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Bitcoin Exchange Coinbase Faces Consumer Class-Action Complaint

Bitcoin exchange coinbase faces consumer class-action complaint

Bitcoin Exchange Coinbase Faces Consumer Class-Action Complaint

Bitcoin exchange coinbase faces consumer class-action complaint
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The cryptocurrency exchange is in hot water again, exacerbating an already tenuous relationship with users. A class action lawsuit was filed against San Francisco-based Coinbase in recent days in the US Court for the Northern District of California, claiming the leading US cryptocurrency exchange unlawfully kept cryptocurrencies that were sent by email and left unclaimed for years.

Plaintiffs  Timothy G. Faasse and Jeffrey Hansen are US residents and filed the complaint on behalf of themselves and others who are estimated to be in thousands, all of whom are being represented by Restis Law in San Diego.

William R. Restis of the law firm that bears his name told CCN:

“These types of issues are simply growing pains for a maturing industry that is moving into the mainstream. Coinbase’s failure to deliver was likely an oversight. Hopefully, this lawsuit spurs the company to quickly make things right.”

As far as lawsuits go, this one isn’t that hostile. Both plaintiffs say they will use Coinbase if their bitcoins are restored.

Unclaimed bitcoin

Faasse and Hansen allegedly missed out on 0.10 bitcoin and 0.01 bitcoin, respectively, that was sent in 2013. The BTC price mostly traded below $1,000 in 2013 until year-end, at which time it had a brief spurt trading above $1,000. The pair didn’t claim their funds until this year amid a reminder but were met with a faulty link that wouldn’t let them redeem the funds.

According to the filing, Coinbase’s egregious behavior is akin to a bank keeping funds from an uncashed cashier’s check. In the case of Coinbase, users can send bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and bitcoin Cash by email, informing the recipient they are getting the funds and providing a link whereby they can create their own user account to redeem funds.

Unfortunately, many of these emails went overlooked prior to the rise of cryptocurrencies in 2017. Instead of returning the funds back to their original owners, the exchange held onto them, the lawsuit alleges.

California’s property law is on the side of the investors, the lawsuit says.

“This class action seeks to recover these unclaimed cryptocurrencies and deliver them to the intended recipients, as well as all “forks” thereof (e.g. bitcoin Cash fork of bitcoin), and “airdrops” related thereto,” the lawsuit states.

What Coinbase should have done, according to the complaint, is to notify the recipients of the newfound bitcoin within 2.5 years of when the funds were received that if left unredeemed, their cryptocurrencies plus interest and dividends would be sent to the state of California. Plaintiffs whose email addresses have since “gone stale” want their assets turned over to the state.

Emailing Cryptocurrencies

Coinbase’s email feature is a convenient way to send cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, especially for other members of the exchange for whom funds are automatically deposited into their accounts. For non-users, however, it’s a different story, and the latest allegations shine a spotlight on another possible flaw in the Coinbase infrastructure.

It also opens the door for similar lawsuits to emerge among users at other exchanges where cryptocurrency funds have yet to be claimed.

Coinbase, meanwhile, just recently faced a similarly sensitive situation in which it blamed a tech glitch at Visa for unauthorized charges that the exchange has vowed to reverse.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

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Published at Mon, 05 Mar 2018 15:34:42 +0000

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Max Keiser: BTC to $100,000

Ever-the bitcoin bull, Max Keiser has declared that he thinks bitcoin’s top will be $100,000. According to Russia Today, the network on which Keiser has a regular slot on global economics, Keiser stated in an interview that the  world’s leading digital currency is a “gift from God to help humanity”.

The cryptocurrency advocate went on to elaborate his predictions for the alt-coin market. For him, those currently at the top would likely remain whilst many would disappear:

“Ninety percent of trading is in the top 20 coins, and that will continue. Coins will come and go. The composition of the top 20 will change less frequently. It’s similar to the thousands of stocks that trade on the NYSE and NASDAQ. Over the years, many disappear, new ones are listed. The difference being that with crypto, things move 100 times faster.”

Keiser went on to critique bitcoin Cash. For him, the hard fork of bitcoin that occurred this August is merely an attempt to cash in on the brand name of bitcoin. The sometimes-explosive analyst referred to it as nothing more than an alt-coin and tantamount to plagiarism:

bitcoin cash is an alt-coin that has its fans just like many alt-coins. I don’t think anyone who uses bitcoin’s name and applies it to an alt-coin like bitcoin cash does is adhering to acceptable business practices. In other words, bitcoin’s brand is being stolen by a competitor that calls itself bitcoin cash and this is outright fraud in my opinion, just like it’s fraudulent to use Coca-Cola and Nike’s name to sell soft drinks or shoes.”

When asked if bitcoin was hyper-inflated, he flipped the question on its head. Clearly, the interviewer meant was the price hyper-inflated, however, Keiser of course used the opportunity to rail against the dollar and the rate of inflation in the US. He spoke of the finite supply of bitcoin and how the number of Bitcoins minted is ever-decreasing. Of course, being a crytocurrency proponent, he measures wealth using a scale comprising of a certain flashy, wing-doored super-car:

“I can buy ten times more Lamborghinis this year than I could last year with the same amount of bitcoin. The US dollar is an inflating asset. There are trillions more of them every year. The amount I need to buy a Lamborghini keeps going up, not down. It’s garbage.”

He concluded by comparing those who don’t believe in bitcoin today with Michael Dell in the 1990s. The computer manufacturer called Apple an embarrassment and recommended that they shut down. Two decades later, Apple are one of the most valuable companies in the world and as Keiser reminds us: “nobody talks about Michael Dell anymore.”

 

Image: PixaBay

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