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FG rallies private sector investment in port modernizationAs the final frame approached, Trump's steely determination and unwavering focus propelled him to victory, clinching the English Open title and adding another trophy to his illustrious collection. The win not only solidified Trump's position at the top of the world rankings but also sent a clear message to his competitors that he is a force to be reckoned with.NFL NOTES
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Subscribe to our newsletter Privacy Policy Success! Your account was created and you’re signed in. Please visit My Account to verify and manage your account. An account was already registered with this email. Please check your inbox for an authentication link. Support Independent Arts Journalism As an independent publication, we rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. If you value our coverage and want to support more of it, consider becoming a member today . Already a member? Sign in here. We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. If you value our coverage and want to support more of it, please join us as a member . “Tell all the truth,” Emily Dickinson writes , “but tell it slant.” In terms of film coverage, our bread and butter here at Hyperallergic is documentary. But as our coverage writ large — reviews, opinions, reporting, original art — demonstrates, there are many ways to tell a truth. With that in mind, we’ve compiled a list of the best art films of the year. This list, as you might expect, is eclectic, jump-roping between avant-garde short film and YouTube essays, feature-length investigative documentaries and the intrepid, iterative efforts of late-night talk shows. These works of moving image tell truths that cannot be as thoroughly or artfully conveyed in any other medium, such as the “whirring body” of Loïe Fuller in Obsessed With Light , which Eileen G’Sell likens to “a lambent flower.” Or the relentless use of extended footage of people doing the same repetitive work in sweatshops in Wang Bing’s Homecoming trilogy — “if you think it’s hard to sit through,” Dan Schindel writes, “imagine what it’s like to do that work.” Sorted by release date in North America, here are the top films of 2024. — Lisa Yin Zhang Get the latest art news, reviews and opinions from Hyperallergic. Daily Weekly Opportunities No Other Land , directed by Yuval Abraham, Basel Adra, Hamdan Ballal, and Rachel Szor From the moment it debuted at the Berlinale Film Festival in mid-February, this was the most controversial documentary of the year, spawning death threats for its directors. This searing film, which looks into encroaching Israeli settlements in the West Bank, arrived just a few months into the country’s ongoing assault against Gaza. In the back and forth between the Palestinian and Israeli members of the filmmaking collective behind the camera, the movie captures how a synthesis of viewpoints frames every media object we see. Amidst 2024’s deluge of images of Palestinian suffering and resilience, this film’s contribution — its portrait of constant rebuilding, and protest, and resistance — should not go overlooked, even as it still can’t find a distributor in the United States. — Dan Schindel Read our original review. Pictures of Ghosts , directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho Among current filmmakers, Kleber Mendonça Filho is one of the most adept at portraying the relationships between people, their homes, and their communities. In this hybrid of history and memoir, he explores his hometown of Recife, Brazil through the lives (and afterlives) of its movie palaces. Many are now derelict, some are gone, but together they embody their city in miniature. One theater’s position next to a picturesque bridge, for instance, means it’s been in the backgrounds of countless photos shot on that bridge, creating a timeline of that neighborhood’s evolution. — DS The Other Profile , directed by Armel Hostiou How does a namesake shape identity? How does access to social media both exploit and empower individuals in the so-called Global South? When the French filmmaker discovers another “Armel Hostiou” via an active Facebook profile in the People’s Republic of Congo, he sets out to find the impostor in person, leading to a madcap survey of Kinshasa, the largest Francophone city in the world. A Gallic, often droll version of Naomi Klein’s Doppelganger , this provocative documentary challenges how we see our doubles in the digital age, especially one fraught with massive economic global inequalities. — Eileen G’Sell There Was, There Was Not , directed by Emily Mkrtichian Probing the fraught relationship between feminist solidarity and nationalist zeal, this debut documentary follows four ethnic Armenian women whose lives are riven by the Second Artsakh War. Mixing the fairy tales of her youth with the devastating reality of the region today, the Armenian-American director presents Artsakh as both a sun-swept “paradise” and a bastion of patriarchal control to which her diverse heroines refuse to succumb. A stirring tribute to a lost homeland, There Was... calls attention to the scourge of ethnic cleansing in corners of the world long overlooked by American media. — EGS Read our original review. Problemista , directed by Julio Torres Whimsical and irreverent, Torres’s directorial debut takes a fantastical approach to depicting the very real trials of immigration and creative work. To stay in New York, a young Salvadoran has less than a month to secure a visa sponsor, who comes in the flamboyant form of an embittered middle-aged art critic (Tilda Swinton). Narrated by Isabella Rossellini, the film visually scans as a ludic mashup of Pan’s Labyrinth (2006) and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) — but with an undercurrent of class consciousness that feels all too relatable to anyone hustling to get by on a creative’s salary.— EGS Read our original review. “REFORM!” by Secret Base For years, Jon Bois has quietly been building a playbook for making data on a computer screen cinematically riveting. His series Pretty Good (2015–17), which looks at different odd and interesting cultural moments, had long been on hiatus. Its triumphant return came in the form of this three-part essay about the ridiculous history of the Reform Party, the last real attempt at creating a viable third political party in the United States, which quickly succumbed to petty infighting. It’s a chamber drama of political grievances and machinations, acted out mainly with charts. — DS Gasoline Rainbow , directed by Bill Ross IV and Turner Ross Directors Bill and Turner Ross tag along with a group of teens on a postgrad road trip from Oregon down the Pacific Coast, and turn it into an epic journey. The brothers’ films often straddle a line between believability and unreality; every scenario reveals itself as carefully constructed, once you think about it. Did the kids really just happen onto a party on a ferry? Probably not. It doesn’t matter, though, because the emotions of the rambling conversations and heart-to-hearts feel completely genuine. It is, as the kids say, an incredible vibe. — DS Read our original review. Janet Planet , directed by Annie Baker Shot on grainy, intimate 16mm, this debut film is grounded in the spare but potent dialogue of its Pulitzer-winning playwright of a director, whose early ’90s Massachusetts upbringing serves as the bucolic backdrop. Adopting the perspective of an 11-year-old (Zoe Ziegler) who is as pessimistic and guarded as her hippie mother (Julianne Nicholson) is naive, Janet Planet offers a resolutely unsentimental depiction of their filial bond. A slow burn with a daring final act, the film reminds us that so much depends on shot composition, acting, and a brilliant script. — EGS Daughters , directed by Natalie Rae and Angela Patton Co-directed by a former journalist and the Chief Executive Officer of Girls for a Change, a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering Black girls, Daughters may be the most heart-wrenching documentary of the year. Following four young girls anxiously awaiting the “Date with Dad” dance held at a Washington, DC prison, the film offers a layered account of their fathers’ preparation for the event, much of which resembles group therapy for men traumatized by their own troubled pasts. A tender portrait of families caught in the correctional system, this documentary reveals the extent to which mass incarceration perhaps punishes the innocent most of all. If “our daddies are our mirrors,” as the film posits, what does it mean if they are completely off-limits to those who need them most? — EGS Sugarcane , directed by Emily Kassie and Julian Brave NoiseCat Unlike last year’s overhyped Killers of the Flower Moon , this disquieting investigative documentary puts native voices front and center. Prompted by the 2021 discovery of unmarked graves at a former Catholic “residential school” for Indigenous children, the filmmakers embark on a fact-finding mission that takes them from British Columbia to Vatican City. Brilliantly edited and sensitively shot, this exposé of institutional brutality and ensuing intergenerational trauma never reduces its native subjects to the status of passive victims. “Indigenous peoples are still dying from residential schools,” the film asserts. “And still living, despite them.” — EGS Read our interview with the filmmakers . Will & Harper , directed by Josh Greenbaum Partnering A-list celebrity Will Ferrell with writer Harper Steele, this charming film plays off the classic road trip genre but adds a twist in the form of Steele’s gender transition, which she began in 2022. We are taken along for the ride as the two explore their longtime friendship, navigating gender, fame, and the blue/red divide in the United States. The drama that ensues at a Texan steakhouse proves that trans people still have to navigate an intolerant world, in which there exist people with the best of intentions who just don’t get it. But the film also shows that some of those people eventually do, and that this country is often more tolerant than it can seem online. Touching, truly. — Hrag Vartanian Youth (Hard Times) and Youth (Homecoming) , directed by Wang Bing Wang Bing, one of the chief nonfiction chroniclers of China’s shifting capitalist fortunes, completed his trilogy about young migrant textile workers this year with these two features. Through a relentless use of extended footage of people doing the same repetitive work in sweatshops — if you think it’s hard to sit through, imagine what it’s like to do it — the film drives home the tedium of this labor. But this also makes the moments of comradery and familial love, like a return home for a wedding, all the more poignant. — DS Read our original review . Allo la France , directed by Floriane Devigne When the French director witnesses the gradual, then rapid, removal of public phone booths across her country, she sets out to find and document the last vestiges of a pre-digital era. With its mid-century color palette and stunning symmetrical shot composition, Allo La France may initially seem a Wes-Andersonian tribute to the endearing, yet obsolete, world of phone booths, but ultimately serves as a quiet polemic against the dangers of privatization and the dissolution of public services in France. You’ll never look at, or remember, a payphone the same way again. —EGS Scénarios , directed by Jean-Luc Godard It has been more than two years since Jean-Luc Godard’s death, but he continues to live on through new short film releases. Completed the day before he passed, Scénarios feels like Godard’s final thoughts embodied in film, dense with allusions and experimental free associations between different depictions of mortality, from Howard Hawks movies to social media war footage set in rapid montage. Like much of his work, it demands rigorous attention and thought, yet remains widely open to interpretation. To the very end, no one was doing it like him. — DS Black Glass , directed by Adam Piron Eadweard Muybridge is famous for his motion studies in the 1800s, which constitute some of the earliest approximations of moving images. He also accompanied the US Army during the Modoc War , staging photos of Indigenous aggressors for propaganda purposes. Setting these photographs against modern footage of the landscapes where they were shot, Adam Piron creates a brief but powerful intonation of how photographic images have been part of the colonizer’s war on indigeneity. People die, the film suggests, but the land and the memory endure, however warped. — DS American Muslims: A History Revealed These six short documentary films tell unlikely stories about being Muslim in the United States. Among the incredible stories they share is the unusual tale of the first mosque in North Dakota and the moving story of Muhammad Kahn, an immigrant from Afghanistan who traveled to the United States in 1861 and fought in the Union Army before sparring with the US government for the veteran pension he deserved. This series may shift some of your thinking about the history of diversity in this country — it’s longer, for instance, than you might think — and new revelations finally allow a fuller story to be told. Highly watchable. — HV Exhibiting Forgiveness , directed by Titus Kaphar “Relationships are hard. They’re hard, ” a mother tells her resentful son, who is estranged from his abusive father. Few films depict the depth and complexity of childhood trauma — or Black masculinity — more cogently and sensitively than this debut film from artist Titus Kaphar, whose lived experience serves as the backdrop. Both an indictment of the art world’s racial hypocrisies and a tribute to the tenets of forgiving on one’s own terms, Exhibiting is a work of art about the art of survival — and of healing — when neither necessarily serves the bottom line. — EGS “Silverback,” from the series Nature I wasn’t sure what to expect in this 43-minute documentary, but by the end, I was moved by the connection between filmmaker Vianet Djenguet and a protective 500-pound silverback gorilla in the Kahuzi-Biega National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, particularly the empathy the former showed toward the latter. Djenguet’s three-month journey, often surrounded by security forces, gives you a peek into the psychology of a great ape who has never been habituated to humans, and the distrust he has built after decades of mistreatment and familial tragedies. It was the first time a documentary made me consider the impact of generational trauma on apes. The film works, too, because Djenguet learns as much about his own desire to connect with an animal that isn’t as eager to do the same. — HV Dahomey , directed by Mati Diop In less than an hour, Mati Diop finds ways to approach the issue of artifact repatriation from a multitude of perspectives – including that of the artifacts themselves. Through voiceover, the documentary gives an inner life to a statue of a Dahomeyan king being given back to Benin by France. The statue’s anxieties about his return to his homeland poignantly crystallize ideas about cultural alienation and homecoming. — DS Read our report on the film here. Black Box Diaries , directed by Shiori Itô Editor’s Note: The following contains mentions of sexual assault. To reach the National Sexual Assault Hotline, call 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or visit online.rainn.org . Based on her memoir of the same name, Itō’s investigative documentary examines, in painful detail, the director’s sexual assault at the hands of television reporter Noriyuki Yamaguchi, only to witness her criminal case tossed out by police. In a country where only 4% of women report rape, Black Box Diaries reveals the extent to which the #MeToo movement in the United States both galvanized and overlooked victims in other countries and from other cultures. “I’m not an activist or a propagandist,” Itō vents to a loved one when facing national pushback. In this film, she achieves her own kind of justice in confronting the hypocrisy of Japanese officials head-on, precipitating actual legal changes. — EGS Read our interview with the filmmaker here . Leonardo da Vinci , directed by Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon In classic PBS and Ken Burns style, this two-part, four-hour documentary tells the story of the original Renaissance man, who seemed to march through history with a sense of purpose that makes him continually relevant to this day. Combining interviews with experts and images of his art, Burns and team don’t demystify Leonardo so much as contribute to his mystique as a universal genius — though I never quite understood how likable and funny the Renaissance master was to his contemporaries until this film. This is a good primer for the novice, and kudos to the documentary team for not ignoring the artist’s sexuality, but instead including it in a very matter-of-fact way that helps normalize queerness in historical people, creating a fuller picture of their often wondrous lives. — HV Obsessed with Light , directed by Sabine Krayenbühl and Zeva Oelbaum Less in-depth biography of Loïe Fuller’s life than a chronicle of the dancer’s impact on the last 100-plus years of culture, this documentary heralds “La Loïe” as a singular agent of her own success, a woman as unapologetically brash as she was creatively ingenious. A lustrous tribute to the lesbian icon’s vision, Obsessed with Light juxtaposes archival footage with contemporary iterations Serpentine Dance , a genre she created. To see original footage of Fuller onstage, her whirring body a lambent flower, is to reconsider what makes dance — or any art form — “modern.” — EGS Read our original review. The Girl with the Needle , directed by Magnus von Horn With its stark chiaroscuro lighting and Michal Dymak’s haunting black-and-white cinematography, The Girl with the Needle exudes a shadowy aesthetic redolent of German Expressionism. Following one woman’s struggle to survive during the devastating aftermath of World War I, this visual tour de force pierces the dark, banal heart of misogyny in early 20th-century Denmark. Bracingly relevant to ongoing discussions of reproductive and bodily autonomy, this is a film best viewed with little knowledge of its true-crime basis. — EGS Last Week Tonight with John Oliver During a trying year, it was great to have John Oliver offering his highly researched and entertaining takes on a world gone awry. From Trump’s plans for mass deportation to Israeli settlements in the West Bank to hospice care in the United States, Oliver finds a way to combine his unique and hardcore nerdiness with his need to produce a highly watchable story that challenges the attention span of audiences normally deathscrolling on personal devices. I’m not sure the American mediascape has anyone like Oliver, who can discuss Indian or British elections with the same intensity as corn production, pig farming, or student loan debt, while still finding a way to go viral in the process. Oliver demonstrates that some are still committed to the political purpose of education, and the portion of the public that knows that journalism is key to keeping them informed. — HV We hope you enjoyed this article! Before you keep reading, please consider supporting Hyperallergic ’s journalism during a time when independent, critical reporting is increasingly scarce. Unlike many in the art world, we are not beholden to large corporations or billionaires. Our journalism is funded by readers like you , ensuring integrity and independence in our coverage. We strive to offer trustworthy perspectives on everything from art history to contemporary art. We spotlight artist-led social movements, uncover overlooked stories, and challenge established norms to make art more inclusive and accessible. With your support, we can continue to provide global coverage without the elitism often found in art journalism. If you can, please join us as a member today . Millions rely on Hyperallergic for free, reliable information. By becoming a member, you help keep our journalism free, independent, and accessible to all. Thank you for reading. Share Copied to clipboard Mail Bluesky Threads LinkedIn Facebook
REALITY TV star Calum Best has failed to repay debts of £250,000. The former Celebrity Big Brother contestant earned huge sums on shows including SAS: Who Dares Wins, Celebrity Love Island and Celebs Go Dating. Advertisement But he appointed liquidators to close his failing media firm Trouble to Triumph Limited in 2022. Liquidators have discovered the company had run up substantial debts, including a £48,971 director’s loan and a £85,625 tax bill. Best, the 43-year-old son of football legend George , has now agreed to pay back £60,000 in monthly instalments. Company liquidators said: “Following substantive correspondence with the director, and in consideration of his current financial means, a full and final settlement of £60,000 has been agreed.” Advertisement READ MORE ON CALUM BEST CALUM’S JOY Calum Best breaks silence after being CLEARED of sexual assault BEST CLEAR Calum Best NOT GUILTY of sexually assaulting Brit woman at Wayne Lineker's club In 2013, Calum was forced to surrender a £75,000 18-carat gold Jean Lassale watch after declaring bankruptcy due to unpaid tax bills. The firm was set up in 2015 when he made his first Celebrity Big Brother appearance, which he was paid £50,000 for. He returned to the show for another stint in 2017. The former model is also chairman of Dorking Wanderers FC women’s team. Advertisement Most read in News TV BALLSED UP Lorraine apologises on air for using phrase she 'didn't know' was a swear word BEACH BABE Jean Johansson flaunts incredible toned figure & endless legs on Barbados beach HOST'S PAIN BBC's Glenn Campbell makes shock admission as he gives tumour battle update COMIC'S CASTLE Still Game star takes £150,000 hit to offload luxury £4m Scots castle 1 Reality TV star Calum Best has failed to repay debts of £250,000 after he appointed liquidators to close his failing media firm Trouble to Triumph Limited in 2022 Credit: Getty 'Truth prevails' says Calum Best as he breaks silence after being CLEARED of sexually assaulting Brit at Lineker’s clubJulie Appleby | KFF Health News Unauthorized switching of Affordable Care Act plans appears to have tapered off in recent weeks based on an almost one-third drop in casework associated with consumer complaints, say federal regulators . The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which oversees the ACA, credits steps taken to thwart enrollment and switching problems that triggered more than 274,000 complaints this year through August. Now, the annual ACA open enrollment period that began Nov. 1 poses a real-world test: Will the changes curb fraud by rogue agents or brokerages without unduly slowing the process of enrolling or reducing the total number of sign-ups for 2025 coverage? “They really have this tightrope to walk,” said Sabrina Corlette, co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University. “The more you tighten it up to prevent fraud, the more barriers there are that could inhibit enrollment among those who need the coverage.” CMS said in July that some types of policy changes — those in which the agent is not “affiliated” with the existing plan — will face more requirements, such as a three-way call with the consumer, broker, and a healthcare.gov call center representative. In August, the agency barred two of about a dozen private sector online-enrollment platforms from connecting with healthcare.gov over concerns related to improper switching. And CMS has suspended 850 agents suspected of being involved in unauthorized plan-switching from accessing the ACA marketplace. Still, the clampdown could add complexity to enrollment and slow the process. For example, a consumer might have to wait in a queue for a three-way call, or scramble to find a new agent because the one they previously worked with had been suspended. Given that phone lines with healthcare.gov staff already get busy — especially during mid-December — agents and policy analysts advise consumers not to dally this year. “Hit the ground running,” said Ronnell Nolan, president and CEO of Health Agents for America, a professional organization for brokers. Meanwhile, reports are emerging that some rogue entities are already figuring out workarounds that could undermine some of the anti-fraud protections CMS put in place, Nolan said. “Bottom line is: Fraud and abuse is still happening,” Nolan said. Brokers assist the majority of people actively enrolling in ACA plans and are paid a monthly commission by insurers for their efforts. Consumers can compare plans or enroll themselves online through federal or state marketplace websites. They can also seek help from people called assisters or navigators — certified helpers who are not paid commissions. Under a “find local help” button on the federal and state ACA websites , consumers can search for nearby brokers or navigators. CMS says it has “ramped up support operations” at its healthcare.gov marketplace call centers, which are open 24/7, in anticipation of increased demand for three-way calls, and it expects “minimal wait times,” said Jeff Wu, deputy director for policy of the CMS Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight. Wu said those three-way calls are necessary only when an agent or a broker not already associated with a consumer’s enrollment wants to change that consumer’s enrollment or end that consumer’s coverage. It does not apply to people seeking coverage for the first time. Organizations paid by the government to offer navigator services have a dedicated phone line to the federal marketplace, and callers are not currently experiencing long waits, said Xonjenese Jacobs, director of Florida Covering Kids & Families, a program based at the University of South Florida that coordinates enrollment across the state through its Covering Florida navigator program. Navigators can assist with the three-way calls if a consumer’s situation requires it. “Because we have our quick line in, there’s no increased wait time,” Jacobs said. The problem of unauthorized switches has been around for a while but took off during last year’s open enrollment season. Brokers generally blamed much of the problem on the ease with which rogue agents can access ACA information in the federal marketplace, needing only a person’s name, date of birth, and state of residence. Though federal regulators have worked to tighten that access with the three-way call requirement, they stopped short of instituting what some agent groups say is needed: two-factor authentication, which could involve a code accessed by a consumer through a smartphone. Unauthorized switches can lead to a host of problems for consumers, from higher deductibles to landing in new networks that do not include their preferred physicians or hospitals. Some people have received tax bills when unauthorized policies came with premium credits for which they did not qualify. Unauthorized switches posed a political liability for the Biden administration, a blemish on two years of record ACA enrollment. The practice drew criticism from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle; Democrats demanded more oversight and punishment of rogue agents, while Republicans said fraud attempts were fueled by Biden administration moves that allowed for more generous premium subsidies and special enrollment periods. The fate of those enhanced subsidies, which are set to expire, will be decided by Congress next year as the Trump administration takes power. But the premiums and subsidies that come with 2025 plans that people are enrolling in now will remain in effect for the entire year. The actions taken this year to thwart the unauthorized enrollments apply to the federal marketplace, used by 31 states . The remaining states and the District of Columbia run their own websites, with many having in place additional layers of security. Related Articles Health | Feds suspend ACA marketplace access to companies accused of falsely promising ‘cash cards’ Health | Avon Lake doctor says her direct primary care practice Two Eleven Health like having a doctor in the family Health | More foods are making us sick: What to know as foodborne outbreaks hit Health | Firelands Physician Group vascular surgeons achieve milestone in stroke prevention Health | Which health insurance plan may be right for you? For its part, CMS says its efforts are working, pointing to the 30% drop in complaint casework. The agency also noted a 90% drop in the number of times an agent’s name was replaced by another’s, which it says indicates that it is tougher for rival agents to steal clients to gain the monthly commissions that insurers pay. Still, the move to suspend 850 agents has drawn pushback from agent groups that initially brought the problem to federal regulators’ attention. They say some of those accused were suspended before getting a chance to respond to the allegations. “There will be a certain number of agents and brokers who are going to be suspended without due process,” said Nolan, with the health agents’ group. She said that it has called for increased protections against unauthorized switching and that two-factor authentication, like that used in some state marketplaces or in the financial sector, would be more effective than what’s been done. “We now have to jump through so many hoops that I’m not sure we’re going to survive,” she said of agents in general. “They are just throwing things against the wall to see what sticks when they could just do two-factor.” The agency did not respond to questions asking for details about how the 850 agents suspended since July were selected, the states where they were located, or how many had their suspensions reversed after supplying additional information.
Following the formalities, guests were treated to a lavish banquet featuring a selection of Chinese delicacies and fine wines. Amidst the clinking of glasses and lively conversations, new connections were forged, and partnerships strengthened, setting the stage for a future of collaboration and growth.
Anti-fraud efforts meet real-world test during ACA enrollment periodTopone Exchange: 1000x Leverage and Free Trading, All at the Fingertips 12-06-2024 07:26 PM CET | Business, Economy, Finances, Banking & Insurance Press release from: Getnews / PR Agency: LianPR Topone [ https://top.one/en-US ] exchange is a platform dedicated to providing users with a comprehensive and innovative digital currency trading experience. Since its establishment in 2023, Topone has continuously expanded its services and markets. It now holds a U.S.MSB license, ensuring the security of user funds and compliance in transactions. Image: https://www.getnews.info/uploads/3c54500c84fea4215ad9e95addde60cb.jpg Here are three main features of Topone [ https://top.one/en-US]: Main Features of Topone 1. 60% Self-Commission for New Users - Topone offers a 60% self-commission rebate for new users upon registration. This policy aims to attract more users to the platform and enhance trading activity, thereby increasing overall trading volume. 2. Leverage Up to 1000x - To meet the diverse needs of investors, Topone provides trading options with leverage of up to 1000x. This allows users to control larger trading positions with smaller capital investments, potentially amplifying profits, but it also comes with corresponding significant risks. 3. CEX with DEX-like Freedom - Centralized exchanges (CEX) are increasingly aligning with decentralized exchanges (DEX), and Topone offers a trading experience that emphasizes freedom. Users can enjoy high liquidity and a convenient trading interface while maintaining complete control over their assets, making trading more flexible and autonomous. 4. 1000x Leverage with Zero Trading Fees: Traders can open positions with up to 1000x leverage, allowing for significant potential gains without incurring trading fees, making it an attractive option for high-risk strategies. 5. First Exchange to Support Contract Listings: Topone is pioneering in contract listing various trending tokens, providing users with the opportunity to trade a diverse range of assets in the rapidly evolving cryptocurrency market. Security Assurance and Regulatory Compliance Topone has obtained a U.S. MSB license, reflecting its commitment to compliance and security. The platform implements multiple security measures, including cold storage of assets and two-factor authentication, to safeguard user assets. Additionally, Topone actively embraces regulation and is dedicated to acquiring more legal licenses to enhance user trust. Future Vision Topone's future development vision includes: Supporting more enjoyable Trading: Introducing more innovative features and products to enhance the enjoyment of trading for users. Continuous Innovation: Constantly optimizing platform functions and introducing new technologies to improve user experience. Expanding International Business: The focus of our international business expansion is to extend services into emerging markets, particularly in regions experiencing rapid economic growth, such as Africa and Southeast Asia. This approach aims to tap into new consumer bases and leverage the potential of these dynamic markets. Focusing on User Asset Security: Prioritizing the safety of user assets by ensuring all transaction and deposit/withdrawal processes are transparent and secure. With its unique advantages and strong team background, Topone strives to stand out in the competitive cryptocurrency market by providing high-quality, secure, and efficient trading services to global users. Find Topone on: Website: www.top.one [ http://www.top.one/ ] Twitter: https://x.com/TopOne_Exchange Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@TopOneGlobal Telegram: https://t.me/ToponeGlobal_Official Disclaimer: This press release may contain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements describe future expectations, plans, results, or strategies (including product offerings, regulatory plans and business plans) and may change without notice. You are cautioned that such statements are subject to a multitude of risks and uncertainties that could cause future circumstances, events, or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements, including the risks that actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Media Contact Company Name: Topone Contact Person: Lucie Email: Send Email [ http://www.universalpressrelease.com/?pr=topone-exchange-1000x-leverage-and-free-trading-all-at-the-fingertips ] State: Dubai Country: United Arab Emirates Website: http://www.top.one This release was published on openPR.
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