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Exclusive Q&A with Sujit Unni, Chief Technology Officer at Paysafe

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How important are payment methods and speed of payment processing important for customer experience in online sports betting?

We talked with Sujit Unni, Chief Technology Officer at Paysafe, which had conducted a survey among US punters. He provided insightful and detailed answers on this and several other questions.

Read on for some fascinating perspectives on the past, present and future of the payment process and its role in online sports betting.

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Q. Let’s start with the recent survey that Paysafe conducted among US sports bettors. What are the key takeaways from the survey?

A. Here are some of the conclusions we came to after surveying sports bettors in eight regulated US states:

Available payment methods influence players’ decision to use a brand: To fully capitalize on the growing opportunity of online sports betting, sportsbook operators should strongly focus on the player experience at the checkout. The payment methods that are available and the security of said methods are critical for players when it comes to evaluating which brand they choose to place their bets with.

Transaction security factors highly into choice of sportsbook: When asked to identify which criterion was most important when depositing funds with a sports-betting brand, bettors said the security of the transaction was more important than any other characteristic.

Easy and fast payments are critical: Just as important to players is the speed and ease with which they receive their winnings when they wish to cash out. According to four fifths (79%) of US sports bettors we surveyed, they have a negative impression of the sportsbook when their expectations related to cash out speeds aren’t met. This can result in the sportsbook taking a large reputation hit. A poor reputation spreads among players and can result in a significant brake on its growth.

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The online sportsbooks themselves must be fast and efficient: It’s important to make sure the sportsbook’s payment platform is moving quickly and efficiently. The easier it is for a player to access payouts, the more likely they will be to continue using the platform. Those who adapt to these demands will position themselves well for significant growth.

Q. Everybody talks about the speed of payments. How does speed factor into the mobile process as a whole, and how does it contribute to the overall success of an online business, especially an iGaming business?

 

A. iGaming is changing more rapidly right now than ever before. Mobile’s role in this evolution is huge, given apps’ potential for speed and the strong relationship we’re able to build with end-users: We’re right there, in their pockets, whenever they pick up their phone.

But proximity alone is not enough. End-users will grow bored or burnt out if their experiences are slow, or if we’re not constantly offering new experiences and improving what’s already available.

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Increasing the speed of our processes and the user experience is critical in that every second of load time anywhere within the app literally costs every company money, especially in iGaming, which is less of a considered purchase than traditional mobile shopping or eCommerce. iGaming customers are making fluid, real-time decisions; the more time they have to wait to get to the next step, the less patient they become and the more likely they are to drop off.

Speed is a function of many factors, and there are a number of processes that power the payments experience. We work with mobile DevOps platform Bitrise to increase the speed of all of the mobile processes that power the user experiences leading up to and including payments, as well as the behind-the-scenes operational processes that influence our ability to release updates to the app stores more frequently and faster.

The payments part of the mobile process is a particularly expensive place to be slow. Out-pacing competitors in that process is what’s creating the winners in this space.

Q. What are the ways by which Paysafe tries to accelerate its mobile processes and e-payments?

A. If you look at it from a very high level, the two primary ways we accelerate our processes and e-payments are through having the best talent and technology.

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We stay competitive on the talent side by attracting and – just as importantly –

retaining the best people in the world in this space. We have been able to build on their expertise to constantly improve the speed at which we deliver value for merchants and consumers alike.

When you are investing in this level of talent, it’s important that you are not wasting their skills on things like troubleshooting, waiting around hours to test builds, or doing manual fixes to problems that could be automated.  So, on the technology side, our mobile engineering teams use Bitrise to test all new code, reduce build times from hours to minutes, identify issues that might interfere with the user experience, and so on, before submitting releases to the app stores.

Our goal is to always do everything as fast as possible, without sacrificing our standards of quality and security.

Q. It looks like the ‘slow and steady’ will not win the races anymore. But could the focus on speed–especially in payment processing–be detrimental to the fraud-prevention measures?

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A. Building on my last answer, it’s imperative to not sacrifice security to save time. I will say that one of the upsides of investing in technology like Bitrise is that it allows us to get the best of both worlds: Speed and security. In our mobile engineering processes, for example, Bitrise allows us to automatically run a number of security tests and checks that were previously slow, manual labour. Now they take up less time, are more consistently executed, and actually free up the team to work on innovations for our merchants and consumers. That’s not to say that there aren’t manual checks involved anymore, but those are fewer and more meaningful.

Q. Could you talk about the recent innovations that Paysafe brought to the payments ecosystem?

A. Given the nature of our business we are constantly evolving our value proposition and anchor around our philosophy of customer outcomes. We tend to think of innovation around key pillars including:

  1. Evolving our business to be a true cloud-based platform that supports multi-sided markets. This allows existing customers and merchants to access new features and stay engaged with our platform. The recent introduction of Openbucks, a product that allows store gift cards to be used at point of sale at other merchants in the Paysafe network, benefits customers who can now use restricted gift cards across a wider merchant base, and allows our merchants to accept a non-traditional payment method.
  1. Building out hybrid-business models with the wider finance eco-system through the launch of capabilities like pop-up banking with traditional banks like TSB. While serving as a revenue stream, this also allows banks like TSB to optimize their branch footprint and enables customers to access simple transactions using the Paysafe network.

We have also spearheaded a suite of embedded finance offerings with partners like Amazon and Google. Our offerings of cash to digital, digital wallets and processor agnostic payment methods makes us one of the few firms that can offer industry specific open loop and closed loop solutions.

Q. Allow me now to bring a customer perspective. What benefits do companies, especially those in the iGaming sector, gain from integrating the accelerated payment solutions of Paysafe?

A. Given our “born in gaming” origins, we believe we are one of the few payment platforms in the market that has a full suite of solutions to support both store based and online operators. This means our combination of brick and mortar, wallet, and cash solutions allow customers to seamlessly transact and play across the in-store and online offerings of our gaming merchants.

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Solutions like our single integration API give our gaming merchants access to payment processing platforms that are accessible in multiple geographies through different processors, a host of local payment methods and a global network of banks. This in effect improves the customer experience and reduces revenue losses from declined transactions.

Effective risk and fraud management is a key differentiator, given the deep expertise and geographical coverage we provide the industry. Our investment in our risk and fraud infrastructure protects both merchants and customers while ensuring a seamless payments experience.

Q. The new technologies in the payment space have blurred the boundaries of national currencies to an extent. What are your thoughts on the influence of the laws and regulations of different countries on the growth of payment processes, especially for a highly regulated industry like iGaming?

A. The world is definitely a smaller place from a payments perspective today than it was five or six years back, largely enabled by the rapid adoption of disruptive technologies like blockchain, API driven ecosystems, and standardization of messaging services.

Like any financial service, payments are heavily influenced by regulation – and fortunately in a good way for the most part. Governments have been quick at recognizing how critical a scalable and democratized payments infrastructure is to drive economic growth and, as a result, we see regulation being enacted in in many markets. This is helping build out global payment ecosystems – for instance, UPI in India, Open Banking in Europe, or FedNow in the US. As this ecosystem continues to evolve, we see the emergence of trends like pay by bank and local payment methods continuing to grab market share from the card schemes, which will benefit both consumers and merchants.

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iGaming is still in its infancy and, in certain markets like the US, can ride this wave of an open payments ecosystem to provide a far superior experience to its customers. Regulation in gaming is still evolving and it will look to more mature markets in Europe for insight as it starts to put in place legislation for the industry. Paysafe is leveraging its established presence in the EU to bring insight and product offerings to the US market that allow our gaming partners to not only grow their business in line with established legislation but also to build and offer products that consider future legislation that we think could be enacted.

Q. What is your take on the growth of mobile payments over the last few years?

A. Smartphones are a part of our daily lives today and are to a large degree considered indispensable. In the few years leading up to the pandemic, we were already seeing steady growth in mobile payments.  The onset of the pandemic accelerated that growth by as much as 75% in some segments.

Some of the key drivers are:

The influence of digital transformation: As industry sectors, particularly financial services, have increasingly been disrupted and transformed, the mobile phone has emerged as an important customer engagement channel. As customer behavior matured to using mobile phones as a transaction medium, the need to support payments drove adoption.

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The rise of emerging digital economies: The other big influence was the rise of emerging economies. India, for example, had a head start in becoming a digital economy with its population armed with mobile phones before they even had access to desktop computers. Countries like India that are supported by digital friendly government regulations, have a large unbanked population and an industry that’s very willing to provide payment and banking solutions, witnessed exponential growth in mobile payments.

Apps, wallets, and subscription services: As the number of apps hosted on Apple and Android platforms grew, people are increasingly using mobile phones to purchase a range of services, from buying tickets to ordering rides and subscription services. This adoption led to the creation of a full payment supportive ecosystem, including wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay, and our own Skrill digital wallet, among others) and emerging payments volumes driven by a growing library of subscription services.

Payments continue to become easy and reliable:  Having a credit or a debit card used to be the only way to make a payment on a mobile phone. However, payments have evolved to keep up with the emerging digital landscape. Today beyond these traditional payment methods, customers can pay with their bank accounts, cash, and by using over 200 local payment methods specific to geographies –which has democratized payments. That coupled with regulation to promote open banking systems and reliable real-time payments as well as faster payment infrastructure has helped drive the surge of mobile payments.

Increasingly secure and safe transactions:  Wherever there is a financial transaction there is also the risk of fraud. Because of this, mobile phones have evolved to continually make transactions both convenient and safe. Whether it’s by using face ID, biometrics or contactless payments, the ability of the manufacturers to deliver secure payments was critical in driving the wider adoption of mobile payments.

Q. Let’s conclude with something about the future. Could you reveal some of the changes that you foresee coming in the mobile space? What about the payments sector?

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A. With app store operators seeing pressure from governments around the world to loosen their grips on the mobile ecosystem – especially in terms of payments – we expect to see some massive changes soon.

Alternative app stores that allow more app choices for end-users and more payment processing choices for app store publishers are benefitting both merchants and consumers.

Additionally, we expect the consumer’s need for speed to increase even further, widening the divide between those businesses that can deliver on this expectation and those that can’t.

We’re confident that, between the talent of our team and partners like Bitrise, we’ll land on the right side of that divide.

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HIPTHER Community Voices: Interview with Attorney-at-law and founder at Kancelaria Adwokacka Dr. Justyna Grusza-Głębicka

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With over a decade of experience in legal proceedings and a focus on gambling regulation and anti-money laundering compliance, Dr. Justyna Grusza-Głębicka is a leading voice in navigating the legal complexities of the gambling sector. In this interview, she shares her insights on the effectiveness of current safe gambling campaigns, the growing influence of social media in promoting illegal gambling, and the urgent need for regulatory reform in Poland.

 

Do you believe current awareness campaigns about safe gambling are working? What more should be done to educate players?

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I do not have detailed analysis or data to confirm whether they are truly effective. However, the problem still exists. First of all, I am contacted as a lawyer by players who feel deceived by gambling operators. Players report violations regarding responsible gambling (for example, offering gambling to individuals who show clear signs of addiction) or in the area of AML (disregarding the fact that someone is gambling from another EU country when the operator does not hold a license there). Moreover, the media reports numerous cases involving the exposure of children to gambling – for example, by placing slot machine like devices in amusement parks or introducing gambling like mechanisms into video games accessible to minors. These violations are numerous, so clearly more can be done. To better educate players, influencers and social media platforms should be involved in the campaigns. These are currently the most effective tools for reaching people.

 

What are some common ways illegal gambling sites reach Polish players today? Are social media platforms a big part of the problem?

Social media plays a significant role. Influencers are actively involved in promoting illegal gambling and are very effective, especially as role models for younger generations. The live streams they conduct are difficult for enforcement authorities to monitor, and links to illegal casinos or poker sites are often shared in the comment sections during those streams. Currently, there is a trend of creating closed groups on platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, or Signal, where players are encouraged to participate in illegal gambling and persuaded of its attractiveness. Big Tech companies like Google and Facebook are not helping in the fight against illegal gambling, as they allow such operators to advertise and be promoted through SEO.

 

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Is the current legal system strong enough to go after these middlemen, or does it need updating too?

It is very difficult to prosecute gambling operators that offer services in Poland but are based abroad due to international legal obstacles. However, the current legal system does include tools for prosecuting intermediaries. Article 110a of the Fiscal Penal Code states that anyone who advertises gambling games in violation of the law or benefits from such advertising is subject to a fine. Additionally, under the Penal Code, there is a provision for aiding and abetting a prohibited act. Organizing gambling games without the required license is a criminal offense, and in such cases, the penalty for aiding and abetting is the same as for the principal offender. Aiding can be attributed to virtually anyone who supports the perpetrator in committing the offense.

 

Do you think most Polish players know whether a site is legal or not? How can they check this easily?

Research shows that only 38% of players know how to identify legal gambling websites. The legality of a gambling operator or website can be verified on the official government website: podatki.gov.pl or in the Register of Domains Used to Offer Gambling Games in Violation of the Law. However, the data indicates that it’s not that straightforward, as more than half of the players lack this knowledge.

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What advice would you give to a player who has been scammed by an unlicensed online casino? Is there any legal step they can take?

First, I would advise reporting the crime to the authorities, even at the risk of personal liability, as this may be mitigated. In Poland, participating in foreign (unlicensed) gambling is punishable, so players also bear legal responsibility. Second, players can send payment demands to the entities responsible for organizing the illegal gambling, including payment institutions, although this approach may be ineffective. Under civil law, players are only protected when it comes to claims arising from legal gambling. Criminal proceedings are generally a better path. It’s also possible to seek protection through courts within the European Union.

 

And finally—do you think Poland is heading in the right direction when it comes to regulating online gambling? What are realistic changes you hope to see in gambling laws in the next year or two?

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The last amendment to the Gambling Act was in 2016, so quite a bit of time has passed, and the world of modern technology is advancing rapidly. It is definitely time for change.

Recently, there has been an active debate on the future of gambling regulation in Poland – both within the industry and at the governmental level. A meeting of the Parliamentary Team for Free Market was organized under the topic: Illegal gambling in Poland – Diagnosis of problems in enforcement and proposed solutions, which I had the pleasure of attending. At the end of 2024, a new department dedicated to the gambling sector was also established. These may be signs of coming change.

The most visible demands include the liberalization of online casinos, which are currently under a state monopoly, and a shift from turnover tax to GGR. I believe that liberalizing the online casino market is a realistic development. Poland is struggling with a large grey market in gambling, and experiences from other EU countries show that allowing previously unlicensed operators to operate legally yields positive outcomes in this area.

Focusing on less headline-grabbing reforms, I would point to the need for improving the process through which the Ministry of Finance determines whether a particular game qualifies as gambling, currently, this process is quite costly. In general, facilitating better communication between the industry and the regulator would help avoid many misunderstandings caused by unclear legal provisions.

The post HIPTHER Community Voices: Interview with Attorney-at-law and founder at Kancelaria Adwokacka Dr. Justyna Grusza-Głębicka appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.

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Retention, Recognition & Real Results: How NuxGame Powers the Future of iGaming

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At this year’s MARE BALTICUM Gaming & TECH Summit in Vilnius, NuxGame joins as the official TECH Trends, Innovation & Marketing Stage Sponsor – bringing with them not just cutting-edge technology, but a fully integrated platform built to help operators grow smarter, engage deeper, and stay ahead in a fast-evolving industry.

We caught up with Denis Kosinsky, Chief Operating Officer at NuxGame, to talk about personalized retention, real-world tech upgrades, and how the company is redefining success in a crowded marketplace.

 

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Denis, thank you for joining us! Can you start by introducing yourself and telling us more about your role at NuxGame and the company’s core mission?

Thank you great to be here. I’m Denis Kosinsky, COO at NuxGame. My job in this game is to make sure the product doesn’t just work — it wins. That means constantly solving problems for operators, especially in fast-moving and emerging markets, and building solutions that are not only flexible but built to adapt to whatever the iGaming world throws at us.

At NuxGame, we power the engines behind some of the most competitive casino and betting brands worldwide. We partner with 140+ game providers across dozens of markets, delivering a modular platform that supports everything from game aggregation and payment systems to CRM and bonus engines. I work across product and operations to make sure our partners can launch fast, grow sustainably, and offer the kinds of player experiences that drive real retention not just short-term engagement.
In today’s industry, it’s not enough to be functional — you have to be responsive, scalable, and smart. Our mission at NuxGame is to give operators a platform that evolves with them — whether they need a turnkey launch or custom integrations — and to act as a real partner, not just a tech vendor. Because the way we see it, if our clients win, we win.

 

Retention is one of the hottest topics in iGaming right now. How can modern operators plan for a successful retention-first strategy?

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Acquisition gets the headlines, but retention builds the business. In today’s iGaming landscape, where player acquisition costs are rising, a retention-first strategy is not optional — it’s essential.
At NuxGame, we equip operators with tools that drive sustained engagement: dynamic segmentation, real-time reward engines, personalized bonuses, and gamification systems that go beyond basic loyalty points. Operators using our tier-based achievements and contextual campaigns have reported up to 22% higher 30-day retention and 12% increases in average revenue per user (ARPU). Our platform also supports real-time feedback loops, so operators can adapt instantly to player behavior.
Retention starts with understanding the player — what they want, when they want it, and how they engage. It requires more than just reactivations; it’s about creating an ecosystem where players feel progression, personalization, and value. At NuxGame, we don’t just give operators the tools — we help them build the strategy, map the journeys, and monitor the data to retain players longer and increase lifetime value.

 

NuxGame has recently upgraded its foundation with technologies like Vue 3 and Kubernetes. How do these improvements translate into better day-to-day performance and results for casino operators?

 Technology upgrades aren’t just backend improvements — they directly affect player satisfaction and operator results. Speed, stability, and scalability are what keep users engaged and operations running profitably.
 By moving to Vue 3, NuxGame delivers a faster, smoother front-end experience with better responsiveness across devices — crucial for mobile-first markets. On the backend, Kubernetes allows us to scale platform services dynamically, ensuring high uptime, faster deployments, and better fault isolation. Operators benefit from reduced latency, quicker updates, and minimal downtime — especially during high-traffic events or promotional pushes. These upgrades aren’t just technical milestones — they’re business enablers. Operators using our upgraded stack report improvements in player session length, bounce rates, and overall platform stability. It gives them the infrastructure to support growth, launch faster, and deliver a modern user experience that meets rising player expectations. At NuxGame, we build tech that directly improves performance where it matters: in daily operations and long-term retention.

 

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From Pronto Paga to crypto, payment flexibility seems to be a major focus. How is NuxGame adapting to global demand for diverse, seamless payment options, and what kind of impact does this have on player satisfaction and market reach?

Payment flexibility is no longer a bonus — it’s a necessity. Players expect to deposit and withdraw using the method they trust, whether that’s a local e-wallet like Pronto Paga or a decentralized crypto wallet.
 At NuxGame, we’ve built a modular payment infrastructure that supports over 250+ global payment methods, including fiat gateways, local bank systems, crypto, and Web3 wallets. We partner with PSPs and KYC providers across different jurisdictions to ensure fast, secure, and compliant transactions. This flexibility directly impacts conversion rates — platforms offering localized and crypto payments report up to 35% higher deposit completion rates and a significant reduction in churn during onboarding and cashout.
 It’s not just about supporting more payment methods — it’s about adapting to player expectations in every region. Whether it’s high-growth Latin American markets with strong demand for local cash-based systems or Gen Z users entering through USDT wallets, our goal is to give operators the tools to match payment preferences with minimal friction. This increases trust, shortens time-to-play, and opens the door to new markets.

 

Trust is crucial in this industry. What does your recent GLI-19 certification and Jumio integration mean for operators looking for both compliance and performance?

Operators primarily want peace of mind — that’s a fact. GLI-19 certification shows that our platform is tested, secure, and ready to meet regulatory demands across multiple jurisdictions. But compliance alone isn’t enough. That’s why we’ve integrated Jumio, with the aim of making KYC faster, safer, and easier for both players and operators. This kind of trust is similar to a good Wi-Fi: you don’t notice it when it’s working, but everything runs better because of it. If the signal’s strong, you stop checking it. At NuxGame, trust is built-in, so operators can move forward without second-guessing.

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Let’s talk about gamification. From custom missions to tournaments and loyalty programs, how are these tools reshaping the player experience and operator revenue models?

Gamification is paramount: it transforms activity into habit. It’s the difference between a one-time visit and a reason to come back tomorrow. Instead of players dipping in and out, they start setting goals (and reaching them). This upgrade brings major advantages to operators. Players who feel progress are more likely to stay longer, get a taste for new content, and spend more over time. Such features as missions, loyalty programs, and dynamic campaigns can guide players naturally without pressure. And such tools as our Achievements feature can make that experience even more supportive, especially during onboarding. When players feel seen and rewarded, they engage more — and that leads to higher earnings. Gamification isn’t decoration anymore. It’s how serious operators make gameplay a business strategy.

 

NuxGame is also taking a practical approach to blockchain. Can you share an example of how Web3 or token-based systems are already improving transparency, fairness, or loyalty in your platform?

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Blockchain can help with three big things: fairness, clarity, and loyalty. We’ve already built tools that let operators offer provably fair games, so players can see for themselves that the results are legit. On the loyalty side, we’re working with token-based rewards that don’t just vanish like typical points. Players can use them later, and that keeps them engaged. It’s basically giving players something they own, not simply borrow. We are not here to make Web3 sound fancy: we are here to use it where it makes your iGaming service stronger and keeps players happy. Simple as that.

 

You’re enjoying some major recognition in the industry’s global Awards scene – including winning “Best Platform Provider 2025” at the SiGMA Eurasia Awards and being shortlisted in multiple key categories at our Baltic & Scandinavian Gaming Awards, as well as the AffPapa iGaming Awards. What do these milestones say about where NuxGame is headed next?

Awards are great to receive, but receiving them is not where our focus lies. Awards are proof that our platform is bringing real results for operators. Winning “Best Platform Provider” at SiGMA Eurasia and being shortlisted across several major awards tells us one thing: the work we’ve been doing is being noticed. It means that software is trusted, and we’re moving in the right direction. But we’re only picking up speed. These turning points motivate us to go further, and we’re focused on building even more impactful solutions. Recognition tells us we’re on the right path, but the future is about staying useful, flexible, and fully focused on what operators need next.

Meet Denis Kosinsky and the NuxGame team at the MARE BALTICUM Gaming & TECH Summit 2025 on 27–28 May in Vilnius.

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🔗 Register now to explore tech innovation, platform excellence, and the future of retention-first iGaming.

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Modern Oracles & Smart Payments: Finrax’s Vision for Blockchain, AI & Beyond

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Finrax steps into the spotlight as the official Lanyards Sponsor at HIPTHER’s MARE BALTICUM Gaming & TECH Summit 2025 in Vilnius, bringing with them a next-gen crypto payment gateway and a bold vision that extends far beyond payments.

We sat down with Konstantinas Balakinas, CEO of Finrax, to discuss the future of AI in finance, the real-world potential of blockchain beyond the buzzwords, and how Finrax plans to bridge fintech innovation with eCommerce and beyond.

 

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Konstantinas, thank you for joining us! Can you please introduce yourself to our readers, and share more about your professional background and role in Finrax?

Thank you — it’s a pleasure to be part of this conversation, especially as Finrax steps into a more visible role at this year’s summit.

I’ve been working in the financial industry since 1999, mostly in regulated environments. The bulk of my career has been in consumer finance, where I had the chance to grow several companies from the ground up and eventually guide one through the process of securing a specialized bank license. That experience taught me a lot about how to build resilient financial infrastructure — and how to adapt when the rules, tools, and expectations shift.

My interest in AI came later. I had a first-hand look at its practical impact while working with a Lithuanian EMI that was really leaning into AI-driven operations. That sparked something — and eventually led me to study AI for Business Analytics at Turing College, where I’m currently sharpening both technical and strategic understanding of how AI can reshape financial services.

At Finrax, I serve as CEO and Chair of the Management Board in its Lithuanian entity. Our mission goes beyond crypto payments — we’re focused on building real utility for digital assets in a way that businesses can trust and adopt without friction.

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How do you see today’s AI solutions? Can they be truly predictive, like “modern oracles”, or are we still in the realm of reactive technology?

AI today is generative AI — especially large language models (LLMs), which have made impressive progress in producing human-like text and anticipating user intent. So in a technical sense, yes — these systems are predictive, but not in the way many assume. What they predict is not the future itself, but the next statistically likely word or phrase based on patterns learned from massive datasets. That creates the appearance of intelligence, but not true comprehension.

This distinction is essential. As Carl Bergstrom and Jevin West explain in The Bullshit Machines, LLMs can sound coherent and authoritative while having no actual grasp of truth. They generate content that feels convincing, regardless of whether it’s accurate or logically sound. That’s not a flaw — it’s how they’re designed.

One should approach these tools with both optimism and caution. Today’s AI still sits within the boundaries of Artificial Narrow Intelligence — excellent at specific tasks like pattern recognition, anomaly detection, and content generation, but still a long way from Artificial General Intelligence, which would reason and adapt like a human across any domain. And Artificial Superintelligence, capable of recursive self-improvement and independent thought, remains firmly theoretical.

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So, while we admire the capabilities of today’s generative AI, we don’t mistake fluency for understanding. These are powerful tools — but not oracles. The real challenge is using them responsibly and building systems around them that make sense in the real world.

 

What are some practical ways AI is and could be integrated into Finrax’s crypto payment platform? Are there use cases you’re already exploring or see as promising?

I see three core domains where AI tools offer real practical value — not just for Finrax, but for any fintech building towards efficiency, scale, and regulatory clarity.

The first is internal productivity. AI works well as a personal assistant for employees — helping with everything from drafting emails to summarizing documents or generating code. Off-the-shelf tools like ChatGPT are already useful for this, but their impact depends heavily on how well people know how to prompt them. That’s why custom GPTs are especially promising: they allow us to build tailored assistants with topic-specific knowledge and clear task guidance. For instance, an onboarding specialist might use one to walk through a compliant KYC checklist, while a developer could use another to generate smart contract boilerplate or debug Python scripts.

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The second domain is AI agents — and this space is moving fast. These systems handle automated, rule-based workflows, often collaborating with other agents to move tasks along. They’re more constrained than LLMs, but more reliable when used within predefined rules. For a crypto payment platform like ours, agents could eventually assist in payment routing, compliance alerts, or even technical monitoring — anything repetitive that benefits from low-latency automation.

The third area is pattern recognition, where AI’s value is most proven. We see strong potential in using it to support fraud detection and ML/TF screening — not to replace human oversight, but to enhance it. Spotting unusual activity, flagging anomalies, or refining transaction scoring — these are all areas where AI can quietly but meaningfully improve risk management.

That said, we’re also realistic about the limits. With the EU AI Act now on the horizon, every integration has to pass the test of explainability, compliance, and accountability. Any system we deploy will need a clear inventory, GDPR alignment, risk assessment, and, in some cases, staff training. We’re already looking into how these rules will apply — especially as we explore the potential of agent-based systems.

So yes, we’re enthusiastic — but we’re moving deliberately. We’re not building AI from scratch, but we are actively exploring how to apply it in meaningful ways — both internally and within our services. Our business development team is already using tools like ChatGPT in their day-to-day work, and we see real gains in productivity and clarity. That’s the direction we’re leaning into: using AI where it helps people do their jobs better, not just to check a box.

 

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Finrax has built a strong reputation for reliability and speed – processing crypto payments in under a minute. What differentiates your platform from other solutions currently available on the market?

Reliability is the real star here. Speed is expected in blockchain-based systems — but combining that speed with stability, predictability, and regulatory clarity is a much harder problem to solve. That’s exactly where Finrax delivers.

We’ve built a platform that doesn’t just move fast — it does so in a way businesses can actually depend on. We offer fixed-rate settlements to remove volatility, giving partners certainty about what they’ll receive. That’s especially important in high-volume environments, where financial precision matters just as much as transaction speed.

Compliance is also baked in. Every transaction goes through full AML/CTF screening, and our onboarding and monitoring standards are designed to meet the expectations of regulated businesses. That’s not a side feature — it’s part of our foundation.

And while many of our clients have international operations, we’re careful to operate only where we’re permitted to do so. With MiCA coming into force, we’re preparing to scale responsibly, aligned with the new rulebook.

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So yes, we’re fast — but more importantly, we’re reliable. And in this space, that’s what truly sets us apart.

 

What opportunities do you see in the field of eCommerce for a crypto-first payment provider, and what role could Finrax play in shaping the future of online payments?

Crypto is here to stay — and with that in mind, we’re building the tools to help eCommerce businesses accept crypto as naturally as they would any traditional payment method. Our goal at Finrax is to provide plug-and-play solutions that allow online stores across the EU to accept payments in stablecoins or major cryptocurrencies without having to rethink their entire checkout process.

The opportunity goes beyond retail. We see strong potential in industries like logistics, aviation, luxury, and of course, gaming platforms — areas where cross-border payments, speed, and transparency really matter. That said, everything still depends on how quickly users adopt crypto in their day-to-day transactions.

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What gives us optimism is the direction regulation is moving. With MiCA coming into effect in the EU, we’re finally getting a clear rulebook — and that’s exactly what’s needed to build trust. Once customers know that only licensed, properly regulated providers can offer these services, it changes the perception. It brings structure to the market — and with structure comes wider adoption.

At Finrax, we’re preparing for that shift. We don’t just want to be ready for the future of payments — we want to help shape it in a way that’s both efficient and trusted.

 

As the world becomes increasingly automated, how do you see Finrax maintaining a balance between innovation and user-centric service, especially amidst the fast-evolving tech and regulatory landscapes?

Automation, at its core, is about efficiency — but that doesn’t mean we lose sight of the human side. In fact, I’d argue that smart automation should strengthen customer-centricity, not weaken it.

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At Finrax, we see automation as a way to free up our people to focus on what actually matters — understanding the client’s real needs, solving problems, and making sure the experience feels consistent and supportive across the board. It also helps us align internal processes more clearly, so that we’re not sending mixed messages to clients. That’s often where customer frustration begins — not with the technology, but with the gaps between systems and people.

Another benefit is the ability to understand customers more precisely. With better data and well-designed workflows, we can respond faster and more accurately, without adding friction.

But none of this can come at the expense of trust. As regulations like MiCA, GDPR, and the EU AI Act begin shaping the environment, it’s clear that automation must be explainable, compliant, and ethically sound. For us, innovation isn’t just about what’s possible — it’s about what’s responsible. And we see that as a competitive advantage, not a constraint.

 

You’ll be joining the panel “Beyond the Hype” at MARE BALTICUM, discussing blockchain and AI applications in finance and governance. What are you most looking forward to sharing with the audience –  and what do you hope to take away from the conversation?

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A lot of the hype around AI comes from not really understanding how it works — and I think it’s important to go back to the basics. Most people still assume these systems “know” things. But in reality, large language models are built by training on massive volumes of data — much of it containing human bias, errors, or even outright misinformation. They don’t reason. They predict. They break down language into tokens and map those tokens across hundreds of abstract dimensions — far beyond how we perceive space — then generate output that mimics meaning, even if it’s not grounded in real understanding. But it’s not grounded in fact unless you make it so.

Even the best models will produce an answer to almost anything — even if that answer is fabricated. That’s why we see hallucinations. Unless you know how to prompt properly and critically assess the output, the result might sound confident while being completely off. This is why I always say: at this stage, AI should be seen as an assistant, not an authority. The human must remain in the loop — and at the top.

That said, the future isn’t bleak — it’s exciting, if we use these tools responsibly. One example that stands out to me is what Stripe recently did. They trained an AI model not on words or code, but on tens of billions of payment transactions. The model learned the “language” of money — identifying how payments behave, how fraud patterns look, and what hidden connections exist between different data points. The result? They went from detecting 59% of sophisticated card testing fraud attempts to 97% — almost overnight. That’s not just a technical win — it’s a complete shift in how we think about structured financial data.

So on this panel, I’m hoping to bring two things to the table: first, a grounded reminder that no model is infallible, and second, a practical optimism. AI has the potential to make finance faster, smarter, and safer — but only if we stay thoughtful about how we design, train, and regulate it. Humans should come first — but we don’t need to fear the future if we build it wisely.

 

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Prague Gaming & TECH Summit 2025 (25-26 March)

Meet Konstantinas Balakinas and the Finrax team live at the MARE BALTICUM Gaming & TECH Summit 2025 on 27–28 May in Vilnius.

🔗 Register now to learn more about blockchain-powered finance, crypto innovation, and the real tech shaping tomorrow’s payments.

The post Modern Oracles & Smart Payments: Finrax’s Vision for Blockchain, AI & Beyond appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.

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