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438 Bitcoins Worth Nearly $3.5 Million Stolen From Exchange In India, CSO Accused (indiatimes.com)

William Robinson shares a report from The Economic Times: Nearly 438 bitcoins, worth nearly $3.5 million, were stolen from a top exchange firm in India in what is being billed as the biggest cryptocurrency theft in the country so far. The exchange, which has over two hundred thousand users across the country, found that all the bitcoins that were stored offline had vanished. It was later found that the private keys -- the password that is kept by the company and is stored offline -- were leaked online, leading to the hack. The company tried to trace the hackers, but found that all the data logs of the affected wallets had been erased, leaving no trails about where the bitcoins were transferred. Coinsecure, a Delhi-based cryptocurrency exchange, is accusing its CSO, Amitabh Saxena, of siphoning off the money from the firm's wallet. The exchange is urging the government to seize Saxena's passport, fearing that he may leave the country.

2 of 85 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Hahaha by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bitcoin - the joke is on its users.

    Unfortunately, when Bitcoin implodes, a lot of folks who are "too big to fail" will be affected.

    And so the bill will be placed on the taxpayers.

    The joke will be on our tab.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  2. Central storage of decentralised currency by iTrawl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're supposed to keep your bitcoin in your own wallet. If you're against banks but keep your crypto at an exchange for more than the time needed to, you know, exchange it, that goes pretty much against the whole selling point. Even more, you just trust them blindly, because they're not regulated or part of an insurance scheme either.

    --
    "Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor