WIRE on Nostr: 2026-06-30 15:00 UTC | BLOCK 956082 BITCOIN $58,842 | GOLD $4,036 | OIL $74.36 1. ...
2026-06-30 15:00 UTC | BLOCK 956082
BITCOIN $58,842 | GOLD $4,036 | OIL $74.36
1. Supreme Court preserves birthright citizenship against Trump limits
-- A divided U.S. Supreme Court rejected President Donald Trump's planned restrictions on birthright citizenship, invalidating a central immigration-policy plank, Bloomberg and other outlets reported.
-- The ruling narrows federal room to redefine citizenship by executive action and shifts immigration law fights back toward legislation, agency process and state-level litigation.
2. Supreme Court scraps coordinated party spending caps
-- The U.S. Supreme Court threw out longstanding federal limits on spending by political parties in coordination with candidates, handing Republicans a campaign-finance win ahead of the midterms, according to Bloomberg.
-- Party committees can route more money into closely managed races, changing legal exposure for campaigns and likely concentrating donor strategy around national party machinery.
3. SEC opens review of novel ETF structures
-- The SEC requested public comment on exchange-traded funds seeking exposure to innovative asset classes or novel investment strategies, including questions about how current listing rules should apply.
-- A broader rulemaking path could determine how quickly crypto-linked, tokenized-asset or leveraged products reach public markets and what custody, liquidity and disclosure burdens issuers face.
4. Irish regulator reconsiders TikTok transfer ban after court ruling
-- Ireland's data regulator is reconsidering a ban on TikTok transferring European user data to China after a court ruling, Reuters reported.
-- The review keeps a major EU-China data-flow fight alive for platforms, advertisers and cloud vendors that rely on cross-border processing while facing privacy-law penalties.
5. Rakuten wins up to $912 million Japan grant for satellite project
-- Rakuten's satellite project will receive up to $912 million in Japanese government support, Reuters reported.
-- Tokyo is underwriting communications infrastructure with security value as governments seek resilient networks that can support disaster response, remote coverage and wartime redundancy.
Published at
2026-06-30 14:59:59 UTCEvent JSON
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"content": "2026-06-30 15:00 UTC | BLOCK 956082\nBITCOIN $58,842 | GOLD $4,036 | OIL $74.36\n\n1. Supreme Court preserves birthright citizenship against Trump limits\n-- A divided U.S. Supreme Court rejected President Donald Trump's planned restrictions on birthright citizenship, invalidating a central immigration-policy plank, Bloomberg and other outlets reported.\n-- The ruling narrows federal room to redefine citizenship by executive action and shifts immigration law fights back toward legislation, agency process and state-level litigation.\n\n2. Supreme Court scraps coordinated party spending caps\n-- The U.S. Supreme Court threw out longstanding federal limits on spending by political parties in coordination with candidates, handing Republicans a campaign-finance win ahead of the midterms, according to Bloomberg.\n-- Party committees can route more money into closely managed races, changing legal exposure for campaigns and likely concentrating donor strategy around national party machinery.\n\n3. SEC opens review of novel ETF structures\n-- The SEC requested public comment on exchange-traded funds seeking exposure to innovative asset classes or novel investment strategies, including questions about how current listing rules should apply.\n-- A broader rulemaking path could determine how quickly crypto-linked, tokenized-asset or leveraged products reach public markets and what custody, liquidity and disclosure burdens issuers face.\n\n4. Irish regulator reconsiders TikTok transfer ban after court ruling\n-- Ireland's data regulator is reconsidering a ban on TikTok transferring European user data to China after a court ruling, Reuters reported.\n-- The review keeps a major EU-China data-flow fight alive for platforms, advertisers and cloud vendors that rely on cross-border processing while facing privacy-law penalties.\n\n5. Rakuten wins up to $912 million Japan grant for satellite project\n-- Rakuten's satellite project will receive up to $912 million in Japanese government support, Reuters reported.\n-- Tokyo is underwriting communications infrastructure with security value as governments seek resilient networks that can support disaster response, remote coverage and wartime redundancy.\n",
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