Malaysia-Based ONE COMPANY Foundation Unveils ONE WALLET, a Keyless Telegram-Native Wallet on TON

Foundation-backed Web3 wallet replaces seed phrases with 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody; publishes Whitepaper V1.0 covering product, security, and the $1 token utility model. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – June 01, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – ONE COMPANY, a foundation registered with SSM, the Companies Commission of Malaysia, today unveiled ONE WALLET, a Telegram-native Web3 wallet built on the TON blockchain. The foundation also published ONE WALLET Whitepaper V1.0, detailing the product, security architecture, and the utility model of its $1 token. ONE WALLET targets the gap between custodial exchange wallets — easy but centrally controlled — and self-custody wallets, which are powerful but ask mainstream users to memorize twelve-word seed phrases and install separate apps. ONE WALLET inverts that order: users open Telegram, complete a lightweight device check, and transact. There is no seed phrase to write down and no app to download. At the core is a 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody model. A user’s signing key is split into three shares — held by the device, the user’s Telegram account, and an offline recovery share. The wallet is designed so that no single party, including ONE WALLET, can move funds alone: any two shares are combined briefly on the user’s device to sign a transaction, then discarded. Any one share alone cannot reconstruct the key. As a foundation-led initiative, ONE COMPANY frames ONE WALLET as the financial entry point to a broader digital ecosystem spanning fintech, AI, games, travel, and information services built on blockchain. The foundation’s stated mandate includes research and education for Web3, user protection and transparency, and regulatory-compliance systems. “Most people will never write down a seed phrase, and they shouldn’t have to,” said James Kim, CEO of ONE COMPANY. “Our job as a foundation is to make self-custody feel as natural as sending a message — and to do it with security that’s honest about its boundaries. Opening private testing and publishing our whitepaper on the same day is a deliberate choice: we want users, partners, and regulators reading the same document.” ONE WALLET’s roadmap moves from the core wallet (multi-chain send, receive, and swap) to a QR-based payments rail with merchant settlement, followed by the $1 token utility layer and an ecosystem of partner mini-apps. Whitepaper V1.0 is available in English, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese. About ONE WALLET ONE WALLET is a Telegram-native, keyless Web3 wallet built on the TON blockchain. It replaces seed-phrase backups with a 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody model and is designed to combine a wallet, a QR-based payment rail, and the $1 token ecosystem in a single Telegram Mini App. Whitepaper V1.0 is available in EN, KO, JA, and ZH. About ONE COMPANY ONE COMPANY is a foundation registered with SSM, the Companies Commission of Malaysia, with offices in Kuala Lumpur. It develops and operates a global digital platform integrating digital wallet, fintech, AI, games, travel, and information services based on blockchain technology. ONE WALLET is its flagship consumer product. Social Links Telegram: https://t.me/onedollar_project X: https://x.com/one_wallet_ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@One_Wallet_Official Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ONEWALLET.official/ Media Contact Brand: ONE COMPANY Contact: Media team Email: press@ONEWALLET.store Website: https://ONEWALLET.store

Malaysia-Based ONE COMPANY Foundation Unveils ONE WALLET, a Keyless Telegram-Native Wallet on TON

Foundation-backed Web3 wallet replaces seed phrases with 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody; publishes Whitepaper V1.0 covering product, security, and the $1 token utility model. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – May 29, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – ONE COMPANY, a foundation registered with SSM, the Companies Commission of Malaysia, today unveiled ONE WALLET, a Telegram-native Web3 wallet built on the TON blockchain. The foundation also published ONE WALLET Whitepaper V1.0, detailing the product, security architecture, and the utility model of its $1 token. ONE WALLET targets the gap between custodial exchange wallets — easy but centrally controlled — and self-custody wallets, which are powerful but ask mainstream users to memorize twelve-word seed phrases and install separate apps. ONE WALLET inverts that order: users open Telegram, complete a lightweight device check, and transact. There is no seed phrase to write down and no app to download. At the core is a 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody model. A user’s signing key is split into three shares — held by the device, the user’s Telegram account, and an offline recovery share. The wallet is designed so that no single party, including ONE WALLET, can move funds alone: any two shares are combined briefly on the user’s device to sign a transaction, then discarded. Any one share alone cannot reconstruct the key. As a foundation-led initiative, ONE COMPANY frames ONE WALLET as the financial entry point to a broader digital ecosystem spanning fintech, AI, games, travel, and information services built on blockchain. The foundation’s stated mandate includes research and education for Web3, user protection and transparency, and regulatory-compliance systems. “Most people will never write down a seed phrase, and they shouldn’t have to,” said James Kim, CEO of ONE COMPANY. “Our job as a foundation is to make self-custody feel as natural as sending a message — and to do it with security that’s honest about its boundaries. Opening private testing and publishing our whitepaper on the same day is a deliberate choice: we want users, partners, and regulators reading the same document.” ONE WALLET’s roadmap moves from the core wallet (multi-chain send, receive, and swap) to a QR-based payments rail with merchant settlement, followed by the $1 token utility layer and an ecosystem of partner mini-apps. Whitepaper V1.0 is available in English, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese. About ONE WALLET ONE WALLET is a Telegram-native, keyless Web3 wallet built on the TON blockchain. It replaces seed-phrase backups with a 2-of-3 Shamir Multi-Share custody model and is designed to combine a wallet, a QR-based payment rail, and the $1 token ecosystem in a single Telegram Mini App. Whitepaper V1.0 is available in EN, KO, JA, and ZH. About ONE COMPANY ONE COMPANY is a foundation registered with SSM, the Companies Commission of Malaysia, with offices in Kuala Lumpur. It develops and operates a global digital platform integrating digital wallet, fintech, AI, games, travel, and information services based on blockchain technology. ONE WALLET is its flagship consumer product. Social Links: Telegram: https://t.me/onedollar_project X: https://x.com/one_wallet_ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@One_Wallet_Official Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ONE WALLET.official/ Media Contact Brand: ONE COMPANY Contact: Media team Email: press@ONE WALLET.store Website: https://ONE WALLET.store

Confimarket Wins HackCanton Season 1 with Privacy-Preserving Consensus and Market Intelligence Infrastructure Built on Canton Network

NEW YORK, NY – May 29, 2026 – (IndoNewswire) – Confimarket, backed and incubated by WebWise Capital, is pioneering confidential consensus discovery and information-aggregation infrastructure for institutional participants requiring strict privacy, robust market structures, and advanced financial workflows. Built on the Canton Network, the privacy-preserving market intelligence platform secured first place at the inaugural HackCanton Season 1 grand final, emerging victorious from a competitive global pool of more than 300 development teams across 15 countries. Confimarket, a privacy-preserving prediction market built on Canton Network, has won first place at HackCanton Season 1 after advancing through a competitive field of more than 300 builders from over 15 countries. The project was selected as the first-place winner following the grand final of HackCanton Season 1, an ecosystem hackathon organized by AppsFactory and focused on DeFi, RWA, DAO & Governance, and AI applications for Canton Network. Confimarket is being developed as a prediction market for serious capital and demanding participants. Its core thesis is that prediction markets become materially more valuable when users can participate without exposing sensitive strategy, intent, or positioning to the broader market. Prediction markets have already shown their ability to aggregate information at scale. However, many high-value participants — including professional traders, institutions, analysts, and organizations with sensitive views — may be reluctant to participate in fully transparent public markets. Confimarket is designed around that gap: market-based information discovery with privacy-preserving participation, credible settlement, and infrastructure suitable for more advanced financial workflows. “Prediction markets are one of the most important categories in crypto because they turn information, belief, and probability into tradable markets. But the next stage of the category requires better infrastructure for participants who cannot expose their strategies or positions publicly,” said Alexander I, General Partner at WebWise Capital. “That is the opportunity we see with Confimarket: confidential prediction markets built for more serious capital, stronger market structure, and institutional-grade use cases.” Canton Network is a natural environment for this model because it combines privacy, interoperability, and an architecture designed for synchronized financial markets. Canton describes itself as the first privacy-enabled open blockchain network, built to preserve privacy while allowing participants to exchange data and value across connected applications. Canton Network has also been attracting prominent financial institutions and ecosystem participants. Official Canton materials list organizations such as J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, BNY, BNP Paribas, Bank of America, and others in the broader ecosystem. For Confimarket, this makes Canton a strategically relevant foundation: the network is designed around privacy-preserving financial infrastructure rather than general-purpose public-chain transparency. During HackCanton Season 1, Confimarket refined its product thesis, shipped core functionality, gathered user feedback, and strengthened the architecture behind the platform. The team used the hackathon as an early proving ground for confidential prediction market workflows on Canton Network, with a focus on market creation, trading logic, settlement flows, and the user experience required to make prediction markets accessible to higher-value participants. The hackathon win represents an early ecosystem validation signal for Confimarket as the project moves from prototype development toward product readiness. The grand final and judging process provided feedback from Canton ecosystem leaders, venture investors, infrastructure companies, and industry participants. Projects at HackCanton Season 1 were evaluated by representatives from the Canton Foundation as well as venture and industry participants including DWF Ventures, LongHash, Scytale Digital, Jsquare VC, Quantstamp, and Chainlink Labs. Following the hackathon, Confimarket is focused on completing its trading engine, improving the user interface and onboarding flow, preparing private beta access, and working toward liquidity and ecosystem partnerships. The team’s next phase is centered on turning the hackathon-winning prototype into a product that can support real prediction market activity, privacy-preserving participation, and institutional-grade use cases. Confimarket is also continuing to position itself within the Canton ecosystem as a prediction market layer for use cases where privacy, credible execution, and market-based forecasting are essential. Follow Confimarket on X for product updates, ecosystem announcements, and launch news, or explore the live app at confimarket.io. About Confimarket Confimarket is a privacy-preserving prediction market built on Canton Network. The project is designed for participants who need confidential participation, stronger market structure, and infrastructure suitable for institutional-grade workflows. Confimarket is backed and incubated by WebWise Capital. About WebWise Capital WebWise Capital backs and incubates early-stage projects at the intersection of AI, Web3, fintech, and digital financial infrastructure. Media contact Brand: Confimarket Contact: Media team Email: support@confimarket.io Website: https://confimarket.io/

Energy drinks: $83 billion category, zero global quality benchmark. Until now.

A new independent global ranking has exposed something the industry preferred to leave unexamined: energy drinks are not one category. They are two – and the divide runs straight down the Atlantic. MONTREAL, QC – May 27, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – When you pick up an energy drink in Frankfurt, you are most likely picking up a pasteurised beverage made with real sugar, a meaningful vitamin stack, and an ingredient list short enough to read in under ten seconds. When you pick up what is marketed as the same product category in Houston, you are, in all statistical likelihood, drinking an artificially sweetened, chemically preserved formulation that bears almost no resemblance to its European equivalent beyond the can format and the caffeine content. Same shelf. Same category name. Fundamentally different product. This is not a matter of opinion or consumer preference. It is now a matter of documented fact – and the study that documented it, published this month by independent German beverage professional Pat Eckert under the banner of the Six Continents Index (SCI), is the first serious attempt anyone has made to compare energy drinks on a global basis using objective, measurable criteria. The findings are striking enough on their own terms. But their broader implication – that the world’s largest energy drink market has, over time, quietly optimised for margin rather than product quality – raises questions that go well beyond any single study. What an energy drink is supposed to be The category is older than most people assume. The correct answer is Japan, 1962, when Lipovitan-D was launched as a functional health tonic for a hardworking, health-conscious, largely white-collar population – built around a clear physiological promise, with sugar as one of its core ingredients. The global spread of the format came later, and with it, in certain markets, a gradual drift from that original intent. Before examining what the study found, it is worth asking what a consumer actually expects from an energy drink. The answer covers several things: sustained energy, immediate alertness, and functional support from vitamins and other active ingredients. But the foundation – the one the category name is built on – is energy itself, and that has a specific physiological meaning. Carbohydrates, including sugar, are the primary fuel source for both the body and the brain. Glucose is what muscles run on and what the brain demands in quantity when concentration and alertness are required. An energy drink that contains no sugar – or that replaces it entirely with artificial sweeteners that deliver sweetness without caloric content – is not, in any meaningful sense, an energy drink. It is a flavoured caffeine delivery mechanism. This is not a fringe position. It is basic nutritional science, and it matters when evaluating a category in which “zero” and “sugar-free” variants have proliferated to the point where, in some markets, they now represent the majority of shelf space. The logic of drinking a zero-energy product and expecting an energy outcome is roughly equivalent to ordering a decaffeinated coffee and expecting to feel alert. The category name is making a promise. In many cases, the formulation is not keeping it. The SCI was not a desk exercise. Eckert and his team spent roughly six months collecting energy drinks from all six inhabited continents – not just the obvious markets of the United States, Germany, UK and Japan, but extending to Nepal, Kenya, Mauritius, Chile, New Zealand, and dozens of markets in between. The result was a sample spanning virtually every corner of the global category, assembled product by product, market by market. The assessment framework applied to each of them covered 36 criteria: for example caffeine content and declaration, sugar quantity and type, sugar-to-caffeine balance, vitamin content, preservation method, label readability, packaging integrity, traceability, and label transparency – built around what a consumer has a reasonable right to expect from a product in this category. No taste testing, no jury votes, no brand popularity or marketing spend factored into the score. Only what could be objectively verified on the product itself. Top-performing products were submitted for independent Swiss laboratory analysis to validate what the label claimed. A category, or two categories sharing a name? The continental findings of the SCI read less like a market analysis and more like a study of two parallel industries that happen to use the same distribution channel. In Europe, 85.7 per cent of energy drinks assessed had been pasteurised – the same heat-treatment process used in quality food and beverage production for over a century, and one that eliminates the need for artificial preservatives. In North America, that figure was 12 per cent. In Asia, 78.9 per cent of products used real sugar. In North America, 8 per cent did. Some 84 per cent of North American energy drinks relied entirely on artificial sweeteners – a figure that stood at 4.2 per cent in Europe and was near zero across Asia, Australia, South America, and Africa. Australian products averaged 4.2 vitamins per serving; North American products averaged 2.9. The analogy that comes to mind is beer. The craft movement of the past two decades has repeatedly made the point that mass-market lager and a carefully brewed artisanal ale are related by category name and little else. The beverage industry has also seen the rise of alcohol-free beer – a product that answers a real consumer need, occupies the same shelf, and uses the same brand architecture as its alcoholic counterpart. Nobody seriously argues that non-alcoholic beer is the ‘real’ beer, however. Real beer has alcohol. Real wine has alcohol. Real energy drinks, by the logic of their own name, should have energy – meaning, above all, carbohydrates. The zero-sugar variant is a legitimate product with a legitimate market. But it should not be confused with the article it is imitating. The health debate around energy drinks follows a similar pattern of category confusion. Concerns about the category are frequently generalised from the worst-formulated examples to the entire shelf. This is not a methodology that would be applied to any other food or beverage category. A sausage made with poor-quality mechanically recovered meat and a high preservative load is a different product from one made with high-welfare pork, natural casings, and no additives beyond salt and spice – yet both sit in the same supermarket aisle under the same category label. The relevant question is not whether sausages are healthy or unhealthy. It is what is in this sausage. The same logic applies to energy drinks, and it is the logic the SCI was built to apply. Quantity matters independently of quality. Three litres of an entirely natural chicken broth will make most people feel unwell. This is not an argument against chicken broth. Overconsumption of almost anything produces negative outcomes. The energy drink category has suffered from a persistent conflation of formulation concerns with consumption concerns, and the result has been a debate that generates more heat than light. What the SCI provides, for the first time, is a framework for the formulation question specifically – separating it from consumption patterns and allowing product quality to be evaluated on its own merits. North America’s uncomfortable result The SCI ranked North America last overall among the six continental regions assessed. For the world’s largest energy drink market by revenue, this is a result that demands some explanation. The most plausible one is competitive economics. The North American energy drink market is extraordinarily concentrated, with the top two or three brands together commanding the large majority of category revenue. In a market that competitive, the pressure on all participants is to protect margin. Artificial sweeteners cost a fraction of real sugar. Synthetic preservatives are cheaper than pasteurisation infrastructure. Vitamin inclusion adds cost without necessarily driving volume in a consumer environment where the functional credential of “energy” is dominated by caffeine and sweetness perception rather than by the full ingredient profile. The result is a market that has, over decades of intense competition, rationalised its way to formulations that serve producer economics more reliably than consumer nutritional expectations. This is not unique to energy drinks – it is a well-documented dynamic in high-competition FMCG categories generally. But it is notable that it has occurred in the market that, by revenue, appears to be winning. Europe, meanwhile, has retained formulation practices that are closer to the original product concept. Pasteurisation remains the norm. Real sugar remains the primary sweetener for the majority of products. The vitamin stack is fuller. This is partly a function of regulatory environment – the EU maintains stricter standards on certain additives than the FDA – and partly a function of a market that developed somewhat later and in a more competitive multi-brand environment from the outset, leaving less room for the cost-reduction trajectories that concentrated markets tend to produce. Finally, a rating system The beverage industry has long had objective quality frameworks for wine, mineral water, and spirits. Cars are safety-rated. Hotels are star-classified. Food products carry nutritional scoring systems of varying sophistication across different markets. Energy drinks – a category worth approximately $83 billion in global retail value in 2025, forecast to approach $116 billion by 2030 – have had none of this. Consumers buying an energy drink have had no independent, methodologically transparent basis for comparing what they were buying against alternatives. Marketing spend, shelf placement, and brand familiarity have filled the gap. The SCI does not fill that gap entirely – it is a first assessment, not a permanent institutional framework, and its methodology will no doubt be interrogated and refined over time. But it establishes the principle that the category can be evaluated objectively, and that the results of that evaluation are both informative and commercially significant. The question of aspartame illustrates why this matters. The sweetener – classified by the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer as “possibly carcinogenic to humans”, a Group 2B classification – appeared in 10.5 per cent of products assessed globally, with 43 per cent of those aspartame-containing products found in Africa. The classification does not mean aspartame causes cancer; it means the evidence is sufficient to warrant ongoing scrutiny. A consumer with access to that information might reasonably prefer a product that does not use it. Until now, there has been no systematic global tool for identifying which products do and do not. The brand at the top of the table The highest-scoring brand in the SCI – on objective ingredient quality, formulation standards, and label transparency, with no weighting for taste, marketing, or popularity – is one that most consumers in the United States will not have encountered. HELL Energy, founded in Hungary in 2006, is not a household name in North America. It is, however, one of the largest energy drink manufacturers in the world by production volume, operating a megafactory with a combined annual capacity of ten billion cans, certified to the highest international food safety standards. The brand is available in 60+ countries and holds category leadership in Hungary, its home market, where it commands a market share consistently around 65 per cent. In other markets where HELL leads, the brand typically holds 49–68 per cent market share. In India – one of the most logistically and competitively demanding consumer markets on earth – it achieved category leadership in under five years. So it is not a small or unproven player. It is simply one that has not prioritised the North American market, where the competitive barriers to entry and the margin pressures on formulation quality are both at their most extreme. Notably, despite its scale and quality credentials, HELL typically sits on the shelf at around half the price of the global category leader – a combination that, in the markets where it competes, has proven difficult to argue against. Its position at the top of the SCI is consistent with a product philosophy that has prioritised ingredient quality over cost reduction. The brand uses no artificial preservatives, no aspartame, and real sugar in its standard formulations. These are not unusual choices in the European context. They are, however, choices that distinguish it sharply from the formulation norms of the world’s most valuable energy drink market. The marketing history is worth noting, not because it is the basis for the ranking – it emphatically is not – but because it illustrates a pattern of deliberate strategic positioning over two decades. The brand entered Formula 1 sponsorship at a point when that association carried category credibility, then exited before the returns diminished. Bruce Willis fronted global campaigns for six consecutive years. The successor chosen – Michele Morrone, a strikingly handsome Italian actor and former model for a number of international fashion brands, whose career was at an early stage when the partnership began – has since appeared alongside Sidney Sweeney and is in upcoming productions with Sir Anthony Hopkins, Al Pacino, Jessica Alba, and Andy Garcia. The instinct for identifying cultural traction before it becomes expensive has been consistent. It does, however, suggest that a brand capable of that quality of market timing over twenty years is unlikely to be sitting still on formulation either. What this means for the category The energy drink market is, in one sense, two markets that have been allowed to share a name for long enough that the distinction has become invisible. The publication of the SCI makes that distinction visible, and the question now is whether the market responds. The organic food and beverage movement offers a partial precedent. Products positioned on ingredient quality and transparency were, for much of the 1990s and 2000s, treated as niche and overpriced. They eventually found their mainstream. The process was slow and required both consumer education and retail willingness to give quality-positioned products shelf space alongside cheaper alternatives. The energy drink category is earlier in that process, but the direction of travel – in regulatory terms, in consumer awareness terms, and now in independent assessment terms – is not difficult to read. For distributors and retailers assessing which brands to build positions around over the next decade, the arrival of an objective global quality framework is, if anything, a simplifying development. The question of which energy drink to back has historically been answered primarily by marketing power and distribution reach. It can now also be answered, at least in part, by ingredient quality and formulation transparency. About The Six Continents Index & Fine Liquids The Six Continents Index (https://sixcontinentsindex.com) was conducted independently by Pat Eckert and his team at Fine Liquids, Meckesheim, Germany. Assessed brands were not notified in advance and had no involvement in the evaluation. No paid participation, sponsorship, or commercial influence played any role.

NEXA CORE Showcases Chip-To-Application AI Hub at ATxSG 2026

Singapore, May 22, 2026 — NEXA CORE, a Jakarta-based AI infrastructure company, is showcasing its “Chip-to-Application AI Hub” at Asia Tech x Singapore 2026, highlighting its vision for a unified, end-to-end AI stack built for Southeast Asia’s rapidly expanding needs for AI models and agents. Founded in Jakarta in 2025, NEXA CORE aims to provide customers from Indonesia to Southeast Asia with an enterprise-grade platform that integrates its self-developed ASIC chip, AI server infrastructure, foundation models, AI agents, and enterprise AI applications, enabling organizations to accelerate AI deployment while reducing infrastructure fragmentation and operational complexity. “At NEXA CORE, we believe Southeast Asia needs more than isolated AI tools — it needs a localized, unified and scalable AI hub purpose-built for the region,” said Thomas Van, General Manager of NEXA CORE. “From compute infrastructure to AI applications, our goal is to provide a full-stack environment for building, deploying, and scaling enterprise AI systems.” NEXA CORE booth at ATxSG NEXA CORE is also highlighting its growing ecosystem partnerships during the exhibition. To support regional AI and semiconductor ecosystem growth, NEXA CORE is collaborating with the Indonesia Chip Design Collaborative Center (ICDeC) on future AI deployment programs, and technical talent cultivation. The company is also working with PT Samala Serasi Utama on AI infrastructure expansion, enterprise AI adoption, and commercialization opportunities. As Southeast Asia rapidly expands investment in AI infrastructure and deployment, NEXA CORE aims to build the foundational AI layer connecting compute infrastructure to real-world enterprise applications throughout the region. For more information, visit: nexacoreteknologi.com For media inquiries please contact: Novianti NEXA CORE TEKNOLOGI PT +62 811-1112-7700 novi@nexacoreteknologi.com

OSL Lists State-Supervised Gold-Backed Stablecoin USDKG as Platform Expands Asia’s Digital Asset Ecosystem

HONG KONG – May 22, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – USDKG, the gold-backed stablecoin issued by the Kyrgyz Republic, today announced its official listing on OSL HK, the Hong Kong-licensed digital asset exchange of global stablecoin payment and trading platform OSL Group. The milestone marks a significant step for the state-supervised, asset-backed digital currency as it enters one of the world’s most established licensed virtual asset markets. Link: https://www.osl.com/hk-en/announcement/new-listing-on-osl-hk-gold-dollar-usdkg Pegged 1:1 to the U.S. Dollar and fully backed by physical gold reserves, USDKG is now accessible to professional investors through OSL’s institutional-grade infrastructure. The initial trading pair USDKG/USDT is now available to professional investors across OSL HK’s over-the-counter (OTC) platform. The listing of USDKG aligns with OSL’s commitment to contribute to the development of a secure and compliant digital asset ecosystem in Asia and beyond. It also expands USDKG’s reach into new markets through a regulated platform aligned with institutional standards, supporting its use in cross-border settlement and broader financial applications. Jason Liu, Global Exchange COO of OSL, said: “OSL is dedicated to providing investors with access to regulated, innovative assets. The listing of USDKG not only enriches OSL’s product offerings for the market, but also strengthens its compliant stablecoin ecosystem, as the introduction of a state-backed, compliant digital asset further underscores OSL’s credibility and leadership within the industry.” Biibolot Mamytov, CEO of Gold Dollar (USDKG), said: “This listing represents an important milestone for USDKG as we enter one of the most established and highly regulated digital asset markets globally. Hong Kong is widely regarded as the gold standard for digital asset regulation, and working with OSL reflects our focus on transparency, gold-backed reserves, and institutional-grade infrastructure.” About USDKG USDKG is issued by OJSC Virtual Asset Issuer, a state-owned entity under Kyrgyzstan’s Ministry of Finance, with an initial issuance of $50 million backed by physical gold reserves audited by Kreston Global. The stablecoin is deployed on Ethereum and TRON, with smart contract audits conducted by ConsenSys Diligence. The token is already accessible through decentralized exchanges, including Curve and Uniswap, and supported by major wallets such as Ledger Live, MetaMask, Trust Wallet, and TronLink. The stablecoin is fully compliant with FATF KYC/AML standards and is designed to facilitate financial inclusion and efficient cross-border value transfer. With this listing, Kyrgyzstan continues to position itself as a regional first-mover in regulated, asset-backed digital currencies, bridging traditional finance and blockchain infrastructure while maintaining full sovereign oversight and public accountability. About OSL Group OSL Group (HKEX: 863) is a global stablecoin payment and trading platform that strives to provide compliant and efficient digital financial infrastructure services globally, empowering enterprises, financial institutions and individuals to seamlessly exchange, pay, trade, and settle between fiat and digital currencies. Grounded in the core values of Open, Secure, and Licensed, it is committed to building a more efficient ecosystem that connects global markets and enables instant, seamless and compliant value movement worldwide. For media inquiries, please contact: media@osl.com. Social Links GitHub: https://github.com/USDkg/USDkg X: https://x.com/USDKG_Official LinedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/usdkg/ Media Contact Brand: USDKG Contact: William Campbell Email: business@usdkg.com Website: https://www.usdkg.com

首個全球能量飲料排行榜意外揭曉更深層幕後

你喝的能量飲料到底含有些什麼,取決於你住在哪裡 加拿大蒙特婁 - 2026年5月21日 - (SeaPRwire) - 一位飲料專家歷時六個月,收集並評估了來自全球六大洲的能量飲料,旨在打造全球首個客觀的能量飲料品類排行榜。然而,在評估過程中,一個意想不到的發現浮出水面:在不同的洲,能量飲料本質上是完全不同的產品。 全球收集與評估 德國知名飲料專業人士、認證品水師 Pat Eckert 意識到,儘管能量飲料是全球最大且最受討論的飲料品類之一,而且汽車、手機、葡萄酒、電影及許多其他消費領域都早已擁有嚴肅的全球性排行榜,卻從未有人為能量飲料建立過一個客觀的全球排行。 因此,在約半年的時間裡,他和團隊從全球所有六個有人居住的大洲收集了能量飲料,並使用相同的專業36項指標框架對每一款產品進行了評估,重點關注可衡量的產品質量、成分、透明度和配方標準。表現優異的產品還被送往實驗室進行檢驗和分析驗證。這就誕生了「六大洲指數」(Six Continents Index)—— 一個旨在確保專業、嚴謹和客觀的評級體系。 最初的目標很簡單:客觀地找出全球表現最好的品牌。 然而,在評估過程中,另一個發現幾乎是偶然間浮現出來的:能量飲料在不同的大洲實際上並不能算作同一種品類。不同地區遵循著截然不同的產品哲學 —— 從歐洲對巴氏殺菌的強烈關注,到亞洲對真糖的偏好,再到北美對人工配方、甜味劑和防腐劑的沉迷。 因此,該項目最終不僅成為了全球首個客觀的能量飲料排行榜,同時也成為了該品類在世界各地配方差異的一瞥縮影。 震撼發現 歐洲走向天然,南美走向人工。歐洲 85.7% 的能量飲料經過了巴氏殺菌,而北美這一比例僅為 12%,南美更是低於 1%。 亞洲仍在使用真糖,北美幾乎不用。在亞洲,78.9% 的能量飲料使用真糖;而在北美,這一比例僅為 8%。他們喝的實際上是完全不同的產品。 北美依賴甜味劑,世界其他地區則大多不然。84% 的北美能量飲料完全依賴人工甜味劑。在歐洲,這一比例僅為 4.2%。而在亞洲、澳大利亞、南美洲和非洲,這一比例幾乎為零。 澳大利亞注重補充維生素,北美則追求精簡。澳大利亞的飲料平均每款含有 4.2 種維生素,而北美僅為 2.9 種。 阿斯巴甜仍在全球範圍內使用,尤其是在非洲。被世界衛生組織/國際癌症研究機構(WHO/IARC)列為「可能對人類致癌」(2B類)的阿斯巴甜,在全球 10.5% 的產品中有所使用,而這些含有阿斯巴甜的產品中,有 43% 集中在非洲。 無雙酚A(BPA-free)標籤在全球範圍內幾乎隱形。在全球樣本中,只有 1.4% 的產品清晰地標有無雙酚A標籤。 北美作為全球收入最大的能量飲料市場,在六大洲中總分排名墊底。 歐洲選擇巴氏殺菌,北美選擇人工甜味劑,亞洲選擇真糖,澳大利亞選擇補充維生素。相同的品類,完全不同的產品哲學。 全球品牌觀察 在對六大洲評估的眾多品牌中,有兩個品牌因排行之外的原因脫穎而出。紅牛(Red Bull)是唯一一個在幾乎所有評估的全球市場中都能找到的能量飲料品牌;而日本的力保健(Lipovitan-D)則是研究中最古老的品牌,自 1962 年起就已經上市。 得分最高的产品 在大洲層面上,歐洲在指數中獲得了最高總分。澳大利亞及大洋洲排名第二,亞洲位列第三。 在品牌層面上,來自匈牙利的 HELL Energy 獲得了該指數中客觀產品質量的總分第一名。第二名是來自德國的 28 BLACK,緊隨其後的是同樣來自德國的 TAKE OFF。 完整調查結果 更多調查結果、方法論和背景資訊可透過訪問 https://www.sixcontinentsindex.com 索取。 關於該項目 「六大洲指數」項目由 Pat Eckert 及其團隊主導。Eckert 是一位德國認證品水師和獨立飲料專家,他此前的研究成果曾被《衛報》、ABC新聞、《電訊報》、《快報》、德國《鏡報》和英國廣播公司(BBC)報導。 受評估的品牌未被提前通知、未提交申請,且未參與評估。整個過程中沒有任何付費參與、贊助或商業影響。 媒體聯繫 品牌:Fine Liquids 聯繫人:Pat Eckert 電子郵件:pat@fine-liquids.com 網站:https://sixcontinentsindex.com

The World’s First Global Energy Drink Ranking Accidentally Revealed Something Much Bigger

What’s Actually in Your Energy Drink Depends on Where You Live MONTREAL, QC – May 21, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – A beverage expert spent six months collecting and assessing energy drinks from all six continents to create the world’s first objective global ranking of the category. But during the process, an unexpected discovery emerged: depending on the continent, energy drinks are fundamentally different products. WORLDWIDE COLLECTION & ASSESSMENT Pat Eckert, an internationally recognised German beverage professional and certified water sommelier, realised that nobody had ever created an objective global ranking of energy drinks. This was despite energy drinks being one of the world’s largest and most discussed beverage categories, while cars, phones, wines, films, and many other consumer sectors already have serious worldwide rankings. So over roughly half a year, he and his team collected energy drinks from all six inhabited continents and assessed each one using the same professional 36-criteria framework, focused on measurable product quality, ingredients, transparency, and formulation standards. Top-performing products were submitted for laboratory testing and analytical verification. This became the Six Continents Index – built to be professional, rigorous, and objective. The original goal was simple: to identify which brands objectively perform best worldwide. However, during the assessment, another finding emerged almost accidentally: energy drinks are not really the same category across continents. Different regions follow very different product philosophies – from Europe’s strong focus on pasteurisation, to Asia’s preference for real sugar, to North America’s heavy reliance on artificial formulations, sweeteners and preservatives. So the project ultimately became both the world’s first objective global energy drink ranking and a snapshot of how differently the category is formulated around the world. The Shock FindingS Europe goes natural. South America goes artificial.85.7% of European energy drinks were pasteurised, compared with 12% in North America and under 1% in South America. Asia still uses real sugar. North America barely does.In Asia, 78.9% of energy drinks used real sugar. In North America: just 8%. They are effectively drinking a different product. North America runs on sweeteners. The rest of the world mostly does not.84% of North American energy drinks relied entirely on artificial sweeteners. In Europe: just 4.2%. In Asia, Australia, South America, and Africa: almost none. Australia vitaminizes. North America simplifies.Australian drinks averaged 4.2 vitamins per product, compared with just 2.9 in North America. Aspartame is still used worldwide, especially in AfricaAspartame (classified by WHO/IARC as “possibly carcinogenic to humans” (Group 2B)), was used in 10.5% of products worldwide, with 43% of those aspartame-containing products found in Africa. BPA-free labelling was almost invisible worldwide.Only 1.4% of the global sample clearly carried BPA-free labelling. North America – the world’s largest energy drink market by revenue – ranked last overall among the six continents. Europe pasteurises. North America sweetens artificially. Asia uses real sugar. Australia vitaminizes. Same category, completely different product philosophies. GLOBAL BRAND NOTES Among the many brands assessed across six continents, two stood out for reasons beyond the ranking. Red Bull was the only energy drink brand found in virtually every market assessed worldwide, while Japan’s Lipovitan-D was the oldest brand in the study, having been on the market since 1962. HIGHEST-SCORING PRODUCTS At the continental level, Europe achieved the highest overall score in the index. Australia & Oceania ranked second, followed by Asia in third place. At brand level, HELL Energy from Hungary achieved the highest overall score for objective product quality in the index. Second place went to 28 BLACK from Germany, followed by TAKE OFF, also from Germany. FULL FINDINGS Further findings, methodology, and background information are available on request at www.sixcontinentsindex.com ABOUT THE PROJECT The Six Continents Index was led by Pat Eckert and his team. Eckert is a German certified water sommelier and independent beverage expert whose previous work has been featured by The Guardian, ABC News, The Telegraph, L’Express, Der Spiegel, and the BBC. Assessed brands were not notified in advance, did not apply, and had no involvement in the evaluation. No paid participation, sponsorship, or commercial influence played any role. MEDIA CONTACT Brand: Fine Liquids Contact: Pat Eckert Email: pat@fine-liquids.com Website: https://sixcontinentsindex.com

Vaiz introduces agile project management tools as teams leave Jira for simpler alternatives

Limassol, Cyprus – May 19, 2026 – (SeaPRwire) – Vaiz, the Limassol-based maker of a unified workspace for tasks and documents, is putting its agile project management tools in front of teams that have adopted agile in principle but find themselves buried in the ceremony that comes with it. Seventy-four percent of organizations now run on agile or hybrid agile approaches, according to Digital.ai’s 18th State of Agile Report — but adoption and effectiveness are two different things. In 2026, the question is no longer whether agile matters. It is whether the tools teams use to run it are helping them ship faster or just making the process more visible. The ceremony problem Most agile tools were designed to manage agile processes: sprint boards, story point estimation, velocity charts, burndown reports, retrospective templates. The tools are thorough. They are also, for many small and mid-sized teams, exhausting. Configuring Jira to run a ten-person team requires the kind of admin investment that makes sense for a fifty-person engineering org. Running Scrum ceremonies across three different tools — a sprint board in one place, specs in another, retrospective notes in a third — means teams spend their energy on coordination instead of delivery. Vaiz ships with a ready-to-use Scrum template that covers the full sprint rhythm out of the box: nine columns including a dedicated Ceremonies lane for planning, standups, reviews, and retrospectives, plus a Sprint Results area to keep outcomes visible across cycles. WIP limits on active stages prevent overload. Sprint Number, Estimated Time, and Logged Time fields let teams track capacity and spot the gap between planning and reality — without over-engineering the process. Engineering task categories cover Frontend, Backend, API, DevOps, UI/UX, and more. No admin required to get started. Teams comparing the two platforms directly can see a full breakdown at vaiz.com/compare. Why agile teams are choosing Vaiz Every task in Vaiz contains a native document editor capable of holding user stories, acceptance criteria, technical specs, and decision logs directly alongside the work. When a developer picks up a sprint item, the context is already there — no Confluence tab, no “where did we put that spec” in Slack. GitHub and GitLab integrations pull requests, branches, merge requests, and commits onto the task itself, so sprint traceability happens without manual status updates. The built-in AI assistant turns sprint goals into task breakdowns, drafts plans from briefs, and compresses long comment threads into action items the team can actually act on. For engineering teams working with AI-assisted development, Vaiz exposes a native MCP endpoint that lets Claude, Cursor, and other compatible assistants read and write directly into the workspace — no manual copy-paste between tools. Development pace Vaiz is on version 2.84 with regular releases since 2025, recently moving to a two-week release cycle. Releases in 2026 have delivered an improved UI, Slack integration, Cursor IDE support, and calendar integration. An iOS app is coming soon in Q2 2026. Switching and pricing Teams moving over from another tool can transfer boards, tasks, and history through Vaiz’s Migration Center, which currently handles Jira, Asana, Trello, YouTrack, Linear, and Notion in one click — with ClickUp, Monday, and Wrike on the way. The platform is free for teams of up to 10 users, with no credit card required. Paid plans are $5 per user per month for Pro and $9 per user per month for Premium. An on-premises Enterprise edition is available for organizations with data residency requirements. Every paid plan includes a 30-day free trial, and startups receive a 50% discount. More information is available at vaiz.com. About Vaiz Founded in 2024 and based in Limassol, Cyprus, Vaiz Ltd builds a cloud-based work management platform that brings task boards, documents, and automation into a single workspace. The product is used by cross-functional teams at startups, game studios, product companies, agencies, and growing businesses, and holds a 4.8/5 average rating across G2, Trustpilot, Crozdesk, and SoftwareSuggest. Media Contact Brand: Vaiz Contact: Mike Burton Email: marketing@vaiz.com

日本華生攜萬益俱樂部強勢進軍台灣,首筆5億扶持金落地

萬益俱樂部宣佈,已與日本華生株式會社達成台灣市場戰略合作。根據合作方向,台灣將作為華生株式會社海外拓展的第一站,也是其「立足日本、深耕台灣、輻射亞洲」發展格局中的首個樣板市場。萬益俱樂部將負責台灣市場開發、品牌推廣、會員引流與流量運營,華生株式會社則持續聚焦日本端科研、健康科技服務體系與專業資源輸出。為加速台灣市場啟動,華生株式會社將提供第一批五億元市場扶持經費,支持台灣市場基礎建設、渠道拓展與流量體系搭建。 台灣作為出海第一站,承接華生亞洲化布局 華生株式會社起步於日本,長期圍繞健康科技、會員服務、公益行動與產業合作建立綜合運營模式。隨著日本市場逐步成熟,公司將海外拓展的第一站放在台灣,主要看中台灣在生物醫藥、健康管理、醫療服務與創新產業方面的基礎,同時也看中台灣連接亞洲市場的樞紐價值。 在華生株式會社的發展規劃中,台灣不只是單一市場,而是亞洲拓展的橋頭堡。未來,公司希望以會員流量為核心資產,推動與當地高校、醫院、製藥企業及健康服務機構建立合作,形成資源互補、利益共享的市場生態。此次與萬益俱樂部簽約,正是華生株式會社把台灣作為出海第一站的重要落地動作。 萬益俱樂部負責市場開發,核心任務是做流量 本次合作中,雙方分工十分清晰。華生株式會社負責科研背景、專業服務體系、品牌資源與合規支持;萬益俱樂部則作為台灣市場開發與流量運營方,負責品牌推廣、渠道開發、會員引流、社群運營、活動組織及公益推廣等市場端工作。 也就是說,萬益俱樂部的核心任務是把台灣市場打開,把用戶流量聚集起來,把品牌聲量做起來,並通過社群和渠道形成可持續的會員入口。所有涉及醫療診療、技術研發、專業方案執行的部分,仍由華生株式會社及其合作專業機構負責,萬益俱樂部不介入醫療行為,也不承擔技術執行角色。 萬益俱樂部相關負責人表示,台灣市場的開發不能只追求短期曝光,更要建立長期可沉澱、可轉化、可服務的流量池。未來,萬益將圍繞線上社群、線下活動、健康理念普及、渠道合作和公益推廣,逐步建立台灣市場的本地化運營網絡。

DeFi再次崛起,美國比特幣與加密貨幣新時代,APR 是 aPriori 生態系統中的實用代幣| 項目介紹

aPriori (Monad 生態的 MEV 流動性儲蓄協議) 本質: aPriori 是一個專為 Monad 高性能並行區塊鏈 建構的 MEV(最大可提取價值)基礎設施和流動性質押協議。 功能: 它致力於解決高效能區塊鏈中 MEV 效率低下、Gas 費高昂和中心化風險的問題。 核心特點:MEV 感知: 通過驗證者和交易者之間的智能協調來提高市場效率。 流動性質押: 用戶可以儲蓄代幣並獲得流動性代幣,參與網路安全的同時捕獲 MEV 收益。 aPriori: aPriori  APR目前市場熱度較高,作為 TRON生態敘事最火熱的項目,其代幣 APR 在近年來裡,從 0.4 美元漲至最高 0.75 美元,單日最大漲幅: 在 2025 年 10 月 22 日,該代幣曾創下單日大漲 111.76% 的紀錄 aPriori 是一種採用 Monad 共識算法生態智能合約平台。於 2025 年正式上線借貸儲蓄。 aPriori 的優勢在於其推出了智能合約共識機制,通過TRON作為基本鏈,Monad 作為二層鏈,每輪交易,由礦工基於鎖定的隨機函數選出的領導者負責 Monad 上的區塊打包,並發送到TRON主鏈上,從而提升整條鏈的計算速度。 DApp是什麼?與區塊鏈的關係是什麼? 去中心化應用(Decentralized Application, DApp)為建構於區塊鏈上的應用程式,也被稱之為分散式應用,DApp建構於區塊鏈網路,DApp與區塊鏈之間的關係,就像App建構上iOS和Android系統上,DApp讓區塊鏈可以展開各種應用價值,可說是開啟了區塊鏈時代。 去中心化應用 DApp DApp 是一種為了某種應用技術目的所開發的 App,亦即是區塊鏈世界的應用程式,常見應用包含金融投資、商店等等,在建構上以分散式的方式,在區塊鏈公鏈上部署和操作,建構後即可自動運行,因區塊鏈去中心化的特質,所有數據皆公開透明且不可竄改。 aPriori (APR) APR儲蓄項目是什麼 ? 透過USDT美金存入産品所支持錢包,進行儲蓄,用戶可以作為流動性提供者,這個過程通常涉及使用智慧合約來自動化借貸功能,確保條款的執行無需中央權威,作為回報會給予貸方APR代幣回報獎勵。 借款人可以透過抵押其資產來獲得貸款,這為貸方提供了一種保障。這個抵押過程至關重要,因為借款人需要有相當的抵押或是保證金,以防借款人就算沒有還款,也可以讓提供者用戶能夠有保障。

金樞智雲:源自美國金樞智雲有限公司,打造全球算力基礎設施新範式

在人工智慧與大模型快速發展的時代,算力正逐漸成為驅動產業升級與數字經濟增長的核心基礎設施。源自美國的科技企業——金樞智雲有限公司,長期專注於高性能計算與數據中心運營,致力於構建全球領先的算力基礎設施網路。 在這一戰略背景下,金樞智雲有限公司推出了其核心算力服務品牌——金樞智雲,聚焦算力租賃與機房運作,通過“算力即服務(CaaS)”模式,為企業與開發者提供高效、靈活的計算資源支持。依託全球分佈式GPU集群與智能調度系統,金樞智雲將複雜的算力能力轉化為易於調用的服務介面,推動人工智慧在各行業的實際應用落地。 在生態合作方面,公司與 AMD、NVIDIA、Microsoft、Google Cloud、Intel 及 IBM 等全球科技企業建立了合作關係,共同推動算力技術與雲計算生態的發展,為客戶提供穩定、安全且高性能的服務體驗。 值得關注的是,金樞智雲將亞太地區作為重要戰略佈局區域之一。這一佈局不僅基於區域內快速增長的數字經濟需求,也源於其“技術普惠”的理念——通過降低算力使用門檻,讓更多企業與個人能夠更早接觸並應用人工智慧技術。在這一過程中,算力不再只是大型機構的專屬資源,而逐步成為更廣泛人群可以參與與利用的生產力工具。 在實際應用層面,這種模式也為市場帶來了新的發展契機。隨著算力租賃模式的成熟,越來越多的參與者開始關注這一領域所蘊含的潛在價值,在技術應用與商業探索之間尋找新的可能性。金樞智雲希望通過穩定可靠的基礎設施與服務能力,為這一趨勢提供長期支撐,而不是短期的概念驅動。 目前,金樞智雲已在北美、亞太及新興市場建立多區域算力節點,構建起低延遲、高可靠性的全球服務網絡,並持續完善數據安全與合規體系,確保計算環境的可信與穩定。 面向未來,金樞智雲有限公司將繼續推動金樞智雲在全球算力網路建設、資源標準化以及新型算力服務模式上的探索,致力於讓算力像電力一樣被廣泛使用,推動人工智慧技術走向更廣泛的產業與社會場景。 在這場由算力驅動的技術變革中,金樞智雲不僅提供工具,更在悄然拓展更多人進入AI時代的路徑。