UK’s Starling Strikes 10-Year Software Deal with Canada’s Tangerine, Plans 100 New Hires

British digital lender Starling Group announced on Tuesday a 10-year agreement with Canada’s Tangerine Bank, owned by the Bank of Nova Scotia, to upgrade the bank’s core software systems using its Engine by Starling technology platform. The deal marks Engine’s largest contract to date and represents a major step in Starling’s global expansion.

Under the agreement, Tangerine will migrate its digital banking operations to Engine’s cloud-based Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform. The partnership follows Engine’s recent expansion into North America, with new offices in Toronto and New York, and makes Tangerine its first North American client.

As part of the expansion, Engine plans to hire more than 100 new employees, according to a company spokesperson. Engine by Starling, spun off from Starling Bank in 2022, already serves clients such as Salt Bank in Romania and AMP Bank GO in Australia.

Starling’s customer base has grown from 43,000 in 2017 to 4.6 million in 2025, driven by its innovative digital banking model. However, the bank — like other UK challengers — has faced challenges maintaining revenue growth amid fierce competition. To diversify, Starling has focused on providing its software solutions to other financial institutions worldwide.

The company’s growth has come with regulatory scrutiny. Britain’s financial watchdog fined Starling £29 million last year for weaknesses in financial crime controls, though the bank says it has since addressed the issues and strengthened its governance.

iHeartMedia Shares Surge to Two-Year High on Report of Netflix Licensing Talks

Shares of iHeartMedia jumped 22% on Tuesday to their highest level in more than two years after a Bloomberg report revealed that Netflix is in talks to license video podcasts from the U.S. radio and podcasting giant. The rally marks iHeart’s best trading day in months, signaling renewed investor optimism about the company’s growth prospects.

According to the report, Netflix aims to secure exclusive rights to select iHeart video podcasts, potentially removing them from YouTube and intensifying competition among streaming platforms. A partnership could bring iHeart’s top shows to a global audience and create new opportunities for advertisers and podcast creators as the industry evolves toward more visual formats.

Analysts said the talks reflect a broader shift in the media landscape, where audio platforms are increasingly embracing video-driven engagement to boost viewer retention. A study by Zebracat earlier this year found that average engagement with video podcasts was 2.7 times higher than with audio-only versions on mobile devices.

The potential deal mirrors Netflix’s recent move with Spotify, which announced last month that its most popular video podcasts would appear on Netflix from early 2026. If finalized, the iHeart collaboration could establish the streaming giant as a major player in video podcasting and mark a significant milestone in iHeartMedia’s post-pandemic turnaround.

India Tribunal Lifts WhatsApp Data-Sharing Ban but Upholds Meta’s $25 Million Fine

An Indian appeals tribunal has overturned a five-year ban preventing WhatsApp from sharing user data with other Meta-owned entities but upheld a $25.4 million fine, delivering a mixed verdict for the U.S. tech giant.

The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) ruled on Tuesday that the Competition Commission of India’s (CCI) 2024 order lacked sufficient justification for restricting data sharing, calling the regulator’s rationale “missing altogether.” However, it agreed with the CCI’s finding that Meta had abused its market dominance by imposing unfair terms on users.

WhatsApp had challenged the CCI’s ban, warning it could have been forced to roll back certain features if the restriction remained. Meta, in turn, argued that the watchdog lacked the technical expertise to assess the implications of its decision.

The dispute dates back to 2021, when changes to WhatsApp’s privacy policy sparked widespread backlash in India. Regulators accused the company of pressuring users to accept new data-sharing terms or risk losing access to the platform.

A Meta spokesperson said the company is reviewing the tribunal’s written order and reiterated that the 2021 privacy update “did not change the privacy of people’s personal messages, which remain end-to-end encrypted.”

India is Meta’s largest market globally, with hundreds of millions of users across WhatsApp, Facebook, and Instagram — making the ruling a critical development for the company’s operations in the country.