Showing posts with label exchange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exchange. Show all posts

Exchange Accused of Stealing Millions From Crypto Projects - Calling Them a "Coordinated, Chinese Criminal Group"...

idax


IDAX had become, or at least appeared to be, one of the hot spots for projects to conduct an Initial Exchange Offering - similar to an ICO, but in theory IEOs provide additional assurances to investors by having the tokens sold by an established exchange, and with that comes knowing the token will be listed as well. 

Behind the scenes for weeks now, IEO's that used the exchange had been reaching out to each other to compare their experiences, all were finding one thing in common - what they got did not match what they were told to expect.

Then, one of the more recent companies to attempt to IEO through IDAX decided to take the public route much faster, publishing a post on their blog that reads in part:

"As many of you know, Crypto Market Ads (CMA) project had IEO on IDAX.pro exchange recently. First time it was canceled by IDAX.pro because we do not agreed on their terms (they called us hours before IEO, we have voice call recordings). They wanted to simulate all the sales in 1 hour time!

We tried to get refund, but unsuccessfully, they and our users pushed on us to do IEO anyway, to see what IDAX will do. Note: we do not agreed on simulation."

For evidence, they also uploaded a recorded phone call with the IDAX operations department here.

My editor here at The Global Crypto Press, Ross Davis, runs PR for one of the projects that's caught up in this mess, TuneTrade, asking his opinion on the information coming out, he told me;

"I can confirm that the experience with IDAX seemed to be all about getting their fee, saying whatever they needed to get it, then when the time comes - none of those promises were true."

However, it seems experiences vary, as he points out differences between what came out this week, and their IEO which occurred over a month ago:

"There's 2 pretty big differences i'm seeing with the story Crypto Market Ads posted and ours.  We assumed IDAX dropped the ball when it came to marketing, they told us that tens of thousands of users would be receiving mobile notifications that the IEO was live, letting them know participate. When no one received these notifications, we figured their poor performance was simply because their users were never told the sale was even happening.  

Something happened inbetween the weeks between dealing with us, and Crypto Market Ads. They are saying IDAX let them in on the secret, and tried to get them to agree to faking sales." 

But why? I tend to agree with how he sums things up:

"So here's what I think we're looking at.   We were able to compare their promises with what they delivered and say they didn't uphold their end of the deal.  But if they can artificially make a token sale look like a success, and do with the blessings of the company behind it, nobody talks afterwards.  

No company would come forward to complain 'yes we agreed to let IDAX make our sale look popular using fraudulent techniques, but we thought it would be more profitable'.  These projects would quietly have to move on."

In the interest of fairness, the post by Crypto Market Ads does focus in-part on IDAX being a member of Coinmarketcap's Transparency DATA Alliance, which aims to stop fraudulent or inaccurate trading information from being when in tracking coin prices and trading volume.

However, one of my sources from a company still part of the DATA Alliance confirmed to me IDAX is out, and was before these accusations, saying "They we're a member for a couple weeks, then quietly removed. I never heard why but it looks like we're finding out now."

Other IEO's have already gone public over the last few days since I began working on this story, including Babbber, Migranet, and Stipend - making a class action lawsuit appear to be a likely next step.

For IDAX to make the problem go away some companies have said they'll settle for their money back, they just want to move on. Other say they're preparing evidence for authorities, believing IDAX is deserving of criminal charges. The fees are up to 30 BTC in some cases, not a small amount easily given up by either side.

We will continue to follow this story and bring you the latest!

------- 
Author: Adam Lee 
Asia News Desk

Coinbase already UNDER FIRE gets gas thrown onto the flames - inside the past few days of a public relations nightmare...

Coinbase

Coinbase is quickly learning that the power and influence that earned them an $8 billion valuation also comes with people watching every move they make, and listening closely to every word they say.

Lately, a lot of people really don't like what they've been seeing and hearing.

If you need to catch up on things, the summary is - they purchased a company called Neutrino, which was founded by a man named Giancarlo Russo.  There's nothing sinister specifically about Neutrino, or Coinbase's reason for doing business with them - they make analytics software, Coinbase was looking to upgrade theirs.

The problem is - this isn't the only company its founder created, he's also behind the infamous 'Hacking Team' which is accused of everything from helping the US government spy on its citizens, to supplying other countries with spyware they used to arrest journalists and political protestors.

To make matters worse, with the backlash from that still growing - one of their own employees threw gasoline on the fire.

Christine Sandler, Coinbase’s director of institutional sales made a failed attempt at spinning things into a story about how much they care about privacy. Speaking to Cheddar, she said the whole reason they needed new analytics software is that the old provider was“selling client data to outside sources" - opening up a whole new scandal on top of the current one.

No surprise - people didn't hear it how she imagined they would, and Coinbase now says she simply misspoke - client data was never sold by or even supplied to the previous provider.

One of the perks of being headquartered in Silicon Valley and attending way too many conferences and meetups are the people I've been able to become friends with, many happen to be from various companies in the cryptocurrency or general tech industry. Hopefully, I earn their trust by covering their companies honestly, even when they screw up.

This is how I've been fortunate enough to build a decent list of sources, including several inside Coinbase. One of them is ranked pretty high up on the corporate ladder and in a position that effects decision making and policy within the company.

I wanted to understand how they got here to begin with, beyond the official public statements. Usually, I get a 'no comment' back from this particular source - but this time they had a lot to say:

"I agree with some of the critics here and so does [the CEO] Brian. I would never tell a journalist what to say but I reply to you because you've been fair.  In the interest of being fair don't you think it's dishonest to be angry at us but is still be using Google or Facebook?   I see your publication has links to a Facebook page on your homepage and I assume like most people you use Google for searches, do you not? 

Humor me for a minute - what recently came to light over at Google? They were building AI [artificial intelligence] to make military drones better at spying. It took a revolt from low-level employees to stop it, but what that means is their leadership was all for it.


There's a whole other Google for christ sakes, one where apparently the Chinese government has never been criticized on the entire internet, no matter how hard you search for it. Is every company that uses Google services evil now? Or can they separate something like purchasing cloud services from helping China censor their citizens? 


Facebook was even building a tool that would have given the Chinese government the power to censor any post they don't like. It still didn't satisfy the Chinese government enough to let them in so they spun it like they dumped China to stand up for free speech, but that isn't what happened. 

Facebook also says their AI scans your private messages for things to 'flag' for review, do you know what those things are? I don't.

My point is this: Coinbase already holds itself to a standard above other companies that our critics use on a daily basis, some tweets that were directed at us frankly make no sense when you include this fact."


To be fair - all this is true, and valid to bring up - but only for some perspective on the issue as a whole. But two wrongs don't make a right -  so I asked what is the actual company philsophy? How did this all go down to begin with?

"Remember this is a company started by a guy who also has a *separate* company [hacking team], that separate company is the one accused of doing some bad stuff.  Right off the bat notice how far removed Coinbase is here.  We didn't know the extent of the things they were accused of, and you can be sure we'll be doing deep research from here on out before any other acquisitions.

We were focused on was answering: does the software work? Testing it was the focus of our research.

The craziest tweets I saw basically were saying 'Coinbase has put their security at risk' a conspiracy theory that the software could contain spyware. Let me add and emphasize - WE OWN THE COMPANY AND THE SOURCE CODE. To imply we wouldn't notice spyware built into it is downright dishonest. Please put that in bold, it's the most important takeaway here for your readers.

Even with these fears being unfounded we announced today that we're letting go of all employees who were working at Neutrino before we acquired it. All we wanted was the tech and our team is capable of keeping it up to date from here.

 Trust me when I say we never imagined Coinbase's name thrown into articles about international 'black ops' and 'government spying' when looking into analytic software solutions.


All I'm saying is think big picture. Coinbase participated in none of the acts people are against - it was guilt by association, and we've ended that association."


I think what we're seeing here absolutely is a double standard - but it's one I'm glad we have. We're aware some tech giants have done a lot wrong and we don't want to see crypto go down the same path.

So, while I cannot support Coinbase's initial decisions I can applaud how they handled it in the end. As mentioned above, the complete statement from CEO Brian Armstrong says:

"We took some time to dig further into this over the past week, and together with the Neutrino team have come to an agreement: those who previously worked at Hacking Team (despite the fact that they have no current affiliation with Hacking Team), will transition out of Coinbase"


In closing I just want to say - I love that the cryptocurrency world is like this.  I love that Coinbase doing business with people who violate free speech was enough to unite us in disapproval, and I love that Coinbase basically said 'you're right' and took action.

Something just rubs us the wrong way when we hear of governments restricting it's citizens basic rights like free speech.  I don't know exactly what to call it, and I don't know many people I'd describe as 'political activists' in crypto - but there are some lines you just don't cross.

Whatever this is called, let's never stop doing it.

-------
Author: Ross Davis
E-Mail: Ross@GlobalCryptoPress.com Twitter:@RossFM
San Francisco News Desk


Uber Founder & ETrade Executive’s new crypto trading app 'Voyager' beta released, they’ll give you $25 to try it now...



The new cryptocurrency app "Voyager" has just launched the first beta version, and they're currently giving new users $25 to help them test it out. 

Voyager's founders include Uber co-founder Oscar Salazar, as well as early Uber investor Philip Eytan. The company CEO is Stephen Ehrlich, who previously ran the professional trading arm for online stock broker E-Trade.

The Voyager app feels like any other trading app, you buy and sell with the push of a button. But behind the scenes it's searching for the lowest price of the coin you want on multiple exchanges.

While giving the app a test run, I honestly didn't even notice that I was actually shopping multiple exchanges, I just chose a coin, put in the amount, pressed "buy", and a second later the tokens were in my wallet - i'm not even sure which exchange the app found the coins on.

The current list of tokens supported include:
Bitcoin (BTC)
Ethereum (ETH)
Ripple (XRP)
Bitcoin Cash (BCH)
Bitcoin Satoshi Vision (BSV)
EOS (EOS)
Stellar Lumens (XLM)
Litecoin (LTC)
Ethereum Classic (ETC)
Ontology (ONT)
Zcash (ZEC)
Tron (TRX)
Cardano (ADA)
Iota (IOT)
Neo (NEO)
VeChain (VET)
Qtum (QTUM)
ICON (ICX)

Voyager has partnered with universal wallet Ethos which will provide integrated storage for all of the coins you've traded with Voyager, keeping them in 1 central wallet that you control.

The app is in beta testing now, and the official launch comes soon.

You can now help test the app, and they'll start you off with $25 worth of Bitcoin in your account balance.

------- 
Author: Ross Davis
E-Mail: Ross@GlobalCryptoPress.com Twitter:@RossFM
San Francisco News Desk


Stock giant TD Ameritrade becomes the latest to set their eyes on the cryptocurrency market...

Online stock brokerage firm TD Ameritrade touts $38.627 Billion in assets held for their investment clients - now they're the latest to want a piece of the emerging cryptocurrency sector.

They're doing this a little differently from other stock brokerage firms which are looking to add cryptocurrency options to their clients using their existing platforms.  TD Ameritrade instead has invested in a little-known new exchange called ErisX.

“We wanted to find a platform that would be fully regulated, and something that has that capital markets feel” said JB Mackenzie, the head of futures and foreign exchange trading at TD Ameritrade.

ErisX supports trading, deposits and withdrawals for bitcoin, bitcoin cash, ethereum, and litecoin.

"We listened to our customers — what we continued to hear was that they wanted access to trade digital currency products." added Mackenzie.

ErisX is also soon planning to offer Bitcoin futures, pending approval from the CFTC.
------- 
Author: Adam Lee 
Asia News Desk

New exchange is coming from executives of Uber and E-Trade - with no fees, and fresh features...


The exchange and company behind it is called "Voyager" and among it's founders is Uber co-founder Oscar Salazar, as well as early Uber investor Philip Eytan.

“We saw an opportunity to build a dynamic smart order router that can take advantage of the marketplace and also offer customers no commissions” Voyager CEO Stephen Ehrlich explained. Stephen previously ran trading arm of the online stock trading site E-Trade.

Now here's the part that sounds most exciting - Voyager will have the ability to pull price data and make purchases though over 10 global exchanges - and execute the trade on whichever has the lowest price for that coin at that moment. Prices can vary for the same coin from one exchange to another, and sometimes widely - knowing you're always getting the best price is a pretty big advantage.

Then as icing on the cake - there's zero fees (for now), which is why I expect this to take a large bite out of Cobinhood, the cryptocurrency trading platform launched by stock trading app Robinhood which also boasts "zero fees" - but features a lot less coins.

They aim to launch with 15 cryptocurrencies and rumor is among them will be Ripple's XRP, and Stellar - making them the first mainstream US based exchange to feature them.

Beta testing has just began, with a tentative official launch in October of this year.

You can signup for updates at http://investvoyager.com

 ------- 
Author: Ross Davis
E-Mail: Ross@GlobalCryptoPress.com Twitter:@RossFM
San Francisco News Desk