Jack Dorsey just halved the size of Block's employee base and he says your company is next (4 minute read)
Block is eliminating more than 4,000 roles, shrinking its workforce from over 10,000 to under 6,000 as Jack Dorsey positions the company for an AI-driven operating model. He framed the move as a deliberate reset to avoid repeated layoffs, arguing that smaller, highly skilled teams leveraging automation will soon become the norm across tech. Investors rewarded the decision with a sharp stock jump, even as questions linger about whether AI efficiency gains truly justify the scale of these cuts.
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Plaid valued at $8B in employee share sale (2 minute read)
Plaid allowed employees to sell shares at an $8 billion valuation, up 31% from last year's $6.1 billion round but still about 40% below its 2021 peak of $13.4 billion. The secondary provides liquidity and helps staff cover taxes tied to vesting RSUs, while easing pressure to pursue an IPO prematurely. The move reflects a broader trend among late-stage fintechs like Stripe using structured liquidity as a retention tool.
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Crypto market hedges Iran war risks with 24/7 oil and gold trading (4 minute read)
As tensions escalate between the US, Israel, and Iran, traders are turning to crypto-native perpetual futures on platforms like Hyperliquid to gain round-the-clock exposure to oil, gold, and silver. Commodity perps surged over the weekend while bitcoin and ether rebounded, underscoring how crypto venues are becoming off-hours proxies for global risk. The episode strengthens the case for 24/7 trading across asset classes, though questions remain about whether on-chain infrastructure can support institutional-scale volumes.
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Mucker Capital Fund I: a $12M debut that returned ~40β50x (6 minute read)
Mucker Capital's first $12 million fund, launched in Los Angeles in 2013, generated one of the strongest debut performances in venture history, driven by a $280 million return from Honey alone (23x the fund) plus exits including ServiceTitan, Emailage, and Retention Science. By combining geographic contrarianism, accelerator-driven deal flow (MuckerLab), deep operational support, and tight LP alignment, the firm demonstrated that small, hands-on funds in undercapitalized ecosystems can produce power-law outcomes.
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Cantor, Stripe, PE, and the evolving map of AI and markets (6 minute read)
Byrne Hobart's latest roundup spans a math plagiarism saga involving Georg Cantor, Stripe's bullish 2026 letter on agentic commerce, and a critique of private equity's systemic risk with proposals to curb limited-liability abuse. He also explores how AI could increase developer demand by lowering project costs, whether Bitcoin and AI are inversely correlated, and how pair trades outsmarted directional housing bets in 2008. The edition closes with a meditation on mapping the world through text, drawing a parallel between Renaissance geographers and modern LLMs stitching coherence from messy data.
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Visa, Mastercard, and Google are building agentic payments. None are solving the real problem (10 minute read)
Visa, Mastercard, and Google are all building agentic payments. None of them are solving the real problem. Every major player in payments made the same move in the same quarter. Google launched Universal Commerce Protocol. Visa announced Intelligent Commerce. Mastercard shipped Agentic Tokens. Checkout.com positioned as the single connection point. Razorpay built agentic payments on Anthropic's Claude. Cashfree partnered with Mastercard and OpenAI for in-chat transactions. The conclusion is unanimous: AI agents will transact on behalf of consumers and businesses, and the payment infrastructure underneath needs to support that.
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Meta dips a toe back into crypto with stablecoins (3 minute read)
Meta is reportedly testing stablecoin payments across its apps, potentially enabling use cases like WhatsApp transfers in emerging markets and creator payouts on Instagram and Facebook. Unlike its failed Libra/Diem effort, Meta plans to use existing stablecoins rather than launch its own, with Stripe emerging as a possible partner. The move comes amid a more supportive US regulatory backdrop and could position stablecoins as infrastructure for cross-border and in-app payments at massive scale.
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Apple looks to bring Apple Pay to India (2 minute read)
The US tech giant is in discussions with ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, and Axis Bank, as well as Visa and Mastercard, about an Apple Pay launch as early as mid-2026. The launch would support India's Unified Payments Interface (UPI), as well as card-based transactions.
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The trap Anthropic built for itself (5 minute read)
After the Trump administration blacklisted Anthropic from federal contracts over its refusal to support mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, MIT's Max Tegmark argues the company is facing the consequences of the industry's long-standing resistance to binding AI regulation. He contends that AI leaders promised self-governance while lobbying against enforceable rules, leaving them exposed in a regulatory vacuum. Tegmark frames uncontrollable superintelligence as a national security threat, not an asset, and says the path forward is clear: treat advanced AI like other high-risk industries, with mandatory oversight and independent safety validation before deployment.
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One-third of Millennials now rely on gig payments and tips as primary income (5 minute read)
A growing share of younger workers is stitching together income from freelance jobs, online sales, commissions, and tips instead of relying on a single employer paycheck. 72% of US consumers received at least one instant payment last year, and heavy recipients are significantly more likely to pay for immediate access to their funds, especially those living paycheck to paycheck. As digital wallets and debit cards rival traditional bank transfers, real-time disbursements are emerging as the financial backbone of a generation managing variable cash flow and rising economic pressure.
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