April 22, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Irony Alert: JPMorgan Gets Sued for Bitcoin Fraud

Irony alert: jpmorgan gets sued for bitcoin fraud

Irony Alert: JPMorgan Gets Sued for Bitcoin Fraud

Jp morgan blockchain fintech
Advertisement

Join our community of 10 000 traders on Hacked.com for just $39 per month.

If Jamie Dimon didn’t believe in karma before, he may be a believer now.

JPMorgan has been hit with a class-action lawsuit on allegations of tacking on unannounced layers of fees plus interest after pulling the rug out from under the feet of cryptocurrency investors, according to a Reuters report. No wonder the decentralized revolution is upon us.

The bank put the kibosh on credit card purchases for cryptocurrencies earlier this year when it also sparked controversy by treating crypto purchases as cash advances, the latter of which command higher fees. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon infamously called bitcoin a fraud a while back, and now those words are coming back to haunt him.

The plaintiff, Brady Tucker, is from Idaho and the lawsuit was filed in a New York court. He alleges that JPMorgan charged additional layers of fees and much higher interest on the cash advances versus what they charge for credit card purchases. Customers cried foul, but the bank refused to budge.

A Chase spokesperson told Reuters that while the bank placed a ban on credit card purchases for bitcoin and altcoins, they did so “because of the credit risk involved” and pointed out that customers could still use their checking account-linked debit cards for purchases and bypass fees. JPMorgan wasn’t the only bank to ban credit card use for bitcoin, as Bank of America, Citi and others took similar action amid a pullback in the bitcoin price in the new year.

Meanwhile, the Plaintiff is fighting back after being charged these extra fees, including more than $140 in “fees” and another $20-plus in sudden interest charges tied to nearly half-a-dozen transactions right about the same time Chase implemented the ban.

According to the lawsuit, there are “hundreds” and “possibly thousands” of other Chase customers who were similarly met with these unexpected fees in their accounts. While the suit may be about the fees, it wouldn’t be surprising to learn that it’s also about the principle.

‘Stuck It to Him’

Before turning to the law, Tucker reached out to JPMorgan Chase’s customer service and afforded them the chance to remove the charges, to no avail. Instead, the lawsuit says the bank “stuck the plaintiff with the bill, after the fact of his transactions, and insisted that he pay it.”

Tucker’s attorneys are arguing a violation of the US Truth and Lending Act, which is designed to protect consumers from “unfair credit billing and credit card practices.” It also says that financial institutions must inform customers of any changes to the terms in writing.

The class action lawsuit is seeking damages of $1 million.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

Follow us on Telegram.
Advertisement

Published at Wed, 11 Apr 2018 20:47:19 +0000

Banking[wpr5_ebay kw=”bitcoin” num=”1″ ebcat=”” cid=”5338043562″ lang=”en-US” country=”0″ sort=”bestmatch”]

Previous Article

ATB Financial Is Reaching Out to Blockchain Startups and ICOs

Next Article

Irony Alert: JPMorgan Gets Sued for Bitcoin Fraud

You might be interested in …

Bitcoin

Bitcoin

bitcoinPhoto by CafeCredit under CC 2.0 You can use this photo for FREE under Creative Commons license. Make sure to give proper author attribution to www.cafecredit.com. Thank you for respecting Creative Commons license. P.S. Need […]

These 27 Companies Support Bitcoin Unlimited, 44 Oppose

While bitcoin Unlimited is gaining traction among miners, only a handful of bitcoin companies are in favor of its bigger block and Emergent Consensus proposal.


Breakdown by Company

The scaling debate in which two predominant bitcoin improvement proposals, SegWit and bitcoin Unlimited, are competing for miners’ support is becoming more and more intense.

As the debate escalates, supporters from both sides are now threatening to push for user activated forks (both soft and hard). While bitcoin Unlimited is considered the most popular proposal in terms of hashing power, a look at the companies that support it or SegWit reveals the exact opposite.

As of this writing, out of the companies listed in Coin Dance, 66 support SegWit and 58 are ready for it. Only 8 companies oppose SegWit.

On the BU side, there are 27 in favor, with 9 companies ready for it. This means that 70% of companies actively support SegWit, compared to 20% for BU. The other 10% are undecided or “unknown”. The companies that support BU include:

  • AntPool
  • Atlanta bitcoin
  • BitAddress.org
  • bitcoin.com (Saint Bitts LLC)
  • BitcoinPlug
  • Bitmain
  • BTCPOP
  • Canoe
  • Coinucopia
  • GoUrl.io
  • bitcoin WordPress/PHP Gateway
  • Keys4Coins
  • MrCoin
  • Slon BTM
  • Bitfire.io
  • Bittoku GK
  • btc.top
  • GBMiners
  • Keyois
  • Prohashing
  • Satoricoin
  • ViaBTC
  • Bitzillions
  • Magnr
  • Bitaps.com
  • CTY bitcoin Vietnam TNHH
  • OKCoin
  • Trezor (Ready)
  • Electrum (Ready)
  • bitcoin Wallet for Android (Ready)
  • Bifinex (Ready)
  • Breadwallet (Ready)
  • Gemini (Ready)
  • Lamassu (Ready)
  • Rocketr (Ready)

It should be noted that even among the 9 companies that are ready for BU, two also support SegWit (Electrum and Trezor) and 5 are ready for SegWit (including Bitfinex and Gemini). 

It’s also worth noting that some of the companies that are against bitcoin Unlimited are not even supporting SegWit. They are simply opposed to BU’s Emergent Consensus.

Meanwhile, 4 of the 8 companies that oppose SegWit and are all signaling for BU are mining pools.

Who Supports What?

We can see that some predominant exchanges like Poloniex, LocalBitcoins, CoinCheck and others are ready for SegWit, while other names like BTCC, Xapo and Bitso support it.

On the BU side, in addition to bitcoin.com, Magnr, BitAddress.org, and several BTM providers, the biggest names by far are mining pools such as Bitmain’s Antpool, ViaBTC and GBMiners. However, the independence of these mining pools has recently come under question by the community.

//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

At the same time, the only major exchanges that support BU also support SegWit, including OKCoin, Bitfinex (ready) and Gemini (ready).

The companies that actively oppose SegWit include 4 mining pools and 4 other small companies that don’t have much bearing in the bitcoin ecosystem. Conversely, among the companies that oppose BU actively, we find names like BitGo, Vaultoro, Bitsquare, and GreenAddress.

Among the undecided, we still have names like Bitstamp, Bittrex, Bitmex, Kraken, and others.

bitcoin Businesses Generally Against BU, Hard Fork

The general animosity towards bitcoin Unlimited can also be observed in the industry letters that have been signed so far. For example, a list of nearly 20 exchanges has signed a hard fork contingency plan in which the BU token would be listed as BTU or XBU.

Canada’s bitcoin ecosystem has also produced an industry letter in which a large number of economic nodes operators signaled their rejection for BU and proposed industry guidelines for hard forks.

Moreover, the data is also reflected (despite varying data depending on the course) by the share of bitcoin Core (84-91%) nodes among total network nodes compared to bitcoin Unlimited’s (2-9%).

The conclusion that can be draw from this data is that despite the growing popularity of bitcoin Unlimited among mining pools, bitcoin companies as well as user nodes are largely opposed to the bitcoin Unlimited proposal.

Would you boycott a company based on their support or lackthereof? Let us know in the comment below!


 Images courtesy of Coin.dance, Shutterstock, nodecounter.com

The post These 27 Companies Support Bitcoin Unlimited, 44 Oppose appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.