Venmo, John Mateer and Oklahoma
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It’s been almost a week since reports surfaced that Oklahoma starting quarterback John Mateer may have been caught gambling via his Venmo account, something he denied earlier this week.
Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer is under scrutiny following alleged screenshots on Venmo with transactions related to sports gambling. Griffin Media's Toby Rowland reports that Matter has "vehemently denied gambling on sports.
When you send or receive money on Venmo, your payments might be visible to anyone, even people who are not connected to you.
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Front Office Sports on MSNCybersecurity Experts Warn Athletes Against Public Venmo Accounts
Venmo “can expose patterns of spending, locations, and relationships.” The post Cybersecurity Experts Warn Athletes Against Public Venmo Accounts appeared first on Front Office Sports.
Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk has admitted that he was under so much pressure involving gambling and fan requests about it that he was forced to change his Venmo. Tkachuk arrived at that decision after fans began sending him messages demanding compensation for lost sports bets.
When you send or receive money on Venmo, your payments might be visible to anyone, even people who are not connected to you.
PayPal and Venmo are introducing new AI-powered scam detection alerts to help users avoid fraud when sending money through their platforms. The new system will alert you when it detects potential scams.
If you're among the many Americans who sell goods online or utilizes third-party platforms such as PayPal, Venmo or Cash App, note that your tax rules are changing. There are a bevy of new tax reporting rules that are being implemented because of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act being passed in July.