitical trend

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Shweta Singh, Assistant Professor, Information Systems and Management, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick

    Mijansk786/Shutterstock

    After years of mounting scrutiny over TikTok’s data practices, in 2024 the Chinese video platform was threatened with a forced sale in the US or a nationwide ban. With the deadline looming on June 19, US–China tech rivalry has entered a new and more aggressive phase. TikTok vowed to fight forced divestment, claiming it would “trample” free speech.

    But what started as a controversy over data privacy now has global implications. This conflict is about more than just an app. It represents a shift in the balance of digital power — one that could redefine how nations view national security, economic sovereignty and the internet itself.

    In light of my research on AI bias, algorithmic fairness, and the societal impact of digital platforms and my experience advising government on AI regulation and digital ethics, I see TikTok as the flashpoint of a broader, more dangerous trend. Digital spaces are becoming battlefronts for geopolitical influence.

    TikTok has evolved from a social media app to – in the eyes of some policymakers – a digital weapon. Its massive global following has made it a cultural juggernaut. But this viral success has also made it a prime target in the escalating US-China tech war.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    US politicians worry that its owner, ByteDance, could be forced by the Chinese government to hand over American user data, or manipulate TikTok’s algorithm to serve Beijing’s political agenda.

    The concerns are serious, even if not proven. Platforms have been used to sway political sentiment before — as with Facebook in the Cambridge Analytica scandal. But TikTok is different. Its algorithm isn’t like those of other social platforms that rely on a user’s social graph (what you follow, who you know) to connect people, organisations and places.

    Instead, TikTok uses a real-time recommendation system based on micro-interactions: how long you watch a video, whether you pause or replay it and even your swipe patterns. The result is an ultra-addictive content stream. This gives TikTok an almost unprecedented power to shape opinions, whether intentionally or not.

    TikTok in the US: three possible scenarios

    There are three potential outcomes for TikTok. The first is a forced sale to a US-based entity, which could satisfy lawmakers but likely provoke severe retaliation from China.

    The second is a ban, which may be more symbolic than effective, but would send a strong message. The third, and perhaps most likely, is a long, drawn-out legal battle that results in a stalemate. Trump seems set to extend the June 19 deadline, after all.

    But there’s a deeper issue here. The world is becoming increasingly divided along digital lines. The US and China are building rival digital ecosystems, each suspicious of the other’s platforms.

    Like past restrictions on Huawei and Nvidia chip exports, this case signals how national security and economic policy are merging in the digital age. This threatens to splinter the internet, with countries choosing sides for their suppliers based on political and economic allegiances rather than technical merit.

    For China, TikTok is a symbol of national pride. It’s one of the few Chinese apps to achieve global success and become a household name in western markets. Forcing ByteDance to sell TikTok, or banning it, could be seen as an affront to China’s ambitions on the global digital stage. It’s no longer just about a platform — it’s about control over the future of technology.

    TikTok’s defenders argue that banning the app would undermine free speech, stifle creativity and unfairly target a foreign-owned platform. These concerns are valid, but the broader landscape of digital platforms is far from straightforward.

    Other platforms have faced criticism over allegations of spreading misinformation, amplifying bias and contributing to social harm. However, the key distinction with TikTok lies in its algorithm and its ability to sway opinions on a global scale.

    TikTok’s “for you” feed tracks micro-interactions, serving up personalised content with an addictive intensity. As a result, users can find themselves pulled deeper into curated content streams without realising the extent to which their preferences are being shaped.

    While its competitors might be able to spread misinformation and stoke division in more traditional ways, TikTok could potentially do so through the finely tuned manipulation of the user’s attention. This is a potent tool in the world of digital politics.

    It also raises critical questions about how the US approaches regulation. Is TikTok a genuine national security threat or simply a symbol of the growing strategic competition between two superpowers?

    Rather than relying on bans and trade wars, what is needed is robust, cross-border frameworks that prioritise transparency, data protection, algorithmic accountability and the mitigation of online harms.

    Concerns about harassment, disinformation, addictive design and algorithms that amplify toxic content are not unique to TikTok. US legislation such as the Kids Online Safety Act and the proposed Platform Accountability and Transparency Act signal growing concern. But these efforts remain piecemeal.

    The EU’s Digital Services Act is a welcome model for accountability. But global coordination is now essential. Without it, there is the risk of further fragmentation of the internet (what has been called the “splinternet” — where access is determined by geopolitics rather than universal principles).

    The digital world has long been dominated by a handful of powerful corporations. Now it is increasingly shaped by state rivalries. The battle over TikTok is a harbinger of deeper tensions around how data, influence and trust are distributed online.

    The real question now is not whether TikTok survives, but whether nations can craft a digital future that prioritises democratic values, cross-border collaboration and the public good. This isn’t just about national security or free speech. It’s a defining moment in the battle for the future of the internet.

    Shweta Singh does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. The battle for TikTok is at the forefront of a deeper geopolitical trend – https://theconversation.com/the-battle-for-tiktok-is-at-the-forefront-of-a-deeper-geopolitical-trend-258341

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Frozen, thawed: how Arendelle’s glacier would fare under modern climate change

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Harold Lovell, Senior Lecturer, Glaciology, University of Portsmouth

    As a glaciologist who thinks about ice a lot, rewatching the movie Frozen umpteen times with my six-year-old daughter provides ample opportunity for my imagination to run wild. The movie is set in the fictional kingdom of Arendelle, which is modelled on a fjord landscape, complete with a large glacier at the head of Arenfjord. Ice unsurprisingly plays a very prominent role in the story. Yet this glacier receives very little attention.

    Glaciers are receding across the world at an unprecedented rate. And on more than one occasion I have wondered how Arendelle’s glacier might have fared since the time of Frozen.

    To add some scientific rigour to this thought experiment, it is useful to approximate a real geographical location. Arendelle is inspired by the fjords of western Norway, a region where most of the glaciers flow from the Jostedalsbreen ice cap, the largest ice mass in mainland Europe.

    We can also approximate the date. Based on various clues, including the clothing and technology on show, it appears the events in Frozen take place one July in the mid-19th century. This means the glacier is depicted towards the end of the little ice age, a cool period lasting several centuries during which most northern hemisphere glaciers expanded to their largest size in recent history.

    In the movie, the glacier plunges from a high elevation plateau into the fjord below and looks steep and crevassed at the front. This implies a healthy, advancing glacier, in a similar condition to the many outlet glaciers of Jostedalsbreen that reached their little ice age maximum positions around this time.

    The short-term health of Arendelle’s glacier may have been further boosted by the unseasonal summer snowfall and cold temperatures that Elsa’s powers unleashed on the kingdom.

    Real glaciers are shrinking fast

    The fate of the fictional glacier since the little ice age would have been less positive, as demonstrated by the very real glaciers of Jostedalsbreen. This period has been characterised by accelerated climate warming, causing widespread glacier retreat and thinning.

    Since Elsa’s time, the real glaciers it’s based on have shrunk by about a fifth. Individual glaciers have retreated several kilometres at rates of up to 20 metres per year. This makes it likely that, without any further help from Elsa, Arendelle’s glacier would have retreated onto land within decades of the time of the film.

    How Jostedalsbreen’s glaciers have retreated from the little ice age (red outline) to today (blue).
    Andreassen et al. 2023

    In the late 1980s and early 1990s, an increase in winter snowfall in western Norway meant most major glaciers in the region began to advance up to a few hundred metres. The Arendelle glacier might therefore have grown again for a time, although probably not enough for the glacier to re-enter the fjord. While there are other explanations, the more imaginative mind might consider the possibility that a descendent of Elsa was responsible for this period of increased snowfall.

    Since the early 2000s, those same glaciers have shrunk significantly, retreating by up to 70 metres per year. That’s largely because higher air temperatures mean more ice is melting in summer. Several of Jostedalsbreen’s glaciers have retreated almost back onto the plateau, while others are disconnecting from the larger ice bodies that have been nourishing them for centuries.

    What would Arendelle’s glacier look like today?

    Retreat of this scale means the fictional glacier today might look something like Briksdalsbreen, now just a small tongue spilling over from the plateau ice behind. Indeed, it is quite possible that in 2025, designated by the UN as the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation, Arendelle’s glacier would no longer have been visible from Arendelle Castle.

    Briksdalsbreen, one of Jostedalsbreen’s outlet glaciers, shows what the Arendelle glacier might look today.
    Nataliya Nazarova / shutterstock

    So, if Arendelle’s glacier were real, it would be a shadow of its 19th-century self – much like its real-life Norwegian equivalents. By 2050, approximately 200 years after the time of Frozen, the glacier would probably have retreated onto the plateau. The ice cap would also have thinned considerably and might even be in the early stages of terminal break up.

    However, while this is one potential scenario for Jostedalsbreen in the 21st century, it is by no means certain. Climate scientists agree that concerted action is needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to limit warming.

    Magic helped Arendelle once. This time, it’ll take real-world action to ensure the real glaciers have a fighting chance of still being around by the time Frozen 3 is finally released.


    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

    Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 45,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


    Harold Lovell receives funding from NERC.

    ref. Frozen, thawed: how Arendelle’s glacier would fare under modern climate change – https://theconversation.com/frozen-thawed-how-arendelles-glacier-would-fare-under-modern-climate-change-255539

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Life’s Better by Bike — Even Small Rides Can Make a Big Difference 16 June 2025 Islanders are being invited to leave the car at home and hop on their bikes this June

    Source: Aisle of Wight

    Islanders are being invited to leave the car at home and hop on their bikes this June, as part of the Isle of Wight Council’s ‘Life’s Better by Bike’ campaign.

    The campaign aims to inspire residents to swap shorter car journeys for cycling — boosting their own health and wellbeing while helping to protect the Island’s environment.

    Throughout June, the campaign will highlight how cycling can help improve physical fitness, strengthen mental wellbeing, and contribute to cleaner, greener communities.

    While we recognise that not all routes are currently ideal for cycling — with some lanes and footpaths in need of improvement — the campaign also aims to raise awareness of the importance of maintaining and enhancing our cycling infrastructure. Feedback from local cycling groups is vital in helping us identify areas that need attention.

    Simon Bryant, the Isle of Wight’s Director of Public Health, said: “We know that regular cycling can help reduce stress, improve mental focus, and boost heart health. It’s also a great way to reconnect with nature, enjoy time with friends and family, and rediscover that sense of freedom we often lose in busy daily life. Life really is better by bike — and we’d love to see as many people as possible joining in this June.”

    With the Island’s roads often busy, especially during peak times, cycling can offer a refreshing alternative for some journeys — no queues, just the freedom of two wheels. However, we understand that for others, walking may feel like a safer or more accessible option, and that’s okay too. The key is finding ways to stay active and reduce car use where possible.

    The council will be promoting local cycle routes — including those best suited for beginners or families — offering inspiration for Islanders of all abilities to get started or rediscover the simple joy of riding a bike.

    The Isle of Wight celebrates its highly reputed status as one of the top cycling destinations in the world. With around 200 miles of cycle tracks, byways and bridleways, there are plenty of opportunities to explore — whether you’re a seasoned cyclist or just starting out.

    Residents are encouraged to share their cycling adventures on social media, tagging the council and using the hashtag #LifesBetterByBike for a chance to be featured.

    Even a short ride can make a big difference — to your health, your mood, and the environment we all share.

    Residents can find cycling tips, local routes, and ways to get involved by visiting our Life’s better by bike webapge: Life’s better by bike

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Support for Struggling Island Households – DWP Household Support Fund 16 June 2025 Households on the Isle of Wight will benefit from extended financial assistance thanks to the DWP extension of the HSF

    Source: Aisle of Wight

    Households on the Isle of Wight will benefit from extended financial assistance with the cost of food, utilities, and wider essentials thanks to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) extension of the Household Support Fund (HSF). Available from early-June 2025 until March 2026, the fund provides £1.994 million to help eligible Island residents struggling to manage the continued cost of living pressures.

    Ian Lloyd, Strategic Manager for Partnerships and Support Services, Isle of Wight Council, emphasised the importance of this funding: “Supporting our community through these challenging times is a top priority, as recognised in the Island’s Poverty Reduction Strategy. The extended Household Support Fund will offer crucial assistance to those facing financial hardship.”

    Key Support Measures

    • Supermarket Vouchers: A £25 one-off voucher will be distributed to up to 10,000 households receiving Local Council Tax Support as of 19 May 2025. These vouchers will be sent out in July. Pensioners in receipt of Local Council Tax Support as of 29 September 2025 will receive an additional supermarket voucher in November.

    • Utility Support for Pensioners: Eligible pensioners will receive £75 pre-paid utility cards or vouchers between November and February, in addition to the supermarket voucher in November.

    • Additional Vouchers: Up to three £25 supermarket vouchers will be available for households experiencing significant financial crises through Isle of Wight Council and partner organizations.

    • Foodbank and Community Pantry Support: Essential food items will be provided to those in financial crisis need.

    • Help Through Crisis: Support for utility debt, energy-efficient white goods, and emergency food assistance.

    • Community Grants: Funding will be available for local initiatives offering crisis and preventative approaches through support and guidance, with application windows in June, September, and January.

    For more information, visit the council’s cost of living web page, email hsf@iow.gov.uk, or call (01983) 823644.

    This initiative aligns with the Isle of Wight’s Poverty Reduction Strategy 2024-2029, which aims to address financial hardship through targeted support, preventative measures, and long-term planning in partnership.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Dstl celebrates King’s Honours and team commendations

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    News story

    Dstl celebrates King’s Honours and team commendations

    Dstl engineer Peter Briggs awarded an OBE for his work securing UK defence and security capabilities, and Dstl teams receive VCDS commendations.

    Dstl scientist Peter Briggs OBE

    Peter Briggs, Senior Principal Engineer in Positioning, Navigation and Timing at the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) has been recognised in the King’s Birthday Honours list 2025. He has been made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).

    The prestigious honour acknowledges Peter’s significant contributions to the UK’s defence and security capabilities through his expert work in Positioning, Navigation and Timing technologies at Dstl.

    During his 23-year career at Dstl, he has led numerous groundbreaking projects that have enhanced the resilience of the UK’s critical navigation systems, developed countermeasures against emerging threats and strengthened collaboration with international partners.

    On hearing about his award Peter said:

    I am amazed and proud to receive this honour for the work I’ve done over my career. I’d like to thank all of my incredible colleagues, both nationally and internationally, that I have worked with and learnt from over the years. Their team effort has led to me proudly receiving this honour.

    The recognition comes as Dstl teams have also received Vice Chief of Defence Staff (VCDS) commendations for their exceptional work on critical defence projects.

    Dr Paul Hollinshead, Dstl’s Chief Executive, said:

    This well-deserved honour recognises Peter’s exceptional technical leadership and innovation in critical defence technologies. His work has significantly enhanced the UK’s security capabilities and represents the outstanding talent we have at Dstl.  

    We’re especially proud that our teams have also been recognised through the Vice Chief of Defence Staff commendations, which highlight the crucial contribution Dstl makes to national security through cutting-edge research and collaboration with military and industry partners.

    Taskforce Spirit commendation recognises international collaboration

    A combined Dstl and Ministry of Defence (MOD) team has been commended for supporting allies with leading-edge expertise to help develop long-term military capability.

    Taskforce Spirit developed and delivered innovative wargaming, modelling and analytical techniques to inform critical capability priorities and investment decisions, helping to generate forces fit for the future operating environment.

    The work, conducted alongside allies and partners, has enhanced the UK’s reputation in the Strategic Force Development arena and contributed to United Kingdom National Security Objectives to counter global threats and support UK interests and influence.

    Dstl Strategic Force Analysis team recognised for Strategic Defence Review work

    Dstl’s Strategic Force Analysis team has also received a commendation for their crucial role in providing the MOD with force design and capability evidence to inform the Strategic Defence Review (SDR).

    Between August 2024 and January 2025, the team developed coherent candidate Defence Force Structures representing different policy choices, costed principal alternatives, and explored variations as requested by Defence Reviewers. Their work ensured senior management understood the challenges and choices available to Defence, drawing praise from the Chief of Defence Staff.

    Multidisciplinary team receives Vice Chief of Defence Staff commendation

    A multidisciplinary team including Dstl scientists has received a prestigious VCDS commendation for their work on a complex flight test event conducted in the US in late 2024.

    The successful trial tested multiple technologies and concepts to improve air survivability in a complex Anti-Access Area Denial (A2AD) environment. The whole-force collaboration included elements from the RAF Rapid Capabilities Office, Air and Space Warfare Centre, Dstl and industry partners.  

    Dstl continues to play a vital role in science and technology innovation for the UK’s defence and security, with experts like Peter Briggs and the commended teams demonstrating the organisation’s world-class capabilities and contributions to national security.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s message to mark the 100-day Countdown to the International Day of Peace [scroll down for French version]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    On 21 September, the world unites for the International Day of Peace. This year’s call: “Act Now for a Peaceful World”.

    Peace can’t wait – and it starts with us.

    We all have the power to help silence guns, build bridges and plant the seeds of lasting change.

    As we launch the 100-day countdown to Peace Day, let’s do our part to forge a more peaceful world.

    ***

    Le 21 septembre, le monde s’unit pour célébrer la Journée internationale de la paix. L’appel lancé cette année est : « Agissons maintenant pour l’avènement d’un monde pacifique ».

    La paix n’attend pas – et elle commence avec nous.

    Nous avons toutes et tous le pouvoir de faire taire les armes, de tisser des liens et de semer les graines d’un changement durable.

    À 100 jours de la célébration de la Journée de la paix, agissons pour forger un monde plus pacifique.

    ***
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: CS chairs HR meeting

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Chief Secretary Chan Kwok-ki today chaired the second meeting of the fourth-term Human Resources Planning Commission, during which he introduced the work of the Committee on Education, Technology & Talents (CETT).

    Chaired by the Chief Secretary, the CETT co-ordinates cross-bureau efforts to drive technological innovation, industrial innovation and the co-ordinated development of human resource supply and demand on the basis of strategic positioning and advantages of the “eight centres”, while flexibly bringing in and gathering talent from various sectors to build an international hub for high-calibre talent to contribute to the high-quality development of the country.

    The Education Bureau introduced the work on the development of universities of applied sciences (UAS). The commission members supported the Government’s efforts in related fields and gave opinions on the work plan of the Alliance of UAS.

    Meanwhile, the Security Bureau briefed the meeting on the measures to facilitate the two-way flow of Mainland and Hong Kong high-end talent. The commission members were pleased to note that the measures would enhance the Greater Bay Area’s strategic planning on the mobility of talent and expedite the development of a talent hub in the bay area, fully reflecting Hong Kong’s distinctive advantages of being closely connected to the world with the strong support of the motherland under “one country, two systems”.

    The commission was also briefed by the Labour & Welfare Bureau on the arrangements for admission of professionals of specified skilled trades to Hong Kong. The new arrangements, formulated under the CETT’s steer, allows young and experienced non-degree professionals to apply for entry into Hong Kong under the designated employment policy and talent scheme to join eight skilled trades facing acute manpower shortages.

    Applications will be accepted starting June 30 for a period of three years, with an overall quota of 10,000 and the quota for each skilled trade is limited to 3,000. The commission welcomed the new arrangements and anticipated it would effectively address the shortage of mid-level technical professionals and inject new impetus into the relevant trades.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: Westhaven Announces Non-Brokered Private Placement With Eric Sprott and Earthlabs, for Gross Proceeds of $3.16 Million

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWS WIRE SERVICES OR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES.

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Westhaven Gold Corp. (TSX-V:WHN) (“Westhaven” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that the Company has arranged a non-brokered private placement (the “Offering”) for aggregate gross proceeds of $3,160,000 from the sale of 8,333,333 units of the Company (each, a “Unit”) at a price of $0.12 per Unit, and 12,500,000 flow-through units of the Company to be sold on a charitable flow-through basis (each, a “Charity FT Unit”, and collectively with the Units, the “Offered Securities”) at a price of $0.1728 per Charity FT Unit.

    Eric Sprott and Earthlabs Inc. are expected to be the subscribers for the Units and the end purchaser of Charity FT Units, following the charitable flow through donations in the Offering.

    Ken Armstrong, President and CEO of Westhaven, commented: “We are pleased to welcome Eric Sprott as a new shareholder of Westhaven, as well as the continued support of Earthlabs. This financing represents a strong endorsement of Westhaven’s approach to advance the Company’s Spences Bridge Gold Belt properties, particularly the Shovelnose gold project located adjacent to well-established transportation and power infrastructure, less than 2.5 hours by car from Vancouver in southern British Columbia. Proceeds of this private placement will allow the Company to expand our summer exploration drilling program to at least 5,000m and advance work towards realizing the potential outlined in a recently completed preliminary economic assessment of a high grade, high margin underground gold mining opportunity at the South Zone, FMN and Franz gold deposits at Shovelnose (please see news release dated March 3rd, 2025 for details).”

    Each Unit will consist of one common share of the Company (each, a “Unit Share”) and one-half of one common share purchase warrant (each whole warrant, a “Warrant”). Each Charity FT Unit will consist of one share that will qualify as a “flow-through share” within the meaning of subsection 66(15) of the Income Tax Act (Canada) and one half of one Warrant. Each whole Warrant shall entitle the holder to purchase one common share of the Company (each, a “Warrant Share”) at a price of $0.18 at any time on or before that date which is 24 months after the closing date of the Offering.

    The Company intends to use the net proceeds from the sale of the Units for working capital and general corporate purposes. The gross proceeds from the issuance of the Charity FT Units will be used for Canadian exploration expenses on the Company’s projects in British Columbia and will qualify as “flow-through mining expenditures”, as defined in subsection 127(9) of the Income Tax Act (Canada) (the “Qualifying Expenditures”), which will be incurred on or before December 31, 2026 and renounced to the subscribers with an effective date no later than December 31, 2025 in an aggregate amount not less than the gross proceeds raised from the issue of the Charity FT Units.

    The private placement is expected to close on or around July 3, 2025, and is subject to certain conditions including, but not limited to, receipt of all necessary approvals including the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange. All securities issuable in connection with the Offering will be subject to applicable resale restrictions in accordance with Canadian securities legislation and the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange.

    A finder’s fee, consisting of a cash payment of $66,823 and 250,000 non-transferable broker warrants will be paid to Red Cloud Securities Inc. in respect of the private placement. Each broker warrant can be exercised to acquire one common share at a price of $0.12 for a period of 24 months post-closing.

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any of the securities in the United States. The securities have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “U.S. Securities Act”), or any state securities laws and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to or for the account or benefit of a U.S. person (as defined in Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act) unless registered under the U.S. Securities Act and applicable state securities laws or an exemption from such registration is available.

    On behalf of the Board of Directors

    WESTHAVEN GOLD CORP.

    “Ken Armstrong”

    Ken Armstrong, President and CEO

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

    About Westhaven Gold Corp.

    Westhaven is a gold-focused exploration and development company targeting low sulphidation, high-grade, epithermal style gold mineralization within the Spences Bridge Gold Belt in southern British Columbia. Westhaven controls ~61,512 hectares (~615 square kilometres) within four gold properties spread along this underexplored belt. The Shovelnose Gold project is the most advance property, with a recently updated 2025 Preliminary Economic Assessment that validates the Project’s potential as a robust, low cost and high margin 11-year underground gold mining opportunity with average annual life-of-mine gold production of 56,000 ounces and having a Cdn$454 million after-tax NPV6% and 43.2% IRR (base case parameters of US$2,400 per ounce gold, US$28 per ounce silver and CDN/US$ exchange rate of $0.72). Initial capital costs are projected to be Cdn$184 million with a payback period of 2.1 years. Please see Westhaven’s news release dated March 3, 2025 for details of the updated PEA. Shovelnose is situated off a major highway, near power, rail, large producing mines, pipelines and within commuting distance from the city of Merritt, which result in lower cost exploration and development.

    Qualified Person: The technical and scientific information in this news release has been reviewed and approved by Peter Fischl, P.Geo, who is a Qualified Person for the Company under the definitions established by National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.

    Westhaven trades on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker symbol WHN. For further information, please call 604-681-5558 or visit Westhaven’s website at www.westhavengold.com.

    Forward Looking Statements:

    This press release contains “forward-looking information” within the meaning of applicable Canadian and United States securities laws, which is based upon the Company’s current internal expectations, estimates, projections, assumptions and beliefs. The forward-looking information included in this press release are made only as of the date of this press release. Such forward-looking statements and forward-looking information include, but are not limited to, statements concerning the Company’s expectations with respect to the Offering; the use of proceeds of the Offering; completion of the Offering and the date of such completion. Forward-looking statements or forward-looking information relate to future events and future performance and include statements regarding the expectations and beliefs of management based on information currently available to the Company. Such forward-looking statements and forward-looking information often, but not always, can be identified by the use of words such as “plans”, “expects”, “potential”, “is expected”, “anticipated”, “is targeted”, “budget”, “scheduled”, “estimates”, “forecasts”, “intends”, “anticipates”, or “believes” or the negatives thereof or variations of such words and phrases or statements that certain actions, events or results “may”, “could”, “would”, “might” or “will” be taken, occur or be achieved.

    Forward-looking information involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Such risks and other factors include, among others, and without limitation: that the Offering may not close within the timeframe anticipated or at all or may not close on the terms and conditions currently anticipated by the Company for a number of reasons including, without limitation, as a result of the occurrence of a material adverse change, disaster, change of law or other failure to satisfy the conditions to closing of the Offering; the Company will not be able to raise sufficient funds to complete its planned exploration program; that the Company will not derive the expected benefits from its current program; the Company may not use the proceeds of the Offering as currently contemplated; the Company may fail to find a commercially viable deposit at any of its mineral properties; the Company’s plans may be adversely affected by the Company’s reliance on historical data compiled by previous parties involved with its mineral properties; mineral exploration and development are inherently risky industries; the mineral exploration industry is intensely competitive; additional financing may not be available to the Company when required or, if available, the terms of such financing may not be favourable to the Company; fluctuations in the demand for gold or gold prices generally; the Company may not be able to identify, negotiate or finance any future acquisitions successfully, or to integrate such acquisitions with its current business; the Company’s exploration activities are dependent upon the grant of appropriate licenses, concessions, leases, permits and regulatory consents, which may be withdrawn or not granted; the Company’s operations could be adversely affected by possible future government legislation, policies and controls or by changes in applicable laws and regulations; there is no guarantee that title to the properties in which the Company has a material interest will not be challenged or impugned; the Company faces various risks associated with mining exploration that are not insurable or may be the subject of insurance which is not commercially feasible for the Company; the volatility of global capital markets over the past several years has generally made the raising of capital more difficult; inflationary cost pressures may escalate the Company’s operating costs; compliance with environmental regulations can be costly; social and environmental activism can negatively impact exploration, development and mining activities; the success of the Company is largely dependent on the performance of its directors and officers; the Company’s operations may be adversely affected by First Nations land claims; the Company and/or its directors and officers may be subject to a variety of legal proceedings, the results of which may have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business; the Company may be adversely affected if potential conflicts of interests involving its directors and officers are not resolved in favour of the Company; the Company’s future profitability may depend upon the world market prices of gold; dilution from future equity financing could negatively impact holders of the Company’s securities; failure to adequately meet infrastructure requirements could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business; the Company’s projects now or in the future may be adversely affected by risks outside the control of the Company; the Company is subject to various risks associated with climate change, the Company is subject to general global risks arising from epidemic diseases, the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, rising inflation and interest rates and the impact they will have on the Company’s operations, supply chains, ability to access mining projects or procure equipment, supplies, contractors and other personnel on a timely basis or at all is uncertain; as well as other risk factors in the Company’s other public filings available at www.sedarplus.ca. Readers are cautioned that this list of risk factors should not be construed as exhaustive. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking information are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. The Company cannot guarantee future results, performance, or achievements. Consequently, there is no representation that the actual results achieved will be the same, in whole or in part, as those set out in the forward-looking information. The Company undertakes no duty to update any of the forward-looking information to conform such information to actual results or to changes in the Company’s expectations, except as otherwise required by applicable securities legislation. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information. The forward-looking information contained in this offering document is expressly qualified by this cautionary statement.

    The MIL Network