in
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Stop saying that
Mark is the culprit,not the shareholders
Mikp
Lol
Wow
No mention of new shares for us
Were did you get that info again?
Mikp
Sorry
Wrong reason to do an rs after him repeating that would never happen
Were are all the big news that he promised!
Not good for the shareholders of record
Mikp
Beside what we have?
New shares in Arowana?
I don't see were he said that
Did I miss it?
Does not say we getting new shares
Were Cornerstone said that
I do not see what you stated
About getting new shares
Do you?
Did you day that?
Were shows the info??
Cornerstone was saying that we will get shares in the new company based on our current position in MIKP.
Who is the idiot that sold again?
Were does it say that?
Revenues $19000?
Wow
No $m
Cash on hand down by 100k?
Pinocchio legacy continue
Geez get it right once
I use an other poster to reply
He puts nicely
Like I said it's a house of cards.The SEC has to look like they are doing something.Literally every brokerage and financial institution have been breaking the laws for years.The SEC knew and knows this has been going on forever.The dollar values are staggering,to say the least.These tiny fines and wrist slaps are a drop in the bucket compare to the hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud being committed.They will and continue to cover their tracks to look like they are doing something for the average investor.Make no mistake they know which side their bread is buttered.They have and always will be in the pockets of the hedge funds and large investors and institutions.We never had a chance from day one.Good luck and good trading.
Yes indeed
Crooks
SEC Charges 10 Firms with Widespread Recordkeeping Failures
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2023-212
Washington D.C., Sept. 29, 2023 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against five broker-dealers, three dually registered broker-dealers and investment advisers, and two affiliated investment advisers for widespread and longstanding failures to maintain and preserve electronic communications. The firms admitted the facts set forth in their respective SEC orders and acknowledged that their conduct violated recordkeeping provisions of the federal securities laws. The firms agreed to pay combined penalties of $79 million as outlined below and have begun implementing improvements to their compliance policies and procedures to address these violations.
Interactive Brokers Corp. and affiliate Interactive Brokers LLC (together, Interactive Brokers) agreed to pay a $35 million penalty;
Robert W. Baird & Co. Inc. agreed to pay a $15 million penalty;
William Blair & Company LLC and affiliate William Blair Investment Management LLC (WBIM) agreed to pay a $10 million penalty;
Nuveen Securities LLC agreed to pay an $8.5 million penalty;
Fifth Third Securities Inc. agreed to pay an $8 million penalty; and
Perella Weinberg Partners LP (Perella Weinberg), together with Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities LLC (TPH) and Perella Weinberg Partners Capital Management LP (Perella Weinberg Capital), which self-reported, agreed to pay a $2.5 million penalty.
“One of the orders included in today’s announced actions is not like the others,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “There are real benefits to self-reporting, remediating and cooperating.”
The SEC’s investigations uncovered pervasive and longstanding off-channel communications at all 10 firms. As described in the SEC’s orders, the broker-dealer firms admitted that, from at least 2019, their employees communicated through personal text messages about the business of their employers, and the investment adviser firms admitted that their employees sent and received off-channel communications related to recommendations made or proposed to be made and advice given or proposed to be given. The firms did not maintain or preserve the substantial majority of these off-channel communications, in violation of the federal securities laws. By failing to maintain and preserve required records, certain of the firms likely deprived the SEC of these off-channel communications in various SEC investigations. The failures involved employees at multiple levels of authority, including supervisors and senior managers.
Interactive Brokers, Baird, William Blair, Nuveen, Fifth Third, Perella Weinberg, and TPH were each charged with violating certain recordkeeping provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and with failing to reasonably supervise with a view to preventing and detecting those violations. Baird, William Blair, WBIM, Fifth Third, and Perella Weinberg Capital were each charged with violating certain recordkeeping provisions of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and with failing to reasonably supervise with a view to preventing and detecting those violations.
In addition to the significant financial penalties, each of the firms was ordered to cease and desist from future violations of the relevant recordkeeping provisions and was censured. The firms also agreed to retain independent compliance consultants to, among other things, conduct comprehensive reviews of their policies and procedures relating to the retention of electronic communications found on personal devices and their respective frameworks for addressing non-compliance by their employees with those policies and procedures.
Separately, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced settlements with Interactive Brokers for related conduct.
The SEC’s investigations into Interactive Brokers, Perella Weinberg, TPH, and Perella Weinberg Capital were conducted by Laurel S. Fensterstock, Karolina Klyuchnikova, Austin Thompson, and Alison R. Levine and supervised by Thomas P. Smith Jr. of the New York Regional Office. The SEC’s investigations into Baird, William Blair, WBIM, Nuveen, and Fifth Third were conducted by Som P. Dalal, Ruta G. Dudenas, Amy S. Cotter, and Anne C. McKinley and supervised by Paul A. Montoya and Kathryn A. Pyszka of the Chicago Regional Office.
SEC Charges 10 Firms with Widespread Recordkeeping Failures
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2023-212
Washington D.C., Sept. 29, 2023 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against five broker-dealers, three dually registered broker-dealers and investment advisers, and two affiliated investment advisers for widespread and longstanding failures to maintain and preserve electronic communications. The firms admitted the facts set forth in their respective SEC orders and acknowledged that their conduct violated recordkeeping provisions of the federal securities laws. The firms agreed to pay combined penalties of $79 million as outlined below and have begun implementing improvements to their compliance policies and procedures to address these violations.
Interactive Brokers Corp. and affiliate Interactive Brokers LLC (together, Interactive Brokers) agreed to pay a $35 million penalty;
Robert W. Baird & Co. Inc. agreed to pay a $15 million penalty;
William Blair & Company LLC and affiliate William Blair Investment Management LLC (WBIM) agreed to pay a $10 million penalty;
Nuveen Securities LLC agreed to pay an $8.5 million penalty;
Fifth Third Securities Inc. agreed to pay an $8 million penalty; and
Perella Weinberg Partners LP (Perella Weinberg), together with Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities LLC (TPH) and Perella Weinberg Partners Capital Management LP (Perella Weinberg Capital), which self-reported, agreed to pay a $2.5 million penalty.
“One of the orders included in today’s announced actions is not like the others,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “There are real benefits to self-reporting, remediating and cooperating.”
The SEC’s investigations uncovered pervasive and longstanding off-channel communications at all 10 firms. As described in the SEC’s orders, the broker-dealer firms admitted that, from at least 2019, their employees communicated through personal text messages about the business of their employers, and the investment adviser firms admitted that their employees sent and received off-channel communications related to recommendations made or proposed to be made and advice given or proposed to be given. The firms did not maintain or preserve the substantial majority of these off-channel communications, in violation of the federal securities laws. By failing to maintain and preserve required records, certain of the firms likely deprived the SEC of these off-channel communications in various SEC investigations. The failures involved employees at multiple levels of authority, including supervisors and senior managers.
Interactive Brokers, Baird, William Blair, Nuveen, Fifth Third, Perella Weinberg, and TPH were each charged with violating certain recordkeeping provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and with failing to reasonably supervise with a view to preventing and detecting those violations. Baird, William Blair, WBIM, Fifth Third, and Perella Weinberg Capital were each charged with violating certain recordkeeping provisions of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and with failing to reasonably supervise with a view to preventing and detecting those violations.
In addition to the significant financial penalties, each of the firms was ordered to cease and desist from future violations of the relevant recordkeeping provisions and was censured. The firms also agreed to retain independent compliance consultants to, among other things, conduct comprehensive reviews of their policies and procedures relating to the retention of electronic communications found on personal devices and their respective frameworks for addressing non-compliance by their employees with those policies and procedures.
Separately, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced settlements with Interactive Brokers for related conduct.
The SEC’s investigations into Interactive Brokers, Perella Weinberg, TPH, and Perella Weinberg Capital were conducted by Laurel S. Fensterstock, Karolina Klyuchnikova, Austin Thompson, and Alison R. Levine and supervised by Thomas P. Smith Jr. of the New York Regional Office. The SEC’s investigations
into Baird, William Blair, WBIM, Nuveen, and Fifth Third were conducted by Som P. Dalal, Ruta G. Dudenas, Amy S. Cotter, and Anne C. McKinley and supervised by Paul A. Montoya and Kathryn A. Pyszka of the Chicago Regional Office.
No reply for the parrot in the house
Let him talk to himself
Mikp
He feels important to Spam the board
How silly,but what ever
Nothing can stop this train now
Watch what comes next$$__
Mikp
Genius Group to Announce First Half 2023 Financial Results
Source: GlobeNewswire Inc.?
Genius Group Limited (NYSE American: GNS) (“Genius Group” or the “Company”), a leading entrepreneur edtech and education group, will announce first half 2023 financial results on Friday, September 29, 2023, prior to market open.
Management will host a live webcast to discuss the results at 8:30 a.m. ET / 8:30 p.m. SGT on Friday, September 29, 2023. The webcast, along with supplemental information, will be accessible on the investor relations section of the Genius Group website. An archive will be available after the conclusion of the live event and will remain available via the same link for 6 months.
This earnings call will be in place of the September Virtual Investor Meeting and Genius Group maintains its commitment to a high level of ongoing investor communications with the intention to hold a Virtual Investor Meeting on a monthly basis.
Webcast and Conference Information:
Time: Friday, September 29, 2023, at 8:30 a.m. ET / 8:30 p.m. SGT
Webcast: Click on this link or go to the Investor Relations section of the Genius Group website to listen and view the slides.
Dial in: 877-407-0712 / +1 201 493 6716
About Genius Group
Genius Group is a leading entrepreneur Edtech and education group, with a mission to disrupt the current education model with a student-centered, life-long learning curriculum that prepares students with the leadership, entrepreneurial and life skills to succeed. Through its learning platform, GeniusU, the Genius Group has a member base of 4.5 million users in 200 countries, ranging from early age to 100.
For more information, please visit https://www.geniusgroup.net/
Investor Notice
Investing in our securities involves a high degree of risk. Before making an investment decision, you should carefully consider the risks, uncertainties and forward-looking statements described in our most recent Annual Report on Form 20-F, as amended for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, filed with the SEC on June 6, 2023 and August 3, 2023. If any of these risks were to occur, our business, financial condition or results of operations would likely suffer. In that event, the value of our securities could decline, and you could lose part or all of your investment. The risks and uncertainties we describe are not the only ones facing us. Additional risks not presently known to us or that we currently deem immaterial may also impair our business operations. In addition, our past financial performance may not be a reliable indicator of future performance, and historical trends should not be used to anticipate results in the future. See "Forward-Looking Statements" below.
Forward-Looking Statements
Statements made in this press release include forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of words such as “may,” “will,” “plan,” “should,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “continue,” or comparable terminology. Such forward-looking statements are inherently subject to certain risks, trends and uncertainties, many of which the Company cannot predict with accuracy and some of which the Company might not even anticipate and involve factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected or suggested. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements and are advised to consider the factors listed above together with the additional factors under the heading “Risk Factors” in the Company's Annual Reports on Form 20-F, as may be supplemented or amended by the Company's Reports of a Foreign Private Issuer on Form 6-K. The Company assumes no obligation to update or supplement forward-looking statements that become untrue because of subsequent events, new information or otherwise.
Contacts
Investors:
Flora Hewitt, Vice President of Investor Relations and Mergers and Acquisitions
Email: investor@geniusgroup.net
Media Contact:
Adia PR
Email: gns@adiapr.co.uk
US Investors:
Dave Gentry, RedChip Companies Inc
1-800-RED-CHIP
GNS@redchip.com
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Waiting on News
We are due .
Come on Mark
Geez
Are they paying the court?
Any update on the shareholder's
Lawsuit?
Nice Mick
Thanks
Mikp
Nice
Yes
Come on Mark
Now you write a nice PR
Mikp
Still cheap
Mikp
10000 left at 0008
Mikp
Yes
It's been a month since the 8k
3m traded?
Yes
Still alive..lol
The writers’ strike deal is a big step, but roadblocks remain for Hollywood’s return to work
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SAG-AFTRA members picket outside Netflix and Sunset Bronson Studios in Los Angeles.
(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
BY WENDY LEESTAFF WRITER
SEPT. 25, 2023 5:11 PM PT
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Hollywood breathed a collective sigh of relief Sunday night when the Writers Guild of America and the major studios announced a tentative deal for a new contract.
The nearly five-month strike — among the longest in the union’s history — secured what the guild described as significant wins for writers, but also had a devastating effect on the livelihoods of thousands of cast and crew who’ve been out of work for months.
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“We can say, with great pride, that this deal is exceptional — with meaningful gains and protections for writers in every sector of the membership,” WGA’s negotiating committee wrote in a memo to members on Sunday night. The union did not release deal points, but the proposed contract is said to include bonuses tied to the success of high-budget subscription streaming programs and address the guild’s deep concerns around artificial intelligence, among other topics.
But optimism and elation surrounding the agreement, which came after 146 days of picketing, has also been tempered with a sobering recognition that Hollywood’s return to work won’t be immediate or easy.
?
COMPANY TOWN
Writers and studios reach tentative agreement on new contract
July 1, 2020
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The Sunday pact is but one of several pieces in a complicated puzzle that must be completed before writers, actors and crew members can get back on the job, even once the strike officially ends and the WGA contract is ratified by the union’s 11,500 film and TV writers.
The union’s negotiating committee is expected to recommend that the union’s board approve the contract as early as Tuesday, before it is sent to members for a vote. WGA members will be able to return to work before the ratification vote, but they must first wait for the guild’s authorization.
MORE TO READ
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Hotel workers strike at five Santa Monica properties after negotiations stall again
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Column: The writers’ strike was the first workplace battle between humans and AI. The humans won.
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The man who didn’t invent Flamin’ Hot Cheetos
Indeed, it may be weeks or even months before production activity returns to anywhere close to the levels that existed before the work stoppage began on May 2. Late-night shows and talk shows are expected to be the first to go back to production.
“It’s one of those things that doesn’t happen just overnight,” said Todd Holmes, associate professor of entertainment media management at Cal State Northridge. “There’s gonna be a ramp-up time to get the writers back to work and to get productions moving again.”
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Citadel?
SEC obtains thousands of Wall Street staffers’ WhatsApp messages as probe widens: sources
By
Reuters
Published Sep. 25, 2023, 1:41 p.m. ET
The US securities regulator has collected thousands of staff messages from more than a dozen major investment companies, escalating its probe into Wall Street’s use of private messaging apps, said four people with direct knowledge of the matter.
Previously, the Securities and Exchange Commission had asked the companies to internally review the messages in its investigation of Wall Street’s use of WhatsApp, Signal and other unapproved messaging apps to discuss work.
MORE ON:WALL STREET
Government shutdown would delay release of key economic data, including jobs report: official
Morgan Stanley’s new AI tool ‘spotty on accuracy’: sources
Goldman Sachs in talks to sell home improvement lender to investment group at steep loss: report
Archegos founder Bill Hwang to face SEC fraud charges over $36B firm’s epic collapse
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The two-year crackdown into potential breaches of record-keeping rules initially targeted broker dealers, netting regulators over $2 billion in fines.
While Reuters and other media have reported that the SEC’s “off-channel” communication probe has expanded to investment advisers, its move to review thousands of their staff messages has not previously been reported.
It marks an escalation of the investigation and raises the stakes for the companies and the executives concerned by exposing their conduct to SEC scrutiny.
“It increases risk,” one source said. “The more information you give the SEC, the more you fuel the beast.”
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?The two-year crackdown into potential breaches of record-keeping rules initially targeted broker dealers, netting regulators over $2 billion in fines.REUTERS
Looking forward my friend
Is this the beginning?
Mikp
Whom will serve 0008?
Come on
Mikp
Hollywood’s Focus Turns to Actors After Writers Agree to Deal
The studios and the actors’ union haven’t spoken for more than two months, but a deal is needed before the entertainment industry can fully return.
Share full article
17
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Actors have been on strike since July, with many of the same demands that the writers have.Credit...Jenna Schoenefeld for The New York Times
???
By John Koblin, Nicole Sperling and Brooks Barnes
Sept. 25, 2023Updated 3:36 p.m. ET
Hollywood’s actors are back in the spotlight.
With screenwriters reaching a tentative agreement with the major entertainment studios on a new labor deal on Sunday night, one big obstacle stands in the way of the film and TV industry roaring back to life: ending the strike with tens of thousands of actors.
The two sides have not spoken in more than two months, and no talks are scheduled.
Leaders of SAG-AFTRA, the actors’ union, have indicated a willingness to negotiate, but the studios made a strategic decision in early August to focus on reaching a détente with the writers first. A big reason was the rhetoric of Fran Drescher, the president of the actors’ union, who made one fiery speech after the next following the strike, including one in which she denounced studio executives as “land barons of a medieval time.”
“Eventually, the people break down the gates of Versailles,” Ms. Drescher said after the actors’ strike was called in July. “And then it’s over. We’re at that moment right now.”
Ms. Drescher has been less vocal in recent weeks, however. Only a resolution with the actors will determine when tens of thousands of workers — including camera operators, makeup artists, prop makers, set dressers, lighting technicians, hairstylists, cinematographers — return to work.
The actors’ union offered congratulations to the Writers Guild of America, which represents more than 11,000 screenwriters, in a statement on Sunday night, adding that it was eager to review the tentative agreement with the studios. Still, it said it remained “committed to achieving the necessary terms for our members.”
With a tentative deal in hand, the Writers Guild suspended picketing. But protests by actors will begin again on Tuesday, after a break for Yom Kippur on Monday. “We need everyone on the line Tuesday-Friday,” the actress Frances Fisher, a member of the SAG-AFTRA negotiating committee, said on Sunday on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. “Show your #Solidarity.”
Dozens of Writers Guild members vowed to support the actors. “I know there’s a huge sign of relief reverberating through the town right now, but it’s not over for any of us until SAG-AFTRA gets their deal,” Amy Berg, a Writers Guild strike captain, wrote on X.
It has been 74 days since the actors’ union and representatives of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which bargains on behalf of the studios, have talked. That will probably soon change given the high stakes of salvaging the 2024 theatrical box office, which will be in considerable jeopardy should Hollywood not be able to restart production within the next month. The TV production window for the remainder of the year is also closing, given the coming holidays.
Restarting talks with the actors’ union is a bit more complicated than it sounds. For a start, SAG-AFTRA officials will need time to scrutinize the deal points achieved by the Writers Guild; those wins and compromises will inform a new bargaining strategy for the actors. Also, talks between studios and writers restarted only after leaders on both sides spent time back-channeling about the thorniest issues and seeing if there was a willingness to negotiate. Studios are likely to try the same strategy with the actors.
Neither SAG-AFTRA nor the studio alliance commented on Monday.
“There’s tremendous pressure on both sides to get this done,” said Bobby Schwartz, a partner at Quinn Emanuel and a longtime entertainment lawyer who has represented several of the major studios. “The deal that the Writers Guild and the studios struck economically could have been worked out in May, June. It didn’t need to go this long. I think the membership of SAG-AFTRA is going to say we’ve been out of work for months, we want to go back to work, we don’t want to be the ones that are keeping everybody else on the sidelines.”
The dual strikes by the writers and the actors — the first time that has happened since 1960 — have effectively shut down TV and film production for months. The fallout has been significant, both inside and outside the industry. California’s economy alone has lost more than $5 billion, according to Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Warner Bros. Discovery said this month that the impact from the labor disputes would reduce its adjusted earnings for the year by $300 million to $500 million. Additionally, share prices for other major media companies like Disney and Paramount have taken a hit in recent months.
The industry took a meaningful step toward stabilization on Sunday night, though, with the tentative deal between the writers and studios all but ending a 146-day strike.
The deal still needs to be approved by union leadership and ratified by rank-and-file screenwriters. “I’m waiting impatiently to see what the exact language is around A.I.,” said Joseph Vinciguerra, a Writers Guild member and a professor at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.
The approval vote by union leadership is expected on Tuesday.
Though the fine print of the terms has not been released, the agreement has much of what the writers had demanded, including increases in compensation for streaming content, concessions from studios on minimum staffing for television shows and guarantees that artificial intelligence technology will not encroach on writers’ credits and compensation.
“We can say, with great pride, that this deal is
Small ask 0008 right?
Come on new investors
Looking for some huge updates
Mikp
We can close 8/9. With a small push guys
Mikp
Haha
Many more
Mikp
Nice
Hit
Sure
But looks very close
Mikp
Let's see 7/8 today
Mikp