Google Announces Nano Banana Pro for every builder and business

Today Google has announced Nano Banana Pro, their latest and most powerful image generation and editing model yet, built on Gemini 3 Pro. 

They are bringing Nano Banana Pro to many of the Google surfaces where the original model is already available:

  • Consumers and students: Available now in the Gemini app under the ‘Thinking’ toggle alongside Nano Banana (with limited free quotas before reverting to Nano Banana), in Search’s AI Mode for Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the U.S. and in NotebookLM.

  • Professionals: Available to Workspace customers in the Gemini app and in Google Slides.

  • Advertisers: Google is upgrading image generation in Google Ads to Nano Banana Pro to put cutting-edge creative and editing power directly into the hands of advertisers globally.

  • Developers and enterprise: Accessible via the Gemini API and Google AI Studio, and in Google Antigravity; enterprises can use it in Gemini Enterprise and Vertex AI for scaled creation.

  • Creatives: In Flow, the AI filmmaking tool, Nano Banana Pro gives creatives, filmmakers and marketers even more precision and control over their frames and scenes, coming first to Ultra subscribers. 

In addition, Google is expanding their commitment to transparency by launching a new feature in the Gemini app. Users will be able to upload any image and instantly ask if it was generated by Google AI, thanks to their embedded SynthID watermarking technology. As a result, they are removing the visible watermark from images generated by Google AI Ultra tier users in the Gemini app.

See more below

 

Earlier this year we launched Nano Banana (Gemini 2.5 Flash Image). It became the top rated image model in the world, and we were excited to see the overwhelming response from our customers. For enterprises, Nano Banana made it dramatically easier – and more fun – to edit images with natural language and make visuals with consistent characters. 

Today, we’re announcing Nano Banana Pro (Gemini 3 Pro Image), our state-of-the art image generation and editing model, in Gemini Enterprise, Google Workspace, and Vertex AI. Nano Banana Pro excels in visual design, world knowledge, and text generation, making it easier for enterprises to: 

  1. Deploy localized global campaigns faster. The model supports text rendering in multiple languages. You can even take an image and translate the text inside it, so your creative work is ready for other countries immediately. 
  2. Create more accurate, context-rich visual assets. Because Nano Banana Pro connects to Google Search, it understands the real world context. This means you can generate maps, diagrams, and infographics that get the facts and details right — perfect for training manuals or technical guides where accuracy matters. 
  3. Maintain stronger creative control and brand fidelity. The model allows you to upload up to 14 reference images, which means you can load a full style guide simultaneously—including logos, color palettes, character turnarounds, and product shots. This ensures the model has the complete context needed to match your brand identity. Need to refine the result? Just describe the change using natural language to add, remove, or replace details. Nano Banana Pro supports up to 4K images for a higher level of detail and sharpness across multiple aspect ratios. 

Nano Banana Pro and Nano Banana are designed to power a complete creative workflow. Start with Nano Banana for high-velocity ideation, then transition to Nano Banana Pro when you need the highest fidelity for production-ready assets.

Supporting your commercial needs: Both models fall under our shared responsibility framework, and you can ensure transparency and responsible use with built-in SynthID watermarking on every generated asset. We’re committed to supporting your commercial needs with copyright indemnification coming at general availability. 

What Nano Banana Pro can do for businesses 

Nano Banana Pro builds on the incredible speed of the original model, but adds the precision needed for businesses. Marketing teams can use it to generate assets that are immediately campaign-ready and on-brand to quickly iterate on ideas, saving hours of manual review, reducing production cost, and allowing your team to focus on strategy and final creative oversight. Designers can now accelerate concepts and prototyping by rendering a 3D image from a simple sketch or diagram. 

Advanced translation and localization: Marketers, you know how important – and difficult – it can be to translate your campaign into another language. Scaling a global campaign traditionally requires massive budgets and coordination with external agencies. Now, you can easily translate and regenerate assets—allowing you to expand your global footprint without expanding your bottom line. 

Search Grounding: Nano Banana Pro can use Google Search to research topics based on your query, and reason on how to present factual and grounded information. 

Advanced composition: Add up to 14 input reference images to combine elements, blend scenes, and transfer designs to create something entirely new. Nano Banana Pro maintains the quality of a developed asset but delivers it in minutes. 

Advanced text rendering: Generate clear, accurate text within images, unlocking use cases for product mockups, posters, and educational diagrams. This could include natural text placement (e.g., wrapping text around an object) and support for various fonts and styles. 

How customers are already using Nano Banana Pro 

Nano Banana Pro is becoming an essential infrastructure layer for the creative economy, powering the design platforms that creatives rely on. By integrating our models directly into their workflows, we are helping industry leaders like Adobe, Figma, and Canva deliver next-generation AI capabilities. Here’s what they have to say about building on our foundation:

 

 

While platforms build the tools, the world’s leading agencies and brands are delivering results. We’re moving from experimentation to enterprise-grade production, where efficiency and performance shine.

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We’re making Nano Banana Pro available where your teams already work, keeping you in the driver’s seat: 

  • For developers: You can start building with Nano Banana Pro in the Gemini API today in Vertex AI. For those building with Vertex AI, Nano Banana Pro is an enterprise-grade offering that includes Provisioned Throughput, Pay As You Go, and advanced safety filters. 
  • For business teams: Nano Banana is available in Gemini Enterprise with Nano Banana Pro coming soon. Gemini Enterprise is our advanced agentic platform that brings the best of Google AI to every employee, for every workflow. And, starting today, Nano Banana Pro is rolling out to Google Workspace customers in Google Slides, Vids, the Gemini app, and NotebookLM — learn more

How New EU Rules Will Shape the Future of Digital Identity Wallets

Digital identity wallets are at the cusp of transforming how we verify ourselves online – and the European Union is laying the legal and technical groundwork to make them mainstream. The European Parliament recently approved a new framework known as eIDAS 2.0, which will revolutionise not only how Europeans log into websites but also how they interact with banks, healthcare providers, educational institutions and governments. 

With this legislative shift, Europe is doubling down on the idea that digital identity should be secure, and citizen-centric across all EU countries. But as with any sweeping change, there’s nuance to unpack particularly when it comes to privacy.

 

What Are Digital Identity Wallets? 

A digital identity wallet is a secure app that allows individuals to store and share verifiable personal credentials like driver’s licenses. Diplomas, and health records on their smartphones. Think of it like Apple Wallet but for much more than credit cards or plane tickets. Under the new EU regulations, these wallets will become standardised and available to every EU citizen and resident, free of charge. 

 Although the goal is to make identification seamless there’s still a rise in no KYC online casinos. These platforms allow users to gamble using cryptocurrencies without verifying their identity. Their appeal lies in the fact users enjoy hundreds of games, instant withdrawals, and loyalty perks, all while maintaining their privacy.

Key Features of the New EU Digital Identity Framework

At the heart of the new digital identity push is user control. Unlike centralised databases, EU-approved digital wallets will store credentials locally on a user’s device. Only the user decides what to share and with whom. If you’re applying for a loan, you might only share your credit score, not your entire banking history. 

Digital wallets come with several standout features that enhance both privacy and convenience. One of the most notable is the use of Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs), which allow users to verify specific facts (such as being over 18) without revealing sensitive information like their exact birthdate. 

These wallets also offer cross-border compatibility, making it possible for, say, a student from Italy to use the same digital credentials when applying for a scholarship in Germany or a job in Sweden. Additionally, digital wallets can integrate with third-party services, enabling users to log into platforms like online shopping sites, banking apps, or gig economy platforms with ease.

The ultimate promise here is seamless interaction, whether with government services or commercial applications. 

Potential Impact on Businesses and Platforms

For companies, especially those that rely heavily on user data, these rules are a double-edged sword. On the one hand, digital wallets make it easier to onboard users securely. On the other, they shift control over data away from platforms and back to individuals, disrupting existing monetization models based on third party data collection. 

Take social media, for example. Platforms like Facebook or Instagram often monetise by gathering behavioural data. But if users authenticate with verifiable digital identities, and restrict the data they share, companies may have to rethink how they target ads or analyse user behaviour. 

Balancing Security With Privacy

There’s a fine line between making life easier for users and creating a tool that governments or bad actors could exploit. Critics of eIDAS 2.0 worry that even if digital wallets are designed with privacy in mind, central authorities or third parties could still pressure providers to include backdoors. 

To address this, the EU has embedded privacy to design and open-source transparency into the framework. Wallet providers must undergo certification, ensuring they meet strict technical and ethical standards. Still, whether this will satisfy skeptics remains to be seen.  

Europe’s Innovation Path Forward

Briefly but significantly, this initiative signals something larger. Europe is choosing to lead with innovation grounded in regulation. While Silicon Valley often chases disruption and China leans into state-led control, the EU is carving out its niche as a tech policy trendsetter. With digital wallets, they’re not just catching up, they’re setting the standard. 

This innovation isn’t limited to identity. The EU is already piloting AI governance, digital euro projects and sustainability-linked fintech frameworks. Together, these initiatives aim to foster a secure and ethically sound digital ecosystem, where both businesses and citizens benefit. 

What Comes Next?

Member states have until 2026 to roll out compliant digital identity wallets. That means in the next 12 to 24 months, we’ll likely see a flurry of public-private partnerships, app development and educational campaigns aimed at preparing citizens, businesses and institutions to shift. Governments will need to work closely with tech companies, financial service providers, universities and healthcare systems to ensure smooth integration across sectors. 

But adoption will ultimately depend on trust and convenience. If people feel safe using these wallets and find them more practical than current alternatives, they’ll become the default way to navigate the internet. If not, they risk going the way clunky government portals and forgotten smartcard experiments. 

One wildcard is how non-European companies like Apple, Google or Meta could respond. Will they build wallet-compatible services to retain European users or will they push back, leading to a showdown over who gets to shape digital identity infrastructure? 

With billions of users and enormous influences, these companies could either be powerful allies in the rollout or major disruptors. This is especially if wallet integration threatens their current data-driven business models.

 

Plumbing the Depths of Bitcoin Mining: Examining the Process and Economic Framework

In the ever-evolving realm of cryptocurrency, Bitcoin maintains its prominent position as the trailblazing digital currency. The operational bedrock of the Bitcoin network rests on the practice known as mining. This mining process assumes a pivotal role, encompassing the generation of fresh coins and the authentication of transactions. Within this all-encompassing exposition, we embark on an extensive journey into the multifaceted realm of Bitcoin mining, thoroughly examining its technical complexities, its ecological repercussions, and its substantial economic implications. Don’t have a clear understanding about crypto trading? This financial tool named Immediate Edge has every resource that can help you in making informed decisions. Learn more!

Understanding Bitcoin Mining

What is Bitcoin Mining?

Bitcoin mining is the process by which new bitcoins are created and added to the circulating supply. This process also serves as the mechanism through which transactions are confirmed and added to the blockchain, the public ledger that underpins the entire Bitcoin network. Miners use powerful computers to solve complex mathematical puzzles, and the first miner to solve the puzzle gets to add a new block of transactions to the blockchain.

Proof-of-Work Consensus Mechanism

At the heart of Bitcoin mining lies the proof-of-work consensus mechanism. Miners compete to solve these mathematical puzzles, and the solution requires a substantial amount of computational power. This not only ensures the security of the network but also makes it incredibly difficult for malicious actors to alter past transactions.

The Technical Process

Mining Hardware and Software

Miners utilize specialized hardware called ASICs (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits) to carry out the complex computations essential for the mining process. These ASICs are purposefully engineered to enhance the efficiency of the precise calculations needed for solving proof-of-work puzzles within the blockchain. In addition to the hardware, miners rely on mining software that facilitates the connection between their ASICs and the Bitcoin network. This connection enables miners to actively engage in the validation and verification procedures inherent to the Bitcoin ecosystem.

The Mining Process Explained

  • Transaction Validation: Miners select a set of unconfirmed transactions from the Bitcoin mempool, which is a pool of pending transactions.

 

  • Creating the Block Header: Miners gather these transactions and create a block header. This header includes the previous block’s hash, a timestamp, and a unique cryptographic nonce.

 

  • Finding the Nonce: Miners iterate through different nonce values and combine them with the block header. This process continues until a valid hash is found that meets the network’s difficulty target.

 

  • Proof-of-Work: The miner who successfully discovers the valid hash broadcasts it to the network. Other miners then verify the hash and if it’s valid, the new block is added to the blockchain.

Environmental Concerns

Energy Consumption

While the process of Bitcoin mining is essential, it has faced criticism for its substantial energy consumption. The massive computational power required to solve proof-of-work puzzles contributes to the carbon footprint of the network. Some argue that this energy consumption is unsustainable and raises questions about the environmental impact of the cryptocurrency industry.

Economic Framework of Bitcoin Mining

Rewards and Incentives

Miners are incentivized to participate in the network through two primary mechanisms: block rewards and transaction fees. Initially, when Bitcoin was created, miners received a fixed block reward for each successfully mined block. However, this reward is halved approximately every four years in an event known as the “halving.”

Halving and Scarcity

The halving event is crucial to Bitcoin’s economic model. It ensures a controlled and predictable issuance rate, simulating the scarcity of precious resources like gold. As the block reward decreases over time, scarcity increases, potentially leading to upward price pressure as demand continues to grow.

The Future of Bitcoin Mining

As the cryptocurrency landscape evolves, so does the process of Bitcoin mining. Innovations like the Lightning Network aim to address scalability issues and reduce transaction fees. Additionally, some researchers are exploring alternative consensus mechanisms that could alleviate the energy consumption concerns associated with proof-of-work.

Conclusion

In conclusion, Bitcoin mining is a complex and integral part of the cryptocurrency ecosystem. Its technical intricacies, environmental impact, and economic significance make it a topic of constant discussion and innovation. As the industry continues to evolve, finding a balance between sustainability, efficiency, and security will be paramount. Understanding the depths of Bitcoin mining provides insights into the broader implications of decentralized digital currencies and their potential to reshape the financial landscape.

 

Nigeria to Create Legal Framework and ICOs for Stablecoins

The latest strategy paper from the Central Bank of Nigeria reveals the importance of creating a legal framework for stablecoins. The country is ready to make the existence of private stablecoins public. The federal government of Nigeria is determined to show the necessity of a legal framework in its quest to be one of the world’s pioneers in adopting its own central bank digital currency (CBDC). The African country’s central bank recognises digital currencies based on the blockchain or DLT as technological and economic breakthroughs.

According to reports, stablecoins will likely become a successful payment mechanism in Nigeria in the coming 3-5 years. The published document outlines the need to develop a framework under the headline “Nigeria Payments System Vision 2025“, an 83-page report. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) accommodates the possibility of stablecoins becoming successful and believes that initial coin offerings (ICOs) also can become a novel method of financing capital projects, crowdsourcing, and peer-to-peer lending. ICOs pay attention to the present regulation and highlight the current absence of rules in the country, causing investors to lose money.

In the published document, the Central Bank of Nigeria noted, “If implemented properly and supported with the right rules and regulations, ICOs could be turned into Financial Instruments and Investment Options, creating a new way to attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and raise capital.” The country is regarded globally as one of the leaders in pushing to integrate its central bank digital currency (CBDC) into the national economy. The need for regulation for ICOs is also included in the report paying attention to the unavailability of regulation in the sector.

Nigeria’s innovation plan

The Central Bank of Nigeria also acknowledges that digital currencies built on the blockchain or distributed ledger technology are technical and economic innovations with the potential to enable value transfer to be made quickly and inexpensively without the need for third-party involvement. According to the report, the bank plans to continue watching briefs on Initial Coin Offerings and work with the Security Exchange Commission to develop a regulatory framework in case of an ICO-based investment solution.

The CNB will explore whether or not API integration on CBDC is applicable because innovations have the potential to improve operational efficiency, simplicity, trust, and customer experience. The bank aims to continue doing its research, anticipating that full implementation of the currency is possible within the next three to five years. In an attempt to push its cash-less policy and increase the use of the eNaira, insiders from Bitcoineer Official claim that in December 2022, the Nigerian government reduced the amount that individuals and businesses can withdraw to $225 and $1,125 per week, respectively. Since the outcry from Nigerians, they have increased the limit. Since its launch in 2021, eNaira adoption has been low. According to a report by Cointelegraph, the CBN has struggled to influence Nigerian citizens to use CBDC. Less than 0.5% of the population reported using the eNaira as of October 25, 2022.

Several economists condemned the central bank’s intention to develop a regulatory framework for adopting stablecoins for economic improvement, saying that it needs to be more accurate in looking at the failure of the e-naira after its incorporation into the economy. However, TechNext explained how stablecoins could help Nigerians hedge against the failing economy in a detailed report from 2022.

How can Nigerians benefit from the stablecoins regulatory framework?

The stablecoins regulation framework will likely encourage more Nigerians to buy digital assets. Purchasing stablecoins against currencies considered more vital than the Naira could be an advantage. Since there is no hope for Naira’s rise against the US dollar, it is best to save in stablecoins like USDT as it is projected to stay strong, unlike the Naira, which keeps losing value. Stablecoins do not look at national borders; it allows users to send a transaction to someone abroad instantly with low fees. It also offers transparency as it uses blockchain technology, where every transaction stored can be viewed by anyone. To save in USDT, an individual or business is not required to have millions; stablecoins can be purchased for as little as N5000 or less on peer-to-peer platforms. 

The bank also promised to collaborate with industry stakeholders to identify prospective use cases, deadlines, and implementation techniques for potential solutions for remittance using blockchain technology. The Central Bank of Nigeria views this process as a way to reform the country’s economy. The government also plans to watch Potential Smart Contract solutions in other regions to develop valuable solutions and techniques. As we congratulate Nigeria on its plan to create a legal framework and ICO, we promise to keep you informed on any latest information regarding this topic. This article is informative and should not be used as legal advice.