Crypto Backing or Trump Pump? Fairshake PAC Claims Primary Victories
Fairshake said six primary victories on Tuesday revealed a “powerful bipartisan mandate” for pro-crypto policies. But other factors appear to have been at play.
Cointelegraph·

Five Republicans and one Democrat won or went to runoffs following primaries in Georgia, Alabama and Kentucky after a crypto-backed PAC and its affiliates spent a combined $20 million on media and ads.
Read full articleFairshake said six primary victories on Tuesday revealed a “powerful bipartisan mandate” for pro-crypto policies. But other factors appear to have been at play.
Fairshake PAC's success in primaries highlights the growing influence of crypto funding in shaping US political landscapes and regulatory policies. The post Fairshake PAC’s $20M investment secures wins in three US primaries appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
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A political action committee aligned with crypto interest groups reported spending more than $4 million in support of Democratic US House candidate Jasmine Clark in Georgia.
Tens of thousands of Democratic voters in Kentucky got messages tailored to their work, their neighborhood and their voting history, tying it to one of a handful of bills David Kloiber plans to file if elected.
The post Quality Technology Services used 30 million gallons of water without payment in Georgia appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. While residents of Fayette County, Georgia were being told to conserve water during a state-declared drought emergency, a massive data center next door was gulping down nearly 30 million gallons of the stuff without a working meter, and without paying a dime. The facility in question belongs to Quality Technology Services, better known as QTS, which is owned by private equity giant Blackstone. The company’s Project Excalibur development consumed an estimated 29 to 30 million gallons of unmetered water over a 15-month construction period. When the county finally caught the issue and ran the numbers, QTS owed a grand total of $147,474 in retroactive charges. That works out to roughly $0.005 per gallon, a rate significantly lower than what local residents pay for their own water. A metering failure during a drought The oversight wasn’t malicious hacking or
The incident highlights the need for robust infrastructure oversight, especially as data centers expand, to prevent resource mismanagement. The post Quality Technology Services used 30 million gallons of water without payment in Georgia appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
IBM used its Red Hat Summit conference that’s taking place this week in Atlanta, Georgia as the location for the launch of Red Hat AI 3.4, a new release of […] The post Red Hat Learns New AI Tricks at Summit 2026 appeared first on AIwire.