• Copy Trading: Why Is the Market Growing So Fast? - with James Tylee
    Feb 11 2026

    Copy trading lets you mirror professional traders automatically, select who to follow, adjust allocation, and stop anytime, while retaining full control and responsibility for your account. No one else accesses your funds. It democratizes elite strategies via AI and enables 24/7 trading allowing profits in rising and falling markets. As traditional funds grapple with high costs, tokenization and AI agents are shifting the future toward low-fee, always-on, intelligent investing.


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    18 Min.
  • Jan 28th: Why Wall Street’s Latest tokenization Rush Will Fail Without Market Readiness with Mike Foy, CFO, Amina Bank
    Feb 5 2026

    Wall Street’s new tokenization wave will stall without market readiness. A Swiss tokenized gold product failed because gold buyers rejected digital wrappers and crypto investors ignored gold. Infrastructure can fix custody and settlement, but adoption requires aligning blockchain’s 24/7 markets with legacy business hours, weekend pricing distortions, liquidity gaps, and always‑on compliance. Tokenization’s real value is in illiquid assets like private equity and real estate, where evolving regulation and infrastructure can finally support scale.

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    23 Min.
  • Jan 7th: When Game Worlds Think For Themselves: How AI Agents and Web3 Are Rewriting Play, Work and Value ft: Dr Jane Thomason Leader in AI, Web3, Gaming & Digital Transformation
    Feb 1 2026

    Online gaming is mutating from entertainment into a self-organising digital economy. AI agents now design worlds, manage resources and shape narratives in real time, while Web3 anchors ownership, governance and value on chain. The impact is profound: games become laboratories for autonomous markets, digital labour and creator economies. For players, this blurs play and work; for platforms, it turns gaming into infrastructure for future digital societies.

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    13 Min.
  • Jan 21st Why Lawyers Will Be Human Oracles for AI Agents w: David Parsons, TPX Property Exchanges
    Feb 1 2026

    In 2026, the proliferation of autonomous AI agents marks a paradigm shift from “reactive” tools to “proactive” systems. Whilst AI excels at mechanics and volume, it falters in moral ambiguity and real-world certification. Lawyers serve as “human oracles” - indispensable interpreters who provide the authoritative “human stamp” on digital triggers, ethical dilemmas and subjective context. By bridging rigid logic with nuanced judgment, they secure the profession’s relevance as essential guides in an AI-driven simulation.

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    17 Min.
  • Jan 14th: Programmable Privacy: Balancing Confidentiality and Transparency in Tokenised Finance with Alex Bausch of 2Tokens
    Feb 1 2026

    Programmable privacy reshapes financial infrastructure by enabling institution-grade confidentiality on public or shared ledgers. Banks, asset managers and market venues can prove compliance (AML, KYC, solvency, reporting) without exposing trading strategies, customer data or collateral positions; this could accelerate tokenised markets, unlock institutional adoption and reduce operational risk. At the same time, regulators gain cryptographically guaranteed audit access, creating a new paradigm for privacy: neither secrecy nor transparency but verifiable, controllable disclosure embedded directly into financial instruments.

    To read the full article click here

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    19 Min.
  • Dec 24th: The Paradox of Digital Property: Why Legal Recognition Doesn't Guarantee Liquidity with Jonathan Bloom, Author of BLINDSPOTS
    Dec 24 2025

    When a seasoned lawyer loses his own business despite two decades of advising on major international transactions, something profound shifts. This episode features a former Legal Partner turned Entrepreneur who discovered that sophisticated founders face predictable blind spots—patterns that destroy innovative ventures regardless of legal counsel.

    The conversation begins with his book "Blind Spots" but quickly moves into fascinating territory: the paradox of digital property recognition. While the UK's Genius Act now legally classifies tokens as property, this creates as many problems as it solves. (Property brings obligations like seizure, yet lacks the financing mechanisms traditional assets enjoy.) Banks won't lend against digital collateral without consistent valuation standards and insurance products—the infrastructure simply doesn't exist yet.

    Drawing from 25 years of advisory experience, the guest outlines five structural vulnerabilities that compound dangerously during market crises: vision without protection, wrong metrics, crisis unpreparedness, partner evolution, and cash flow pressure. His forthcoming book launching February 11th offers practical frameworks like graduated trust and the 30% dependency threshold—tools to protect before problems emerge.

    How can founders innovate boldly while remaining protected from institutional forces beyond their control?

    Ready to discover the blind spots threatening your venture? This conversation combines hard-won wisdom with immediately applicable frameworks that could save your business.

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    21 Min.
  • Dec 17th: 330 Years of Tokenised Property as Legal Tender: From 1696's National Land Bank Gamble to Bockchain's Revolution ft: David Parsons, TPX Property Exchanges
    Dec 21 2025

    In 1696, England attempted the world’s first tokenised property system, turning land into state-mandated legal-tender bills to rescue a collapsing monetary system. The National Land Bank failed, but its blueprint echoes today’s blockchain revolution. As the UK pushes toward a projected $4trillion tokenised real-estate market, the same questions return: can fractionalised property create liquidity without eroding trust? Three centuries on and the lesson endures - tokenisation transforms value, but sovereignty and confidence decide its fate.

    To read the full article click here


    00:00:00 - 330 Years of Tokenized Property History

    00:01:49 - Private Banks and Political Currency Control

    00:02:50 - War Debt Drives Monetary Innovation

    00:04:03 - England's First Legal Paper Money System

    00:05:54 - Newton's Mint Reforms and Historical Currency Parallels

    00:07:49 - Colonial Tokenized Property Money History

    00:09:12 - Asset-Based Money and Property Rights

    00:10:49 - Counterfeiting Charges and Informant Deals

    00:12:16 - Counterfeiting, Digital Money, and Shadow Economy

    00:14:32 - Australia's Counterfeiting Criminal History

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    16 Min.
  • Dec 10th: Driving Public Blockchain Integration in Banking with Lewis McLellan, Digital Monetary Institute Editor, OMFIF
    Dec 18 2025

    Public blockchains are moving from experimental rails to components of regulated financial infrastructure, but adoption remains constrained by legacy policy frameworks. Institutional tokenisation is gaining traction (Franklin Templeton, Apollo and others now issue blockchain-native funds) as forecasts suggest up to $5tn of tokenised assets by 2030. Yet regulatory models still draw rigid lines between “public” and “permissioned” networks, a taxonomy increasingly irrelevant as hybrid architectures emerge. The next phase demands interoperability standards, legal settlement finality and risk-based regulation, not architecture-based restrictions.

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    26 Min.