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7,000 BTC Lost in Hangzhou Scam

7,000 btc lost in hangzhou scam

7,000 BTC Lost in Hangzhou Scam

7,000 btc lost in hangzhou scam

This article was originally published by 8btc and written by Vincent He.

Nearly 100 victims from various parts of China have reported to the Hangzhou police bureau, claiming that they were deceived by two young men, named Zhou Yi and Li Xiang, who allegedly stole nearly 7,000 bitcoin through exchanging or borrowing.

According to the victims, Zhou and Xiang had claimed on the internet that they could exchange bitcoin as futures and provide interest. The victims trusted them, as some preliminary orders in small amounts were delivered on time. As the pair could offer bitcoin at prices lower than the market rate and delivery seemed stable, they soon collected several thousand orders.

“I began OTC [over-the-counter] Bitcoin trading since 2017, unexpectedly I was cheated by more than 2 million yuan this year,” Mr. Wang, one of the alleged victims, said. “As a senior bitcoin speculator, I always buy low and sell high, I trust my peers.”

But Mr. Wang was not alone, as there appear to be more than 100 victims in this case. It has been reported that more than 7,000 BTC, equating 300 million yuan (≅$43.4 million), was involved.

This apparent bitcoin trade scam was conducted in two WeChat groups. If someone wanted to buy bitcoin, they could negotiate privately in the groups and transfer the money to a designated bank account after confirmation. One or two days later, Zhou Yi would send bitcoin to the buyer’s designated wallet.

”I had been trading with them for more than a year,” Mr. Zhang, another one of the victims, said. “I first traded with them last summer and then bought bitcoins from them three times a week until they lost touch in April. The amount of each transaction [was] about two or three million yuan. In nearly a year, the volume of transactions has reached billions of yuan. Their price [was] very low. I earned nearly one million yuan before.”

Aside from trading bitcoin as futures, the pair was also borrowing bitcoin and promising interest. They gave 100 to 120 yuan worth of BTC to victims as interest, so 90 percent of the victims would deposit bitcoin into their account. When victims pushed them for the release of these bitcoin, they would always transfer some money as compensation before disappearing.

Now Zhou and Xiang have been arrested for “illegal public deposit absorption” and the case is pending further investigation. The biggest concern for victims is how to determine the nature of the case. Some of the victims are not satisfied with the initial charges.

“We just want to give the police more information to prove that they knew at the beginning of March that they couldn’t issue coins, and that the subsequent transactions were not only illegal public deposit absorptions, but also a fraud,” a victim said.

So, where is the legal boundary for OTC Bitcoin trading?

“It is legal to own bitcoins in China,” said Sa Xiao, a council member at the Bank of China Law Research Association, as cited by The Beijing News. Additionally, Xiao considers the occasional exchange of bitcoin between individuals as legal.

Published at Wed, 22 May 2019 17:24:36 +0000

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Chinese Bitcoin Exchanges Will Now Require Video Verification

Chinese bitcoin exchanges are gearing up to resume cryptocurrency withdrawals following the implementation of a video verification procedure.


Know-Your Customer via Video

Following the emails in which Chinese exchanges detailed the information required from clients in order to process their withdrawals, users are now receiving emails announcing video identity verification in accordance with the latest KYC/AML procedures imposed by the People’s Bank of China (PoBC).

The email reads:

In accordance to KYC / AML regulations and account monitoring procedures Huobi is subject to, we will initiate video verification at 17:00 Mar 28th (GMT +8), please cooperate to complete video verification as requested then, or it may affect your withdrawals.

bitcoinist_videoconfimation_cny_exchange

Namely, two of the so-called “Big Three” exchanges Huobi and OKCoin have started implementing video verification.

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Recently, the PBoC proposed a draft that exchanges in the country considered acceptable except for one: on-site verification prior to opening an account, a practice that is common to traditional banks but not to bitcoin exchanges.

However, the latest move by the exchanges suggests that on-site verifications will not be implemented, at least for the time being. It also means that if the PBoC and exchanges have finally reached an agreement on AML (Anti-Money Laundering) procedures, cryptocurrency withdrawals should resume very soon. 

Chinese bitcoin Exchanges Now Heavily Regulated

The return of cryptocurrency withdrawals should help exchanges regain some of the customers that have been flocking towards peer-to-peer alternatives in recent months. However, with the removal of margin trading and zero fees, it’s unlikely that the Chinese market will regain its 90%+ share of the global bitcoin trading market.

Exchange operators will require users to provide their personal information along with explanations of the sources of the funds to be withdrawn and their intended withdrawal destinations.

Now, with the addition of video confirmation, China has become one of the most heavily-regulated countries for bitcoin exchanges.

China Withdrawals

While some traders may feel drawn to the clarity these regulations provide, others may choose to stick with p2p alternatives like LocalBitcoin and BitKan who offer greater privacy and which have experienced record trading volumes since the PBoC clampdown.

In the long-run, the regulations imposed on exchanges may make for a healthier, more decentralized bitcoin market and help boost bitcoin’s overall reputation within the country.

Furthermore, the introduction of clear rules and guidelines may make way for alternative cryptocurrencies to be added on these exchanges that have, so far, only dealt with bitcoin and Litecoin. 

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Can Chinese exchanges recover from the blow dealt by the PBoC and return to their old selves? Will they add new cryptocurrencies? Let us know what you think in the comment section.


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Twitter

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