Month: March 2023
E3 2023 is canceled
There will not be an E3 in 2023 after all — in person, online, or otherwise. The Expo was just canceled for the year.
It had been scheduled to start online on June 11, and then run from June 13-16 in-person in downtown Los Angeles. Now none of that is happening.
Citing two anonymous sources inside E3’s parent organization, the Entertainment Software Association, IGN reported the cancelation on Thursday afternoon. IGN’s report was then confirmed when the ESA released a public statement credited to Kyle Marsden-Kish, global vice president of gaming at ReedPop:
“This was a difficult decision because of all the effort we and our partners put toward making this event happen, but we had to do what’s right for the industry and what’s right for E3. We appreciate and understand that interested companies wouldn’t have playable demos ready and that resourcing challenges made being at E3 this summer an obstacle they couldn’t overcome. For those who did commit to E3 2023, we’re sorry we can’t put on the showcase you deserve and that you’ve come to expect from ReedPop’s event experiences.”
Tweet may have been deleted
(opens in a new tab)
For those keeping score, E3 was canceled in 2020 due to COVID. The 2021 expo, like so many things in 2021, was online-only. Then last year, E3 was cancelled entirely once again. 2023 was supposed to be E3’s big comeback. The ESA’s president and CEO, Stan Pierre-Louis, told the Washington Post last June, “We’re excited about coming back in 2023 with both a digital and an in-person event.”
Currently, there’s still a “Buy Tickets” page, but thankfully it appears the page is incapable of taking anyone’s money.
There will not be an E3 in 2023 after all — in person, online, or otherwise. The Expo was just canceled for the year.
It had been scheduled to start online on June 11, and then run from June 13-16 in-person in downtown Los Angeles. Now none of that is happening.
Citing two anonymous sources inside E3’s parent organization, the Entertainment Software Association, IGN reported the cancelation on Thursday afternoon. IGN’s report was then confirmed when the ESA released a public statement credited to Kyle Marsden-Kish, global vice president of gaming at ReedPop:
“This was a difficult decision because of all the effort we and our partners put toward making this event happen, but we had to do what’s right for the industry and what’s right for E3. We appreciate and understand that interested companies wouldn’t have playable demos ready and that resourcing challenges made being at E3 this summer an obstacle they couldn’t overcome. For those who did commit to E3 2023, we’re sorry we can’t put on the showcase you deserve and that you’ve come to expect from ReedPop’s event experiences.”
Tweet may have been deleted
(opens in a new tab)
For those keeping score, E3 was canceled in 2020 due to COVID. The 2021 expo, like so many things in 2021, was online-only. Then last year, E3 was cancelled entirely once again. 2023 was supposed to be E3’s big comeback. The ESA’s president and CEO, Stan Pierre-Louis, told the Washington Post last June, “We’re excited about coming back in 2023 with both a digital and an in-person event.”
Currently, there’s still a “Buy Tickets” page, but thankfully it appears the page is incapable of taking anyone’s money.
3CX knew its app was flagged as malicious, but took no action for 7 days
“It’s not exactly our place to comment on it,” 3CX rep says of malicious detection.
The support team for 3CX, the VoIP/PBX software provider with more than 600,000 customers and 12 million daily users, was aware its desktop app was being flagged as malware, but decided to take no action for a week when it learned it was on the receiving end of a massive supply chain attack, a thread on the company’s community forum shows.
“Is anyone else seeing this issue with other A/V vendors?” one company customer asked on March 22, in a post titled “Threat alerts from SentinelOne for desktop update initiated from desktop client.” The customer was referring to an endpoint malware detection product from security firm SentinelOne. Included in the post were some of SentinelOne’s suspicions: the detection of shellcode, code injection to other process memory space, and other trademarks of software exploitation.
Is anyone else seeing this issue with other A/V vendors?
Post Exploitation
Penetration framework or shellcode was detected
Evasion
Indirect command was executed
Code injection to other process memory space during the target process’ initialization
DeviceHarddiskVolume4Users**USERNAME**AppDataLocalPrograms3CXDesktopApp3CXDesktopApp.exe
SHA1 e272715737b51c01dc2bed0f0aee2bf6feef25f1
I’m also getting the same trigger when attempting to redownload the app from the web client ( 3CXDesktopApp-18.12.416.msi ).
Defaulting to trust
Other users quickly jumped in to report receiving the same warnings from their SentinelOne software. They all reported receiving the warning while running 18.0 Update 7 (Build 312) of the 3CXDesktopApp for Windows. Users soon decided the detection was a false positive triggered by a glitch in the SentinelOne product. They created an exception to allow the suspicious app to run without interference. On Friday, a day later, and again on the following Monday and Tuesday, more users reported receiving the SentinelOne warning.
E3 2023 Is Canceled Again After Weeks of Speculation – CNET
The video game trade show was expected to have poor attendance among major game publishers.
The video game trade show was expected to have poor attendance among major game publishers.
E3 2023 Has Been Canceled
E3 2023 has been called off “after huge gaming companies like Nintendo, Microsoft, and Ubisoft all said they wouldn’t be participating in the event,” reports The Verge. From the report: E3 2023 was scheduled for June 13th through 16th with a mix of industry-focused days and days that would be open to the public. But in the lead-up to June, there had been some worrying signs that things might be rocky for E3’s revival. According to an email sent to employees and verified by IGN, E3 2023 “simply did not garner the sustained interest necessary to execute it in a way that would showcase the size, strength, and impact of our industry.” In an email to The Verge, Kyle Marsden-Kish, global VP of gaming at ReedPop, wrote: “This was a difficult decision because of all the effort we and our partners put toward making this event happen, but we had to do what’s right for the industry and what’s right for E3. We appreciate and understand that interested companies wouldn’t have playable demos ready and that resourcing challenges made being at E3 this summer an obstacle they couldn’t overcome. For those who did commit to E3 2023, we’re sorry we can’t put on the showcase you deserve and that you’ve come to expect from ReedPop’s event experiences.”
Marsden-Kish suggested the convention could return in subsequent years.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
E3 2023 has been called off “after huge gaming companies like Nintendo, Microsoft, and Ubisoft all said they wouldn’t be participating in the event,” reports The Verge. From the report: E3 2023 was scheduled for June 13th through 16th with a mix of industry-focused days and days that would be open to the public. But in the lead-up to June, there had been some worrying signs that things might be rocky for E3’s revival. According to an email sent to employees and verified by IGN, E3 2023 “simply did not garner the sustained interest necessary to execute it in a way that would showcase the size, strength, and impact of our industry.” In an email to The Verge, Kyle Marsden-Kish, global VP of gaming at ReedPop, wrote: “This was a difficult decision because of all the effort we and our partners put toward making this event happen, but we had to do what’s right for the industry and what’s right for E3. We appreciate and understand that interested companies wouldn’t have playable demos ready and that resourcing challenges made being at E3 this summer an obstacle they couldn’t overcome. For those who did commit to E3 2023, we’re sorry we can’t put on the showcase you deserve and that you’ve come to expect from ReedPop’s event experiences.”
Marsden-Kish suggested the convention could return in subsequent years.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Checkout.com’s new president is bullish on US expansion, says she ‘welcomes’ comparisons to Stripe
Stripe competitor Checkout.com announced last month that Céline Dufétel was appointed as its new president. She had previously served as the London-based fintech startup’s CFO and COO for about 18 months before her promotion. In her expanded role, which still includes serving as the company’s COO, Dufétel oversees all operational and go-to-market teams, including finance
Checkout.com’s new president is bullish on US expansion, says she ‘welcomes’ comparisons to Stripe by Mary Ann Azevedo originally published on TechCrunch
Stripe competitor Checkout.com announced last month that Céline Dufétel was appointed as its new president.
She had previously served as the London-based fintech startup’s CFO and COO for about 18 months before her promotion. In her expanded role, which still includes serving as the company’s COO, Dufétel oversees all operational and go-to-market teams, including finance and marketing. When announcing the New York-based executive’s appointment, the company had told me that the move was symbolic of Checkout.com “staking its claim in the U.S.”
Dufétel certainly has an impressive background in the world of financial services. Immediately prior to joining Checkout, she was the COO and CFO of T. Rowe Price for three years. And before that, she worked at Neuberger Berman and served as a partner at McKinsey & Company. Dufétel was also named to Barron’s 100 Most Influential Women in U.S. Finance in 2021, and to Fortune’s 40 under 40 in 2020.
Checkout.com is building a full-stack payments company — in the words of TC’s Romain Dillet, it acts as a gateway, an acquirer, a risk engine and a payment processor. It lets you process payments directly on your site or in your app, but you can also rely on hosted payment pages, create payment links, etc. It supports card payments, Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal, Alipay, bank transfers, SEPA direct debits and it also lets you issue payouts.
In December, the company made headlines when it slashed its internal valuation to $11 billion, which was a huge drop compared to the $40 billion valuation that the company reached a little less than a year prior. At the time, CEO founder and CEO Guillaume Pousaz had told TC the move was aimed at taking “advantage of the current conditions to update the tax valuation of the company.” More recently, Checkout.com launched a new product, giving its customers a way to create payment cards for their own customers.
TechCrunch reached out to Dufétel to find out more about her plans as Checkout.com’s new president, including what’s in store for the company this year, her thoughts on the future of payments generally and why she sees so much opportunity in the U.S.. We also asked how she felt about the comparisons to Stripe…and her answer may surprise you.
The interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
Congrats on your new role! What is ahead for Checkout.com in 2023?
Thank you, it’s an exciting time to be expanding my remit at Checkout.com as 2023 is a critical year for us – we are really ramping up our commercial efforts, particularly in the U.S. While we’ve grown a lot in APAC and EMEA, the U.S. is the second-largest eCommerce market in the world and there is an extensive, untapped opportunity for growth there.
The U.S. payments landscape is currently dominated by legacy and new-age incumbents, and we know competition would ultimately deliver better outcomes for consumers. We have a robust pipeline of brands across sectors and verticals that we already serve internationally and are keen for our support in the U.S., too. For example, we recently announced a partnership with GE Healthcare to help power the company’s rapid eCommerce expansion.
How did Checkout.com perform in 2022? Can you share revenue/growth metrics (YoY)?
As Checkout.com is a private company, we don’t disclose group financials but we’re an agile and well-funded business that is in a prime position to capitalize on opportunities in what is a quickly expanding total addressable market. We’ve launched five products in recent months and have a strong pipeline planned as we continue to innovate to better serve our merchants.
How many employees do you have? Did you lay off at all in the past year?
Since 2012, we’ve grown to over 1,900 employees in 21 global offices. Like many companies across sectors, we’ve had to adjust the pace of our growth to reflect the current macroeconomic conditions and made the difficult decision in September of last year to reduce Checkout.com’s workforce by shy of five percent (around 100 people). This decision did not come lightly, but it was a strategic reprioritization of our workforce in which we reduced headcount in some areas where we are investing less, and maintained or even grew in areas that are of high priority to us. This will allow us to focus on the strategic priorities against our mission, which is to enable businesses and their communities to thrive in the digital economy by delivering innovative products and services when they need them the most.
What do you think of comparisons to Stripe?
We welcome them. Stripe has built an impressive business and we believe strong competition delivers better outcomes for merchants everywhere, which is our goal. But when you compare us to Stripe, an important distinction to make is that Stripe’s roots are in serving small businesses – ours are in the mid-market and global enterprise segment. Our target customers are those that have grown in complexity and often global presence. Those merchants need a different level of sophistication, as performance of their payments and global reach really matter. The service, engagement, and partnership that we are able to provide is truly important – because we work with thousands of merchants instead of millions, we’re able to provide that white-glove service and flexible solutions to meet their needs.
Merchants want transparency and engagement to help them solve their most complex problems, and we deliver that, too. Where others’ tech stack is more of a black box, we empower those more mature merchants with transparency and customization of their infrastructure to drive performance. Close partnership with our merchants to develop solutions together is of the utmost importance to us. We deliver a true strategic advantage to digitally minded brands, and I am proud to say we have one of the highest acceptance rates in the industry.
How has the global downturn affected your business?
It’s no secret that the current macroeconomic climate is tough for many companies, some of which are our merchants. That said, we are focused and deliberate about hitting our long-term goals and continue to add new merchants to our growing customer roster. Our diverse customer base – which spans a healthy mix of international markets and industries – helps diversify our revenue stream to minimize the impact of instability in specific regions or markets.
Not sure if you’re working with any crypto/web3 companies but if so, did the FTX debacle make you reconsider some of those relationships?
We’ve always believed in serving innovative businesses starting with fintechs since our inception, and more recently, serving innovators in the crypto/web3 space in 2019. While this is an exciting sector, it represents a modest part of our business. We, of course, acknowledge the severity of the current situation in contrast to other past events, but remain committed to supporting our merchants with the best payment solutions possible.
These events underscore the need for a clear regulatory framework. That’s something we’ve long advocated for to better support innovators, put this technology safely into the hands of businesses and consumers globally, and build trust in the ecosystem as a whole.
What do you see overall for the payments industry in 2023?
Now more than ever amid the uncertain economic landscape, CFOs and heads of payments are narrowing in on the impact of payments on topline growth and profitability. Increasingly, business leaders are recognizing the measurable impact of high-performing payments systems in maximizing acceptance rates, minimizing costly fraud concerns, and reducing operational costs. In the U.S. in particular, where the digital payments infrastructure has lagged behind other regions, there is room for companies to shore up their payments processes to drive greater business results.
Checkout.com’s new president is bullish on US expansion, says she ‘welcomes’ comparisons to Stripe by Mary Ann Azevedo originally published on TechCrunch