eHub Specialized APIs, Granola $125M, Infobip Expanded Fraud Prevention
The API Changelog issue 2026.13
This is issue 2026.13 of the API Changelog, a mix of API news, commentary, and opinion. In this issue, you'll get to know the most relevant API-related information from the week of March 23, 2026. Subscribe now so you never miss an issue of the API Changelog.
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Last week, I saw that the API ecosystem continues to evolve as traditional industries adopt programmable interfaces to solve long-standing fragmentation. From shipping and 3D modeling to financial infrastructure and fraud prevention, recent developments show a clear shift toward using APIs as a connectivity layer that hides complexity.
In terms os modernizing infrastructure through connectivity, Talino Finance recently secured $7.5M in Series A funding led by Chemonics International. The company is transitioning from a venture studio into a global fintech foundry, focusing on modernizing cross-border financial infrastructure. By replacing fragmented legacy systems with a more efficient, interoperable connectivity layer, Talino aims to bridge traditional finance with modern stablecoin rails.
At the heart of this transformation is an API-first architecture. This allows technology platforms and enterprises to integrate and launch compliant financial products quickly. By providing a unified API layer, Talino enables businesses to bypass months of development work and overcome technical debt, specifically in underserved corridors like the U.S. and the Philippines.
To secure the digital frontier in the telecommunications space, Infobip has expanded its fraud prevention capabilities by integrating T-Mobile’s network APIs. This collaboration utilizes CAMARA-compliant APIs, such as SIM Swap and Device Status, to provide real-time verification of mobile device identities. Standardizing network APIs allows developers to build more secure authentication workflows that go beyond traditional SMS-based two-factor authentication. By accessing these direct network signals, businesses can identify potential account takeovers or fraudulent activities instantly without adding friction to the user experience.

Orchestrating Logistics and Creativity, shipping platform eHub launched three specialized APIs (Pack, Inventory, and Orchestrate) to automate logistics for merchants and third-party providers. This modular approach ensures that developers can build flexible supply chain workflows that react instantly to changes in demand or carrier performance.

Also, in the world of 3D modeling, Math Magic integrated its Hitem3D platform into the OpenClaw agent ecosystem. By launching a standardized, skill-based API on the ClawHub store, the company allows AI agents to automate the entire image-to-3D generation pipeline. This integration treats 3D creation as a sequence of programmable API calls, bridging the gap between raw generative AI and industrial-grade manufacturing.

There were data-led partnerships and payments, like Fabulate, that joined the YouTube Creator Partnerships API rollout, boosting data-led creator deals in the APAC region. This API integration allows brands to access verified, first-party audience intelligence directly from YouTube. It transitions creator discovery from a manual process into a structured, automated workflow where developers can pull real-time metrics like audience demographics and engagement rates.
In the insurance sector, HawkSoft and RevitPay launched a direct API payments integration. This collaboration utilizes specialized Invoice and Receipt APIs to create a two-way data flow, ensuring that payment status and digital receipts sync in real-time. This eliminates operational friction by providing immediate cash flow visibility without forcing staff to switch between different software tools.
I saw the rise and fall of AI capabilities, as Granola secured $125M in Series C funding, reaching a $1.5B valuation as it expands from a meeting notetaker to an enterprise AI app. The company is launching a suite of enterprise-grade APIs and an MCP server. These tools allow businesses to treat their internal conversation data as a programmable resource, integrating structured meeting notes directly into external AI agents.

However, the industry also saw a significant contraction as OpenAI announced it’s shutting down Sora. The Sora app is scheduled to close on April 26, 2026, followed by the retirement of the Sora API on September 24, 2026. This move effectively removes a major entry point for developers who were integrating high-fidelity generative video into third-party workflows, signaling a shift in how major players allocate computational resources.
The trends across these updates point to a maturing API economy where the focus has shifted from simple data exchange to deep, domain-specific orchestration. Whether it’s stabilizing cross-border financial corridors, securing telecommunications through network-level signals, or turning meeting notes into programmable context, the goal remains the same: reducing friction.
Even as major players like OpenAI recalibrate their offerings, the broader movement toward interoperability continues to gain momentum. The move away from fragmented legacy systems in favor of unified API layers suggests that the next era of digital transformation will be defined by how well different platforms can talk to one another.
For businesses, the message is clear: the ability to integrate and automate via APIs is no longer just a technical advantage. It’s a requirement for scaling in an increasingly connected global market.
See you next week!

