The post Ahead Of 2026 Winter Olympics, Stifel Champions Female U.S. Skiers appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. US’s Lauren Macuga competes during the Women’s Super-G event of the Saalbach 2025 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in Hinterglemm on February 6, 2025. AFP via Getty Images Because the United States is the Olympics’ only major nation whose national team does not receive federal funding, sponsorships and endorsements are especially crucial for U.S. Olympic hopefuls as they train for the Games. For the women of the U.S. Ski Team, having investment banking company Stifel in their corner has proven to be indispensable. In 2022, Stifel became the title sponsor of the U.S. Alpine Ski Team, becoming the most significant alpine partnership in U.S. Ski & Snowboard history. The next year, Stifel broadened its support to include the U.S. Cross Country Ski Team, U.S. Freestyle Ski Team and U.S. Freeski Team. Along with its title sponsorship, the brand has signed individual skiers, the majority of whom are women, to Team Stifel to offer more personalized support. Additionally, the Stifel HERoic Cup, which debuted in 2024, is now awarded—along with $50,000—to the woman U.S. Alpine Ski Team athlete with the most World Cup points after the North American stops on the women’s FIS Alpine World Cup tour. These initiatives by Stifel are synergistic with U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s HERoic Initiative, created in 2022 to provide more leadership, opportunities and mentorship for its women athletes. When it comes to alpine circuit, in particular, the majority of events each season are held overseas. However, that is changing; last year, Sun Valley hosted the World Cup Finals for the first time in the U.S. since 2017, and this season, Colorado’s Copper Mountain will serve as a primary alpine World Cup venue for the first time, a major boon to U.S. athletes in an Olympic year. Still, aside from the two Colorado World Cup events… The post Ahead Of 2026 Winter Olympics, Stifel Champions Female U.S. Skiers appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. US’s Lauren Macuga competes during the Women’s Super-G event of the Saalbach 2025 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in Hinterglemm on February 6, 2025. AFP via Getty Images Because the United States is the Olympics’ only major nation whose national team does not receive federal funding, sponsorships and endorsements are especially crucial for U.S. Olympic hopefuls as they train for the Games. For the women of the U.S. Ski Team, having investment banking company Stifel in their corner has proven to be indispensable. In 2022, Stifel became the title sponsor of the U.S. Alpine Ski Team, becoming the most significant alpine partnership in U.S. Ski & Snowboard history. The next year, Stifel broadened its support to include the U.S. Cross Country Ski Team, U.S. Freestyle Ski Team and U.S. Freeski Team. Along with its title sponsorship, the brand has signed individual skiers, the majority of whom are women, to Team Stifel to offer more personalized support. Additionally, the Stifel HERoic Cup, which debuted in 2024, is now awarded—along with $50,000—to the woman U.S. Alpine Ski Team athlete with the most World Cup points after the North American stops on the women’s FIS Alpine World Cup tour. These initiatives by Stifel are synergistic with U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s HERoic Initiative, created in 2022 to provide more leadership, opportunities and mentorship for its women athletes. When it comes to alpine circuit, in particular, the majority of events each season are held overseas. However, that is changing; last year, Sun Valley hosted the World Cup Finals for the first time in the U.S. since 2017, and this season, Colorado’s Copper Mountain will serve as a primary alpine World Cup venue for the first time, a major boon to U.S. athletes in an Olympic year. Still, aside from the two Colorado World Cup events…

Ahead Of 2026 Winter Olympics, Stifel Champions Female U.S. Skiers

2025/10/25 04:05

US’s Lauren Macuga competes during the Women’s Super-G event of the Saalbach 2025 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in Hinterglemm on February 6, 2025.

AFP via Getty Images

Because the United States is the Olympics’ only major nation whose national team does not receive federal funding, sponsorships and endorsements are especially crucial for U.S. Olympic hopefuls as they train for the Games.

For the women of the U.S. Ski Team, having investment banking company Stifel in their corner has proven to be indispensable.

In 2022, Stifel became the title sponsor of the U.S. Alpine Ski Team, becoming the most significant alpine partnership in U.S. Ski & Snowboard history. The next year, Stifel broadened its support to include the U.S. Cross Country Ski Team, U.S. Freestyle Ski Team and U.S. Freeski Team.

Along with its title sponsorship, the brand has signed individual skiers, the majority of whom are women, to Team Stifel to offer more personalized support. Additionally, the Stifel HERoic Cup, which debuted in 2024, is now awarded—along with $50,000—to the woman U.S. Alpine Ski Team athlete with the most World Cup points after the North American stops on the women’s FIS Alpine World Cup tour.

These initiatives by Stifel are synergistic with U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s HERoic Initiative, created in 2022 to provide more leadership, opportunities and mentorship for its women athletes.

When it comes to alpine circuit, in particular, the majority of events each season are held overseas. However, that is changing; last year, Sun Valley hosted the World Cup Finals for the first time in the U.S. since 2017, and this season, Colorado’s Copper Mountain will serve as a primary alpine World Cup venue for the first time, a major boon to U.S. athletes in an Olympic year.

Still, aside from the two Colorado World Cup events this season at Copper and Beaver Creek, the other races this season will be held in Austria, Finland, Canada, Switzerland, France, Italy, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Andorra, Germany, Sweden and Norway.

Athletes need support to travel to all these stops on the World Cup calendar as they aim to earn enough points to qualify for the U.S. Olympic team. Sponsors such as Stifel can help close the gap, and working with world-class athletes, in turn, elevates the company’s own profile.

Stifel Chairman & CEO Ron Kruszewski, whose personal passion for skiing has helped drive Stifel’s commitment to raising the sport’s visibility, said these relationships reflect the same values that drive the firm: performance, perseverance and partnership.

“Through partnerships with Mikaela Shiffrin, Jessie Diggins, Kristen Faulkner, Brooke Biermann, Lauren Macuga, and Alyssa and Gisele Thompson, we are aligning with role models who are breaking barriers in their sports and inspiring the next generation,” Kruszewski said. “They continuously strive to be their best, lead with resilience and set new standards on the global stage.”

On Friday, Stifel rolled out its new campaign for the winter season, “Where Success Meets Success,” featuring Shiffrin, Diggins, Macuga and male halfpipe skier Alex Ferreira.

“Our sport is hard work, every day, 365 days of the year,” said Diggins, the most accomplished U.S. cross-country skier in the sport’s history, with three World Cup overall titles and three Olympic medals. “And to have a company like Stifel support us along the way and encapsulate that daily grind in an ad spot is something that means a lot to us as athletes.”

“I am thankful to have worked with Stifel for the last few years, and this winter’s campaign really celebrates the hard work and preparation that goes into being a competitive skier across all of the Stifel U.S. Ski Teams,” said Shiffrin, the winningest alpine skier of all time, male or female. “I’m honored to be included and to be part of this campaign alongside some incredible champions on snow.”

ForbesMikaela Shiffrin’s ‘Special’ 101st World Cup Win Comes On U.S. Soil

Macuga, a 23-year-old rising star in the speed disciplines, added that the campaign “celebrates the drive that’s been with me since I was a kid chasing my dreams and medals, the same passion that pushes me today to go faster in every course that I race.”

The 2025–26 World Cup season and the road to the 2026 Winter Olympics begins this Saturday from Soelden, Austria, with the first run of the women’s giant slalom. U.S. viewers can tune in on Peacock.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/michellebruton/2025/10/24/ahead-of-2026-winter-olympics-stifel-champions-female-us-skiers/

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Bitcoin White Paper: A Peer-to-Peer Cash System

Bitcoin White Paper: A Peer-to-Peer Cash System

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In this case, nodes will continue working on the block they received first, but will also save the other branch in case the latter becomes the longest chain. When the next proof-of-work is found, and one of the branches becomes the longer chain, this temporary divergence is resolved, and the nodes working on the other branch will switch to the longer chain. New transactions don't necessarily need to be broadcast to all nodes. Once they reach enough nodes, they will soon be packaged into a block. Block broadcasting also allows some messages to be dropped. If a node doesn't receive a block, it will realize it missed the previous block when it receives the next block, and will therefore issue a request to resubmit the missing block. 6. Incentive As agreed, the first transaction of each block is a special transaction that generates a new coin, owned by the block's creator. 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The user cannot check the transaction themselves, but by connecting to somewhere on the chain, they can see that a network node has accepted the transaction, and subsequent blocks further confirm that the network has accepted it. As long as honest nodes retain control of the network, verification remains reliable. However, verification becomes less reliable if the network is controlled by an attacker. Although network nodes can verify transaction records themselves, simplified verification methods can be fooled by forged transaction records if an attacker maintains control of the network. One countermeasure is for client software to receive alerts from network nodes. When a network node discovers an invalid block, it issues an alert, displays a notification on the user's software, instructs the user to download the complete block, and warns the user to confirm transaction consistency. 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Privacy Traditional banking models achieve a degree of privacy by restricting access to information about transacting parties and trusted third parties. This approach is rejected due to the need to make all transaction records public. However, maintaining privacy can be achieved by cutting off the flow of information elsewhere—public-key anonymity. The public can see that someone transferred a certain amount to someone else, but no information points to a specific individual. This level of information disclosure is somewhat like stock market transactions, where only the time and the amounts of each transaction are published, but no one knows who the transacting parties are. 11. Calculations Imagine an attacker attempting to generate an alternative chain that is faster than the honest chain. Even if he succeeds, it won't leave the current system in an ambiguous situation; he cannot create value out of thin air, nor can he acquire money that never belonged to him. Network nodes will not accept an invalid transaction as a payment, and honest nodes will never accept a block containing such a payment. At most, the attacker can only modify his own transactions, attempting to retrieve money he has already spent. The competition between the honest chain and the attacker can be described using a binomial random walk. A successful event is when a new block is added to the honest chain, increasing its advantage by 1; while a failed event is when a new block is added to the attacker's chain, decreasing the honest chain's advantage by 1. The probability that an attacker can catch up from a disadvantaged position is similar to the gambler's bankruptcy problem. Suppose a gambler with unlimited chips starts from a deficit and is allowed to gamble an unlimited number of times with the goal of making up the existing deficit. We can calculate the probability that he can eventually make up the deficit, which is the probability that the attacker can catch up with the honesty chain[8], as follows: Since we have already assumed that the number of blocks an attacker needs to catch up with is increasing, their probability of success decreases exponentially. When the odds are against them, if the attacker doesn't manage to make a lucky forward move at the beginning, their chances of winning will be wiped out as they fall further behind. Now consider how long a recipient of a new transaction needs to wait to be fully certain that the sender cannot alter the transaction. Let's assume the sender is an attacker attempting to mislead the recipient into believing they have paid the due, then transfer the money back to themselves. In this scenario, the recipient would naturally receive a warning, but the sender would prefer that by then the damage is done. The recipient generates a new public-private key pair and then informs the sender of the public key shortly before signing. This prevents a scenario where the sender prepares a block on a chain in advance through continuous computation and, with enough luck, gets ahead of the time until the transaction is executed. Once the funds have been sent, the dishonest sender secretly begins working on another parachain, attempting to insert a reverse version of the transaction. The recipient waits until the transaction is packaged into a block, and then another block is subsequently added. He doesn't know the attacker's progress, but can assume the average time for an honest block to be generated in each block generation process; the attacker's potential progress follows a Poisson distribution with an expected value of: To calculate the probability that the attacker can still catch up, we multiply the Passon density of each attacker's existing progress by the probability that he can catch up from that point: To avoid rearranging the data after summing the infinite series of the density distribution… Convert to C language program... From the partial results, we can see that the probability decreases exponentially as Z increases: If P is less than 0.1%... 12. Conclusion We propose an electronic transaction system that does not rely on trust. Starting with a simple coin framework using digital signatures, while providing robust ownership control, it cannot prevent double-spending. To address this, we propose a peer-to-peer network using a proof-of-work mechanism to record a public transaction history. As long as honest nodes control the majority of CPU power, attackers cannot successfully tamper with the system solely from a computational power perspective. The robustness of this network lies in its unstructured simplicity. Nodes can work simultaneously instantaneously with minimal coordination. They don't even need to be identified, as message paths do not depend on a specific destination; messages only need to be propagated with best-effort intent. Nodes are free to join and leave, and upon rejoining, they simply accept the proof-of-work chain as proof of everything that happened while they were offline. They vote with their CPU power, continuously adding new valid blocks to the chain and rejecting invalid ones, indicating their acceptance of valid transactions. Any necessary rules and rewards can be enforced through this consensus mechanism.
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PANews2025/10/31 17:05