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Tag: Office

  • AI-assisted works can get copyright with enough human creativity, says US copyright office

    AI-assisted works can get copyright with enough human creativity, says US copyright office

    Artists can copyright works they made with the help of artificial intelligence, according to a new report by the U.S. Copyright Office that could help clear the way for the use of AI tools in Hollywood, the music industry and other creative fields

    Artists can copyright works they made with the help of artificial intelligence, according to a new report by the U.S. Copyright Office that could help clear the way for the use of AI tools in Hollywood, the music industry and other creative fields.

    The nation’s copyright office, which sits in the Library of Congress and is not part of the executive branch, receives about half a million copyright applications per year covering millions of individual works. It has increasingly been asked to register works that are AI-generated.

    And while many of those decisions are made on a case-by-case basis, the report issued Wednesday clarifies the office’s approach as one based on what the top U.S. copyright official describes as the “centrality of human creativity” in authoring a work that warrants copyright protections.

    “Where that creativity is expressed through the use of AI systems, it continues to enjoy protection,” said a statement from Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter, who directs the office.

    An AI-assisted work could be copyrightable if an artist’s handiwork is perceptible, or an AI-generated work include a human’s “creative arrangements or modifications.”

    The report follows a review that began in 2023 and fielded opinions from thousands of people that ranged from AI developers, to actors and country singers.

    It shows the copyright office will continue to reject copyright claims for fully machine-generated content. A person simply prompting a chatbot or AI image generator to produce a work doesn’t give that person the ability to copyright that work, according to the report. “Extending protection to material whose expressive elements are determined by a machine … would undermine rather than further the constitutional goals of copyright,” Perlmutter said.

    Not addressed in the report is the debate over copyrighted human works that are being pulled from the internet and other sources and ingested to train AI systems, often without permission or compensation. Visual artists, authors, news organizations and others have sued AI companies for copyright theft in cases that are still working through U.S. courts.

    The copyright office doesn’t weigh in on those legal cases but says it is working on another report that “will turn to the training of AI models on copyrighted works, licensing considerations, and allocation of any liability.”

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  • Trump asks Supreme Court to delay TikTok ban so he can weigh in after he takes office

    Trump asks Supreme Court to delay TikTok ban so he can weigh in after he takes office

    President-elect Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court on Friday to pause the potential TikTok ban from going into effect until his administration can pursue a “political resolution” to the issue.

    The request came as TikTok and the Biden administration filed opposing briefs to the court, in which the company argued the court should strike down a law that could ban the platform by Jan. 19 while the government emphasized its position that the statute is needed to eliminate a national security risk.

    “President Trump takes no position on the underlying merits of this dispute. Instead, he respectfully requests that the Court consider staying the Act’s deadline for divestment of January 19, 2025, while it considers the merits of this case,” said Trump’s amicus brief, which supported neither party in the case and was written by D. John Sauer, Trump’s choice for solicitor general.

    The argument submitted to the court is the latest example of Trump inserting himself in national issues before he takes office. The Republican president-elect has already begun negotiating with other countries over his plans to impose tariffs, and he intervened earlier this month in a plan to fund the federal government, calling for a bipartisan plan to be rejected and sending Republicans back to the negotiating table.

    He has been holding meetings with foreign leaders and business officials at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida while he assembles his administration, including a meeting last week with TikTok CEO Shou Chew.

    Trump has reversed his position on the popular app, having tried to ban it during his first term in office over national security concerns. He joined the TikTok during his 2024 presidential campaign and his team used it to connect with younger voters, especially male voters, by pushing content that was often macho and aimed at going viral.

    He said earlier this year that he still believed there were national security risks with TikTok, but that he opposed banning it.

    The filings Friday come ahead of oral arguments scheduled for Jan. 10 on whether the law, which requires TikTok to divest from its China-based parent company or face a ban, unlawfully restricts speech in violation of the First Amendment. The law was was signed by President Joe Biden in April after it passed Congress with broad bipartisan support. TikTok and ByteDance filed a legal challenge afterwards.

    Earlier this month, a panel of three federal judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit unanimously upheld the statute, leading TikTok to appeal the case to the Supreme Court.

    The brief from Trump said he opposes banning TikTok at this junction and “seeks the ability to resolve the issues at hand through political means once he takes office.”

    In their brief to the Supreme Court on Friday, attorneys for TikTok and its parent company ByteDance argued the federal appeals court erred in its ruling and based its decision on “alleged ‘risks’ that China could exercise control” over TikTok’s U.S. platform by pressuring its foreign affiliates.

    The Biden administration has argued in court that TikTok poses a national security risk due to its connections to China. Officials say Chinese authorities can compel ByteDance to hand over information on TikTok’s U.S. patrons or use the platform to spread or suppress information.

    But the government “concedes that it has no evidence China has ever attempted to do so,” TikTok’s legal filing said, adding that the U.S. fears are predicated on future risks.

    In its filing Friday, the Biden administration said because TikTok “is integrated with ByteDance and relies on its propriety engine developed and maintained in China,” its corporate structure carries with it risk.

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  • Cousins Properties to Acquire Trophy Lifestyle Office Property in Downtown Austin | Press Releases

    Cousins Properties to Acquire Trophy Lifestyle Office Property in Downtown Austin | Press Releases

    ATLANTA, Dec. 10, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Cousins Properties (NYSE: CUZ) announced today that it is under contract to acquire 601 West 2nd Street, also known as Sail Tower, an 804,000 square foot trophy lifestyle office property in Austin, for a net purchase price of $521.8 million.  The transaction is expected to close in December, subject to customary closing conditions.

    Sail Tower is located near the Second Street entertainment district in Downtown Austin and offers unobstructed views of Lady Bird Lake.  It is just a few blocks away from Cousins’ existing 1.7 million square foot Downtown Austin office portfolio, which is currently 93% leased. Sail Tower was developed in 2022 and the office space is 100% leased to a Fortune 20 company (S&P: AA+) through 2038.    

    “We are thrilled to add this iconic office property, with a strong investment grade customer, to our Austin portfolio,” said Colin Connolly, President and Chief Executive Officer of Cousins Properties.  “Austin continues to exhibit strong demand fundamentals, attracting top talent and growing companies.  This exciting transaction enables Cousins to enhance the quality of our leading lifestyle office portfolio and is immediately accretive to earnings.”

    Please refer to the Investor Relations page of Cousins’ website for a presentation with additional information on the transaction discussed in this release.

    About Cousins Properties

    Cousins Properties is a fully integrated, self-administered and self-managed real estate investment trust (REIT). The Company, based in Atlanta, GA and acting through its operating partnership, Cousins Properties LP, primarily invests in Class A office buildings located in high growth Sun Belt markets. Founded in 1958, Cousins creates shareholder value through its extensive expertise in the development, acquisition, leasing, and management of high-quality real estate assets. The Company has a comprehensive strategy in place based on a simple platform, trophy assets, and opportunistic investments. For more information, please visit www.cousins.com.

    CONTACT:

    Roni Imbeaux

    Vice President, Finance and Investor Relations

    404-407-1104

    rimbeaux@cousins.com

     

    Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cousins-properties-to-acquire-trophy-lifestyle-office-property-in-downtown-austin-302327587.html

    SOURCE Cousins Properties

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  • I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by dancers in their hotel.

    Montana, who posted a video of the disruptive dance on TikTok, described the spontaneous celebration as the ‘one thing’ Australian workers need to know if they plan to ‘work from home’ abroad.

    Many Australians have been moving to Bali for extended stays and working their office jobs from glamorous villas or the beach – with some failing to inform their bosses first. 

    Montana, a journalist and social media expert, has been working remotely for two years, gladly trading the daily grind for a life in paradise.

    ‘I used to live and work on the Gold Coast, I would wake up, go to the gym, go to work, come home and have dinner and go to bed. Every day,’ she said.

    ‘Now I know there is more to life and we don’t have to be tied to that, I can’t see myself living like that ever again.’

    The 29-year-old says she has never been happier or had a better lifestyle than she does now where she works from her laptop at the beach or a local café.

    ‘We wake up, go to the beach, have a coffee with friends, work from a café, catch a Pilates class, work for a bit and then head to watch sunset with a friend,’ she said.

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend's 'super important' meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel 

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn't understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she's never been happier or more productive

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn’t understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she’s never been happier or more productive

    There are downsides to working remotely - you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana's friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting

    She continued with her presentation and said no one flinched despite the bells chiming outside

    There are downsides to working remotely – you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana’s friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting 

    ‘I do more – and better – work now because I can do it on my terms. My imagination is working better and I know if I get the job done quickly and well then I can go to the beach or do something fun.’ 

    Montana’s work from Bali lifestyle was thrown into the spotlight after she filmed her British friend’s poorly-timed meeting.

    ‘My friend was working remote from Bali and had just jumped online to give this very important presentation she’s been prepping for for weeks. At the same time this Balinese dance performance started outside our door,’ she said in a video.

    ‘I am howling, it is so loud and it’s so obvious she is not in London right now.’

    Still amused a week later, the young woman explained her friend’s bosses knew she was working abroad – but not all the stakeholders in the meeting did.

    ‘She kept a straight face the entire time,’ Montana recalled, laughing.

    ‘She said afterwards that her laptop is built for people working from abroad so the others in the meeting didn’t hear anything due to good sound masking.’

    The Balinese performance included lots of shouting, banging and bells as they paraded through the grounds.

    The pair had planned their day around being back in the hotel room for the big meeting. 

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 'grind'

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 ‘grind’

    ‘That’s the one thing people who want to work from a holiday destination need to know – you can’t control the surroundings,’ she said.

    ‘I know a lot of people who have been caught out in meetings because of the noise in the background.’

    Montana spent time in Gili T recently and said the call to prayer was distracting for some of her fellow nomads.

    The tale promoted many to share their own ‘working from home from abroad’ stories too. 

    ‘I wanted to work from Bangkok but when I got there the IP was detected and I got blocked from Outlook,’ one expat said.

    ‘I almost got fired when my boss found out I was attending a meeting from a beach club bar in Malaga, Spain,’ another woman added. 

    ‘I had a call once from inside the Colosseum in Rome, I didn’t want to cancel the day trip for one call,’ one more recalled. 

    Montana said she has been surprised by how many people do their ‘big jobs’ remotely.

    ‘I know CEOs, lawyers and managers who all work in Bali – some of them even have families here with them. They just want the lifestyle,’ she said.

    And she’s right, with many higher-ups sharing their own examples with her. 

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    ‘I once defended a deposition from the hotel pool in Cabo,’ one said.

    ‘I am a stenographer and I have done it from an Airbnb,’ said another. 

    ‘I work in aviation as flight support, which is remote,’ a woman wrote.

    Others were ‘furious’ with the women for living abroad and working online.

    ‘This is the exact behaviour that’s ruining work from home for the rest of us,’ one raged.

    ‘There is a difference between working from home and remotely. A lot of legal and insurance stuff changes when you switch countries,’ another said.

    Montana says her friend locked eyes with her once she got off her call and they both burst into laughter.

    ‘I was cracking up. I said “girl I don’t know how you kept a straight face”. She was just relieved, the meeting went well,’ she said.

    The young woman plans to work remotely for at least five more years and doesn’t understand why so many businesses are cracking down on it.

    ‘Honestly I don’t want to be rude but the world is changing and they should change or be left behind,’ she said.

    ‘Staff happiness boosts productivity and creativity. If Covid taught us anything it is that life is short and most of us can work remotely.’

    Her life used to look very 'eat, sleep, work, repeat'. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Her life used to look very ‘eat, sleep, work, repeat’. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Montana says the cost of living in Bali is similar for her as it was on the Gold Coast, but that the quality of her life is much higher. 

    ‘We shouldn’t be stuck in an office, we can do anything anywhere – when you are living the life you want you are so much more creative and effective,’ she said.

    Working from home has been a hot topic of late, with Australians who continue to do so at a risk of jeopardising their tax return if they fail to keep a diary of their rostered hours.

    H&R Block director of tax communications Mark Chapman said the Australian Taxation Office was likely to demand proof that someone worked from home during the last financial year. 

    ‘We expect the ATO to check claims thoroughly, particularly to verify whether taxpayers have a record of all their working from home hours over the entire tax year, in the form of timesheets, a diary or copy of work rosters,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    New rules came into effect in March 2023 requiring work-from-home professionals to keep a diary of every hour worked at home to claim the 67-cent-an-hour flat rate on their tax return. 

    That would make 2023-24 the first full financial year where time worked from home needed to be recorded. 

    ‘If you don’t keep a record of all your working hours spent at home from 1 July through to 30 June – so, for the entire tax year – you won’t be entitled to claim the 67 cents per hour fixed rate,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    The flat rate method is much simpler than itemising out every single expense related to working from home. 

    ‘This method is generally preferred by taxpayers because – apart from the requirement to keep a record of all your hours worked – the documentation requirements are much less stringent,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    ‘The ATO believes that work-related expenses claims are the biggest element in that ‘tax gap’ and have signalled that they’ll be looking closely at these deductions this year,’ he said. 

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  • I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by dancers in their hotel.

    Montana, who posted a video of the disruptive dance on TikTok, described the spontaneous celebration as the ‘one thing’ Australian workers need to know if they plan to ‘work from home’ abroad.

    Many Australians have been moving to Bali for extended stays and working their office jobs from glamorous villas or the beach – with some failing to inform their bosses first. 

    Montana, a journalist and social media expert, has been working remotely for two years, gladly trading the daily grind for a life in paradise.

    ‘I used to live and work on the Gold Coast, I would wake up, go to the gym, go to work, come home and have dinner and go to bed. Every day,’ she said.

    ‘Now I know there is more to life and we don’t have to be tied to that, I can’t see myself living like that ever again.’

    The 29-year-old says she has never been happier or had a better lifestyle than she does now where she works from her laptop at the beach or a local café.

    ‘We wake up, go to the beach, have a coffee with friends, work from a café, catch a Pilates class, work for a bit and then head to watch sunset with a friend,’ she said.

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend's 'super important' meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel 

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn't understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she's never been happier or more productive

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn’t understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she’s never been happier or more productive

    There are downsides to working remotely - you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana's friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting

    She continued with her presentation and said no one flinched despite the bells chiming outside

    There are downsides to working remotely – you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana’s friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting 

    ‘I do more – and better – work now because I can do it on my terms. My imagination is working better and I know if I get the job done quickly and well then I can go to the beach or do something fun.’ 

    Montana’s work from Bali lifestyle was thrown into the spotlight after she filmed her British friend’s poorly-timed meeting.

    ‘My friend was working remote from Bali and had just jumped online to give this very important presentation she’s been prepping for for weeks. At the same time this Balinese dance performance started outside our door,’ she said in a video.

    ‘I am howling, it is so loud and it’s so obvious she is not in London right now.’

    Still amused a week later, the young woman explained her friend’s bosses knew she was working abroad – but not all the stakeholders in the meeting did.

    ‘She kept a straight face the entire time,’ Montana recalled, laughing.

    ‘She said afterwards that her laptop is built for people working from abroad so the others in the meeting didn’t hear anything due to good sound masking.’

    The Balinese performance included lots of shouting, banging and bells as they paraded through the grounds.

    The pair had planned their day around being back in the hotel room for the big meeting. 

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 'grind'

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 ‘grind’

    ‘That’s the one thing people who want to work from a holiday destination need to know – you can’t control the surroundings,’ she said.

    ‘I know a lot of people who have been caught out in meetings because of the noise in the background.’

    Montana spent time in Gili T recently and said the call to prayer was distracting for some of her fellow nomads.

    The tale promoted many to share their own ‘working from home from abroad’ stories too. 

    ‘I wanted to work from Bangkok but when I got there the IP was detected and I got blocked from Outlook,’ one expat said.

    ‘I almost got fired when my boss found out I was attending a meeting from a beach club bar in Malaga, Spain,’ another woman added. 

    ‘I had a call once from inside the Colosseum in Rome, I didn’t want to cancel the day trip for one call,’ one more recalled. 

    Montana said she has been surprised by how many people do their ‘big jobs’ remotely.

    ‘I know CEOs, lawyers and managers who all work in Bali – some of them even have families here with them. They just want the lifestyle,’ she said.

    And she’s right, with many higher-ups sharing their own examples with her. 

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    ‘I once defended a deposition from the hotel pool in Cabo,’ one said.

    ‘I am a stenographer and I have done it from an Airbnb,’ said another. 

    ‘I work in aviation as flight support, which is remote,’ a woman wrote.

    Others were ‘furious’ with the women for living abroad and working online.

    ‘This is the exact behaviour that’s ruining work from home for the rest of us,’ one raged.

    ‘There is a difference between working from home and remotely. A lot of legal and insurance stuff changes when you switch countries,’ another said.

    Montana says her friend locked eyes with her once she got off her call and they both burst into laughter.

    ‘I was cracking up. I said “girl I don’t know how you kept a straight face”. She was just relieved, the meeting went well,’ she said.

    The young woman plans to work remotely for at least five more years and doesn’t understand why so many businesses are cracking down on it.

    ‘Honestly I don’t want to be rude but the world is changing and they should change or be left behind,’ she said.

    ‘Staff happiness boosts productivity and creativity. If Covid taught us anything it is that life is short and most of us can work remotely.’

    Her life used to look very 'eat, sleep, work, repeat'. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Her life used to look very ‘eat, sleep, work, repeat’. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Montana says the cost of living in Bali is similar for her as it was on the Gold Coast, but that the quality of her life is much higher. 

    ‘We shouldn’t be stuck in an office, we can do anything anywhere – when you are living the life you want you are so much more creative and effective,’ she said.

    Working from home has been a hot topic of late, with Australians who continue to do so at a risk of jeopardising their tax return if they fail to keep a diary of their rostered hours.

    H&R Block director of tax communications Mark Chapman said the Australian Taxation Office was likely to demand proof that someone worked from home during the last financial year. 

    ‘We expect the ATO to check claims thoroughly, particularly to verify whether taxpayers have a record of all their working from home hours over the entire tax year, in the form of timesheets, a diary or copy of work rosters,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    New rules came into effect in March 2023 requiring work-from-home professionals to keep a diary of every hour worked at home to claim the 67-cent-an-hour flat rate on their tax return. 

    That would make 2023-24 the first full financial year where time worked from home needed to be recorded. 

    ‘If you don’t keep a record of all your working hours spent at home from 1 July through to 30 June – so, for the entire tax year – you won’t be entitled to claim the 67 cents per hour fixed rate,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    The flat rate method is much simpler than itemising out every single expense related to working from home. 

    ‘This method is generally preferred by taxpayers because – apart from the requirement to keep a record of all your hours worked – the documentation requirements are much less stringent,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    ‘The ATO believes that work-related expenses claims are the biggest element in that ‘tax gap’ and have signalled that they’ll be looking closely at these deductions this year,’ he said. 

    Source link

  • I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by dancers in their hotel.

    Montana, who posted a video of the disruptive dance on TikTok, described the spontaneous celebration as the ‘one thing’ Australian workers need to know if they plan to ‘work from home’ abroad.

    Many Australians have been moving to Bali for extended stays and working their office jobs from glamorous villas or the beach – with some failing to inform their bosses first. 

    Montana, a journalist and social media expert, has been working remotely for two years, gladly trading the daily grind for a life in paradise.

    ‘I used to live and work on the Gold Coast, I would wake up, go to the gym, go to work, come home and have dinner and go to bed. Every day,’ she said.

    ‘Now I know there is more to life and we don’t have to be tied to that, I can’t see myself living like that ever again.’

    The 29-year-old says she has never been happier or had a better lifestyle than she does now where she works from her laptop at the beach or a local café.

    ‘We wake up, go to the beach, have a coffee with friends, work from a café, catch a Pilates class, work for a bit and then head to watch sunset with a friend,’ she said.

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend's 'super important' meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel 

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn't understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she's never been happier or more productive

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn’t understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she’s never been happier or more productive

    There are downsides to working remotely - you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana's friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting

    She continued with her presentation and said no one flinched despite the bells chiming outside

    There are downsides to working remotely – you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana’s friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting 

    ‘I do more – and better – work now because I can do it on my terms. My imagination is working better and I know if I get the job done quickly and well then I can go to the beach or do something fun.’ 

    Montana’s work from Bali lifestyle was thrown into the spotlight after she filmed her British friend’s poorly-timed meeting.

    ‘My friend was working remote from Bali and had just jumped online to give this very important presentation she’s been prepping for for weeks. At the same time this Balinese dance performance started outside our door,’ she said in a video.

    ‘I am howling, it is so loud and it’s so obvious she is not in London right now.’

    Still amused a week later, the young woman explained her friend’s bosses knew she was working abroad – but not all the stakeholders in the meeting did.

    ‘She kept a straight face the entire time,’ Montana recalled, laughing.

    ‘She said afterwards that her laptop is built for people working from abroad so the others in the meeting didn’t hear anything due to good sound masking.’

    The Balinese performance included lots of shouting, banging and bells as they paraded through the grounds.

    The pair had planned their day around being back in the hotel room for the big meeting. 

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 'grind'

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 ‘grind’

    ‘That’s the one thing people who want to work from a holiday destination need to know – you can’t control the surroundings,’ she said.

    ‘I know a lot of people who have been caught out in meetings because of the noise in the background.’

    Montana spent time in Gili T recently and said the call to prayer was distracting for some of her fellow nomads.

    The tale promoted many to share their own ‘working from home from abroad’ stories too. 

    ‘I wanted to work from Bangkok but when I got there the IP was detected and I got blocked from Outlook,’ one expat said.

    ‘I almost got fired when my boss found out I was attending a meeting from a beach club bar in Malaga, Spain,’ another woman added. 

    ‘I had a call once from inside the Colosseum in Rome, I didn’t want to cancel the day trip for one call,’ one more recalled. 

    Montana said she has been surprised by how many people do their ‘big jobs’ remotely.

    ‘I know CEOs, lawyers and managers who all work in Bali – some of them even have families here with them. They just want the lifestyle,’ she said.

    And she’s right, with many higher-ups sharing their own examples with her. 

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    ‘I once defended a deposition from the hotel pool in Cabo,’ one said.

    ‘I am a stenographer and I have done it from an Airbnb,’ said another. 

    ‘I work in aviation as flight support, which is remote,’ a woman wrote.

    Others were ‘furious’ with the women for living abroad and working online.

    ‘This is the exact behaviour that’s ruining work from home for the rest of us,’ one raged.

    ‘There is a difference between working from home and remotely. A lot of legal and insurance stuff changes when you switch countries,’ another said.

    Montana says her friend locked eyes with her once she got off her call and they both burst into laughter.

    ‘I was cracking up. I said “girl I don’t know how you kept a straight face”. She was just relieved, the meeting went well,’ she said.

    The young woman plans to work remotely for at least five more years and doesn’t understand why so many businesses are cracking down on it.

    ‘Honestly I don’t want to be rude but the world is changing and they should change or be left behind,’ she said.

    ‘Staff happiness boosts productivity and creativity. If Covid taught us anything it is that life is short and most of us can work remotely.’

    Her life used to look very 'eat, sleep, work, repeat'. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Her life used to look very ‘eat, sleep, work, repeat’. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Montana says the cost of living in Bali is similar for her as it was on the Gold Coast, but that the quality of her life is much higher. 

    ‘We shouldn’t be stuck in an office, we can do anything anywhere – when you are living the life you want you are so much more creative and effective,’ she said.

    Working from home has been a hot topic of late, with Australians who continue to do so at a risk of jeopardising their tax return if they fail to keep a diary of their rostered hours.

    H&R Block director of tax communications Mark Chapman said the Australian Taxation Office was likely to demand proof that someone worked from home during the last financial year. 

    ‘We expect the ATO to check claims thoroughly, particularly to verify whether taxpayers have a record of all their working from home hours over the entire tax year, in the form of timesheets, a diary or copy of work rosters,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    New rules came into effect in March 2023 requiring work-from-home professionals to keep a diary of every hour worked at home to claim the 67-cent-an-hour flat rate on their tax return. 

    That would make 2023-24 the first full financial year where time worked from home needed to be recorded. 

    ‘If you don’t keep a record of all your working hours spent at home from 1 July through to 30 June – so, for the entire tax year – you won’t be entitled to claim the 67 cents per hour fixed rate,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    The flat rate method is much simpler than itemising out every single expense related to working from home. 

    ‘This method is generally preferred by taxpayers because – apart from the requirement to keep a record of all your hours worked – the documentation requirements are much less stringent,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    ‘The ATO believes that work-related expenses claims are the biggest element in that ‘tax gap’ and have signalled that they’ll be looking closely at these deductions this year,’ he said. 

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  • I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by dancers in their hotel.

    Montana, who posted a video of the disruptive dance on TikTok, described the spontaneous celebration as the ‘one thing’ Australian workers need to know if they plan to ‘work from home’ abroad.

    Many Australians have been moving to Bali for extended stays and working their office jobs from glamorous villas or the beach – with some failing to inform their bosses first. 

    Montana, a journalist and social media expert, has been working remotely for two years, gladly trading the daily grind for a life in paradise.

    ‘I used to live and work on the Gold Coast, I would wake up, go to the gym, go to work, come home and have dinner and go to bed. Every day,’ she said.

    ‘Now I know there is more to life and we don’t have to be tied to that, I can’t see myself living like that ever again.’

    The 29-year-old says she has never been happier or had a better lifestyle than she does now where she works from her laptop at the beach or a local café.

    ‘We wake up, go to the beach, have a coffee with friends, work from a café, catch a Pilates class, work for a bit and then head to watch sunset with a friend,’ she said.

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend's 'super important' meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel 

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn't understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she's never been happier or more productive

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn’t understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she’s never been happier or more productive

    There are downsides to working remotely - you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana's friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting

    She continued with her presentation and said no one flinched despite the bells chiming outside

    There are downsides to working remotely – you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana’s friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting 

    ‘I do more – and better – work now because I can do it on my terms. My imagination is working better and I know if I get the job done quickly and well then I can go to the beach or do something fun.’ 

    Montana’s work from Bali lifestyle was thrown into the spotlight after she filmed her British friend’s poorly-timed meeting.

    ‘My friend was working remote from Bali and had just jumped online to give this very important presentation she’s been prepping for for weeks. At the same time this Balinese dance performance started outside our door,’ she said in a video.

    ‘I am howling, it is so loud and it’s so obvious she is not in London right now.’

    Still amused a week later, the young woman explained her friend’s bosses knew she was working abroad – but not all the stakeholders in the meeting did.

    ‘She kept a straight face the entire time,’ Montana recalled, laughing.

    ‘She said afterwards that her laptop is built for people working from abroad so the others in the meeting didn’t hear anything due to good sound masking.’

    The Balinese performance included lots of shouting, banging and bells as they paraded through the grounds.

    The pair had planned their day around being back in the hotel room for the big meeting. 

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 'grind'

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 ‘grind’

    ‘That’s the one thing people who want to work from a holiday destination need to know – you can’t control the surroundings,’ she said.

    ‘I know a lot of people who have been caught out in meetings because of the noise in the background.’

    Montana spent time in Gili T recently and said the call to prayer was distracting for some of her fellow nomads.

    The tale promoted many to share their own ‘working from home from abroad’ stories too. 

    ‘I wanted to work from Bangkok but when I got there the IP was detected and I got blocked from Outlook,’ one expat said.

    ‘I almost got fired when my boss found out I was attending a meeting from a beach club bar in Malaga, Spain,’ another woman added. 

    ‘I had a call once from inside the Colosseum in Rome, I didn’t want to cancel the day trip for one call,’ one more recalled. 

    Montana said she has been surprised by how many people do their ‘big jobs’ remotely.

    ‘I know CEOs, lawyers and managers who all work in Bali – some of them even have families here with them. They just want the lifestyle,’ she said.

    And she’s right, with many higher-ups sharing their own examples with her. 

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    ‘I once defended a deposition from the hotel pool in Cabo,’ one said.

    ‘I am a stenographer and I have done it from an Airbnb,’ said another. 

    ‘I work in aviation as flight support, which is remote,’ a woman wrote.

    Others were ‘furious’ with the women for living abroad and working online.

    ‘This is the exact behaviour that’s ruining work from home for the rest of us,’ one raged.

    ‘There is a difference between working from home and remotely. A lot of legal and insurance stuff changes when you switch countries,’ another said.

    Montana says her friend locked eyes with her once she got off her call and they both burst into laughter.

    ‘I was cracking up. I said “girl I don’t know how you kept a straight face”. She was just relieved, the meeting went well,’ she said.

    The young woman plans to work remotely for at least five more years and doesn’t understand why so many businesses are cracking down on it.

    ‘Honestly I don’t want to be rude but the world is changing and they should change or be left behind,’ she said.

    ‘Staff happiness boosts productivity and creativity. If Covid taught us anything it is that life is short and most of us can work remotely.’

    Her life used to look very 'eat, sleep, work, repeat'. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Her life used to look very ‘eat, sleep, work, repeat’. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Montana says the cost of living in Bali is similar for her as it was on the Gold Coast, but that the quality of her life is much higher. 

    ‘We shouldn’t be stuck in an office, we can do anything anywhere – when you are living the life you want you are so much more creative and effective,’ she said.

    Working from home has been a hot topic of late, with Australians who continue to do so at a risk of jeopardising their tax return if they fail to keep a diary of their rostered hours.

    H&R Block director of tax communications Mark Chapman said the Australian Taxation Office was likely to demand proof that someone worked from home during the last financial year. 

    ‘We expect the ATO to check claims thoroughly, particularly to verify whether taxpayers have a record of all their working from home hours over the entire tax year, in the form of timesheets, a diary or copy of work rosters,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    New rules came into effect in March 2023 requiring work-from-home professionals to keep a diary of every hour worked at home to claim the 67-cent-an-hour flat rate on their tax return. 

    That would make 2023-24 the first full financial year where time worked from home needed to be recorded. 

    ‘If you don’t keep a record of all your working hours spent at home from 1 July through to 30 June – so, for the entire tax year – you won’t be entitled to claim the 67 cents per hour fixed rate,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    The flat rate method is much simpler than itemising out every single expense related to working from home. 

    ‘This method is generally preferred by taxpayers because – apart from the requirement to keep a record of all your hours worked – the documentation requirements are much less stringent,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    ‘The ATO believes that work-related expenses claims are the biggest element in that ‘tax gap’ and have signalled that they’ll be looking closely at these deductions this year,’ he said. 

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  • I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    I ‘work from home’ in Bali and love the lifestyle – but there’s a huge catch all Aussies should know (and it could land you in BIG trouble at the office)

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by dancers in their hotel.

    Montana, who posted a video of the disruptive dance on TikTok, described the spontaneous celebration as the ‘one thing’ Australian workers need to know if they plan to ‘work from home’ abroad.

    Many Australians have been moving to Bali for extended stays and working their office jobs from glamorous villas or the beach – with some failing to inform their bosses first. 

    Montana, a journalist and social media expert, has been working remotely for two years, gladly trading the daily grind for a life in paradise.

    ‘I used to live and work on the Gold Coast, I would wake up, go to the gym, go to work, come home and have dinner and go to bed. Every day,’ she said.

    ‘Now I know there is more to life and we don’t have to be tied to that, I can’t see myself living like that ever again.’

    The 29-year-old says she has never been happier or had a better lifestyle than she does now where she works from her laptop at the beach or a local café.

    ‘We wake up, go to the beach, have a coffee with friends, work from a café, catch a Pilates class, work for a bit and then head to watch sunset with a friend,’ she said.

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend's 'super important' meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel

    A young woman has warned Aussies about sneakily working from Bali after her friend’s ‘super important’ meeting was interrupted by Balinese dancers in their hotel 

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn't understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she's never been happier or more productive

    She is currently working from Bali and doesn’t understand why workplaces are so keen to get everyone back to the office grind. She says she’s never been happier or more productive

    There are downsides to working remotely - you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana's friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting

    She continued with her presentation and said no one flinched despite the bells chiming outside

    There are downsides to working remotely – you have to relinquish control of your environment as Montana’s friend found out when this Balinese dance kicked off at the same time as an important meeting 

    ‘I do more – and better – work now because I can do it on my terms. My imagination is working better and I know if I get the job done quickly and well then I can go to the beach or do something fun.’ 

    Montana’s work from Bali lifestyle was thrown into the spotlight after she filmed her British friend’s poorly-timed meeting.

    ‘My friend was working remote from Bali and had just jumped online to give this very important presentation she’s been prepping for for weeks. At the same time this Balinese dance performance started outside our door,’ she said in a video.

    ‘I am howling, it is so loud and it’s so obvious she is not in London right now.’

    Still amused a week later, the young woman explained her friend’s bosses knew she was working abroad – but not all the stakeholders in the meeting did.

    ‘She kept a straight face the entire time,’ Montana recalled, laughing.

    ‘She said afterwards that her laptop is built for people working from abroad so the others in the meeting didn’t hear anything due to good sound masking.’

    The Balinese performance included lots of shouting, banging and bells as they paraded through the grounds.

    The pair had planned their day around being back in the hotel room for the big meeting. 

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 'grind'

    The young woman says living in your favorite holiday destination gives you the ability to prioritise life over the 9-5 ‘grind’

    ‘That’s the one thing people who want to work from a holiday destination need to know – you can’t control the surroundings,’ she said.

    ‘I know a lot of people who have been caught out in meetings because of the noise in the background.’

    Montana spent time in Gili T recently and said the call to prayer was distracting for some of her fellow nomads.

    The tale promoted many to share their own ‘working from home from abroad’ stories too. 

    ‘I wanted to work from Bangkok but when I got there the IP was detected and I got blocked from Outlook,’ one expat said.

    ‘I almost got fired when my boss found out I was attending a meeting from a beach club bar in Malaga, Spain,’ another woman added. 

    ‘I had a call once from inside the Colosseum in Rome, I didn’t want to cancel the day trip for one call,’ one more recalled. 

    Montana said she has been surprised by how many people do their ‘big jobs’ remotely.

    ‘I know CEOs, lawyers and managers who all work in Bali – some of them even have families here with them. They just want the lifestyle,’ she said.

    And she’s right, with many higher-ups sharing their own examples with her. 

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    She now works from cafes, bars and beaches

    ‘I once defended a deposition from the hotel pool in Cabo,’ one said.

    ‘I am a stenographer and I have done it from an Airbnb,’ said another. 

    ‘I work in aviation as flight support, which is remote,’ a woman wrote.

    Others were ‘furious’ with the women for living abroad and working online.

    ‘This is the exact behaviour that’s ruining work from home for the rest of us,’ one raged.

    ‘There is a difference between working from home and remotely. A lot of legal and insurance stuff changes when you switch countries,’ another said.

    Montana says her friend locked eyes with her once she got off her call and they both burst into laughter.

    ‘I was cracking up. I said “girl I don’t know how you kept a straight face”. She was just relieved, the meeting went well,’ she said.

    The young woman plans to work remotely for at least five more years and doesn’t understand why so many businesses are cracking down on it.

    ‘Honestly I don’t want to be rude but the world is changing and they should change or be left behind,’ she said.

    ‘Staff happiness boosts productivity and creativity. If Covid taught us anything it is that life is short and most of us can work remotely.’

    Her life used to look very 'eat, sleep, work, repeat'. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Her life used to look very ‘eat, sleep, work, repeat’. But now every day is sprinkled with fun activities, socialisation and work

    Montana says the cost of living in Bali is similar for her as it was on the Gold Coast, but that the quality of her life is much higher. 

    ‘We shouldn’t be stuck in an office, we can do anything anywhere – when you are living the life you want you are so much more creative and effective,’ she said.

    Working from home has been a hot topic of late, with Australians who continue to do so at a risk of jeopardising their tax return if they fail to keep a diary of their rostered hours.

    H&R Block director of tax communications Mark Chapman said the Australian Taxation Office was likely to demand proof that someone worked from home during the last financial year. 

    ‘We expect the ATO to check claims thoroughly, particularly to verify whether taxpayers have a record of all their working from home hours over the entire tax year, in the form of timesheets, a diary or copy of work rosters,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    New rules came into effect in March 2023 requiring work-from-home professionals to keep a diary of every hour worked at home to claim the 67-cent-an-hour flat rate on their tax return. 

    That would make 2023-24 the first full financial year where time worked from home needed to be recorded. 

    ‘If you don’t keep a record of all your working hours spent at home from 1 July through to 30 June – so, for the entire tax year – you won’t be entitled to claim the 67 cents per hour fixed rate,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    The flat rate method is much simpler than itemising out every single expense related to working from home. 

    ‘This method is generally preferred by taxpayers because – apart from the requirement to keep a record of all your hours worked – the documentation requirements are much less stringent,’ Mr Chapman said. 

    ‘The ATO believes that work-related expenses claims are the biggest element in that ‘tax gap’ and have signalled that they’ll be looking closely at these deductions this year,’ he said. 

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  • Football matches in Wales POSTPONED on Saturday after Met Office issue rare ‘danger to life’ red warnings with Storm Darragh set to hit the country as well as parts of Bristol and Somerset

    Football matches in Wales POSTPONED on Saturday after Met Office issue rare ‘danger to life’ red warnings with Storm Darragh set to hit the country as well as parts of Bristol and Somerset

    • Red weather warnings have been issued by Met Office across Wales due to storm
    • LISTEN NOW to It’s All Kicking Off!: Why can’t Chelsea win the league? They made seven changes and still scored five. Do you think Liverpool could do that? 

    All football matches scheduled to take place in Wales on Saturday 7 have been postponed due to Storm Darragh, which is expected to bring destructive winds and heavy rain, the Football Association of Wales has announced. 

    In a statement, the body confirmed that it had taken the extraordinary measure after advice from the Met Office, which has issued rare red weather warnings in the country. 

    Storm Darragh is sweeping in across the Atlantic, bringing with it 90mph winds and torrential downpours set to spark flooding and travel chaos in parts of Britain.

    ‘The Met Office has issued red, amber, and yellow weather warnings for the vast majority of Wales due to Storm Darragh, which is expected to bring damaging winds and heavy rain, causing significant disruption and danger to life,’ the statement from the FAW began.

    ‘It is not safe to drive in such weather, including travelling to and from football matches. Being outside in high winds increases the risk of injury and The Met Office advises people to stay indoors if possible.

    ‘Clubs have been advised to check for and secure any loose items around their grounds if it can be done safely. This includes bins, furniture, goalposts, and fences etc.

    All football matches in Wales on Saturday have been postponed due to Storm Darragh, which is expected to bring destructive winds and heavy rain

    All football matches in Wales on Saturday have been postponed due to Storm Darragh, which is expected to bring destructive winds and heavy rain

    The Met Office has issued an 18-hour amber wind warning along the UK's west coast from South Ayrshire down to Cornwall (pictured) , as well as in Northern Ireland, will run on Saturday from 3am to 9pm.

    The Met Office has issued an 18-hour amber wind warning along the UK’s west coast from South Ayrshire down to Cornwall (pictured) , as well as in Northern Ireland, will run on Saturday from 3am to 9pm.

    ‘Potential postponements of fixtures on Friday 6 December and Sunday 8 December will be considered on a case-by-case basis, in line with each individual league’s policy.’

    Meteorologists said a period of ‘extremely strong winds’ will develop during the early hours of Saturday morning as the low pressure system moves across the Irish Sea. 

    The ‘significant disruption’ warning from 3am until 11am covers most of the coast of Wales including Cardiff and Swansea, as well as parts of Bristol and North Somerset. 

    That could mean that various Football League and non-league fixtures could also be affected, though at this point there has been announcement from the FA. 

    Championship side Bristol City welcome QPR to Ashton Gate in the early fixture on Saturday, while in the National League Yeovil Town are set to entertain Braintree Town at 3pm. 

    Forecasters told residents to ‘stay indoors if you can’ and ‘avoid travelling by road during potentially dangerous conditions – it is not safe to drive in these conditions’.

    Homeowners were urged to secure loose items outside their properties such as Christmas decorations, bins, garden furniture, trampolines, tents, sheds and fences.

    The red alert, issued just after 10am on Friday, also urged people to ‘consider gathering torches and batteries, a mobile phone power pack and other essential items’.

    Red warnings are a rare event, with the last one issued by the Met Office just under a year ago on January 21, 2024 for 99mph Storm Isha – and Friday is only the 19th time in records dating back to 2011 that a red warning has been imposed.

    The Met Office has also issued a 39-hour yellow wind warning for the whole of England, Wales and Northern Ireland and much of Scotland, from 3pm today until 6am on Sunday.

    And an 18-hour amber wind warning along the UK’s west coast from South Ayrshire down to Cornwall, as well as in Northern Ireland, will run on Saturday from 3am to 9pm.

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  • From outsider to the Oval Office, bitcoin surges as a new administration embraces crypto

    From outsider to the Oval Office, bitcoin surges as a new administration embraces crypto

    NEW YORK — Born from the ashes of the 2008 global financial crisis, bitcoin arrived after trust had withered in the financial system and in Washington’s ability to protect those who must participate in it. Now, it’s Washington’s very embrace of bitcoin that’s helping to send its price to records and lining the pockets of its believers.

    Bitcoin briefly surged above $103,000 after President-elect Donald Trump said he intends to nominate Paul Atkins, a former regulator who’s seen as friendly to crypto, as the next chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. He would replace Gary Gensler, who critics say has been overly aggressive in his oversight of crypto.

    It’s the latest leg in an astonishing run for bitcoin, whose swings in price are already notoriously extreme.

    Bitcoin has more than doubled this year, with a particularly big jump coming after Election Day, when its price was sitting below $70,000. During his campaign, Trump called for making the United States “the crypto capital of the planet.”

    The crypto industry, meanwhile, did its part to bring politicians friendly to digital currencies into Washington. Crypto corporations poured over $119 million into influencing federal elections in 2024, primarily into a political action committee dedicated to electing pro-crypto candidates and defeating crypto skeptics, according to a recent review by Public Citizen.

    It’s a large amount. Crypto companies accounted for 44% of all the corporate money contributed during this year’s elections, according to the consumer advocacy organization.

    Such a tight embrace marks an interesting twist from bitcoin’s early days, when someone or a group of someones under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto created a kind of electronic cash that wouldn’t be beholden to any government or financial institution.

    In the white paper announcing bitcoin, Namakoto said the traditional way of doing business on the internet “works well enough for most transactions.” But, Nakamoto said, it “still suffers from the inherent weaknesses of the trust based model,” where a third party like a bank needs to process payments.

    Instead, Nakamoto suggested harnessing computing power around the world as a way to create a digital currency that can’t be double-spent. “What is needed is an electronic payment system based on cryptographic proof instead of trust, allowing any two willing parties to transact directly with each other without the need for a trusted third party.” That is what became the bitcoin network.

    Since then, bitcoin has moved from the financial fringes toward the mainstream, in jagged fits and starts. While it hasn’t taken off as a way to pay for groceries, it found popularity as a kind of “digital gold,” or a way to store value in something that’s not subject to the direct influence of a federal government or a central bank.

    In its early days, it had a reputation for use by drug dealers, scammers, crypto enthusiasts, libertarians and others who were looking to move money without oversight by the government. Now, it’s also found its way into more investor portfolios. Earlier this year, the SEC approved exchange-traded funds that track the spot price of bitcoin. Such ETFs give investors a relatively easy way to buy bitcoin directly in their existing trading accounts.

    Through its life, bitcoin has soared through a series of manic bull runs as well as “crypto winters” that brought extreme declines. It went from just over $5,000 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic to nearly $69,000 by late 2021, before crashing below $17,000 following hikes to interest rates by the Federal Reserve and the 2022 collapse of crypto exchange FTX.

    With bitcoin in its latest bull run, the man who’s about to roll into the White House seemed to take at least some credit.

    “CONGRATULATIONS BITCOINERS!!!” Trump said in a post on his Truth Social network. “$100,000!!! YOU’RE WELCOME!!!”

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