April 26, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Someone Is Impersonating [BTC] Futures Platfom Bakkt to Raise Money

Someone is impersonating [btc] futures platfom bakkt to raise money

Someone Is Impersonating [BTC] Futures Platfom Bakkt to Raise Money

Someone is poorly impersonating the highly anticipated bitcoin [BTC] futures trading platform Bakkt in an apparent attempt to bilk people out of their bitcoin [BTC].

On Wednesday night, the CoinDesk news team received an email (subject line: “Bakkt News!”) claiming that the platform was set to launch on March 12. The email, sent from a gmail address and written in broken English, further stated that Bakkt would be seeking to raise $50 million in a second financing round and directed readers to a website, bakktplatform.io.

There, prospective investors are invited to register by entering their name and email address. After going through this process, visitors are presented with a bitcoin address to send their money and asked to provide their own address to receive their “profits” from the investment.

Someone is impersonating [btc] futures platfom bakkt to raise money

As of Thursday morning, no funds had been sent to the wallet.

The site (registered just a week ago through WhoisGuard, a domain owner-obscuring service in Panama, according to a WHOIS lookup) is a fake.

A spokesperson for Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), Bakkt’s parent company, told CoinDesk: “that is not a Bakkt website and we wouldn’t have communicated in that way.”

Further, the email’s claims about Bakkt are dubious at best.

No launch date

For starters, Bakkt has no official launch date right now.

The platform is still waiting on regulatory approval to begin listing its futures product, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is nowhere near such an approval.

Indeed, the CFTC has not even published Bakkt’s self-warehousing proposal for comment. Once that proposal is released, the general public will have 30 days to respond. After the comment period ends, the CFTC’s commissioners will likely take a few days to review the feedback before voting to approve or deny the proposal.

In that light, a March 12 launch date would be an aggressive target – and just to be clear, Bakkt has made no such commitment.

Caveat emptor

Even more implausible, however, is the email’s announcement of a “Second Financing Round.”

First, Bakkt just raised $182.5 million at the close of 2018, less than two months ago. And it strains credulity to imagine that a regulated institutional platform would solicit funds from the general public through a website, require just a name and email address to invest (though “company” and “industry” are optional fields on the registration form) and accept bitcoin only.

“We are at the stage of completing the testing of Blockchain on our platform, our tests have shown high results of efficiency and manufacturability using Blockchain technology in contrast to Fiat,” the bogus Bakkt website explains (sorta). “Тhe near future we plan to create the first regulated exchange of the institutional class in a developing industry and much more [sic].”

If that pitch isn’t persuasive enough, the site promises investors a return within three days of the platform’s launch (so by March 15, presumably). Perhaps appealing to FOMO, it says the platform will conclude its fundraising effort on Feb. 25, unless it hits the target before that date.

In all seriousness, please don’t send funds to this platform. Investors who do are unlikely to see their bitcoin [BTC] again.

What this Bakkt; bitcoin [BTC] address signup screenshots from bakktplatform.io

Published at Thu, 07 Feb 2019 16:00:26 +0000

Previous Article

Look How Close We Are To Blockchain Adoption

Next Article

Dubai’s Royal Sheikh Invests in Lichtenstein Based Crypto-Fund

You might be interested in …

Lambda Protocol: Decentralizing Access to Decentralized Applications

Lambda Protocol: Decentralizing Access to Decentralized Applications

The Lambda Protocol has announced a decentralized, open-source solution for unrestricted access to decentralized applications (DApps). Utilizing the Lambda Protocol, DApp developers can leverage existing browsers such as Chrome or Safari to open up their applications to millions of devices currently being used. The Lambda Protocol plans to launch with support for both the Ethereum and bitcoin blockchains, adding support for permissioned blockchains such as Hyperledger Fabric in the future.

The Lambda Protocol team, based in Singapore and Australia, is headed by CEO Taiyang Zhang. Team mentors include Santiment COO Dorjee Sun, KyberNetwork CEO Loi Luu and Liquidity.Network co-founder Arthur Gervais.

In an interview with bitcoin Magazine, Zhang explained that there are two main problems when it comes to DApps: centralized access points and lack of interoperability between browsers and wallets.

Currently, most browsers for the decentralized web are centralized. For example, Google Chrome extensions and iOS applications allow users to access and interact with DApps on the Ethereum Network. These DApp browsers are controlled by private corporations, and they all share a common weakness: a single point of failure. They can easily be removed at a corporation’s discretion, no questions asked.

Zhang compared this single point of failure to a hypothetical in which a portal to search the entire web is hosted on a single website.

All it takes is for an ISP/Government to block one website, which defeats a core premise of decentralization.

All decentralized applications require a cryptocurrency wallet to function. Because of this restrictive prerequisite, desktop users must either integrate a wallet into a browser such as Chrome or Firefox by installing an add-on or create a new wallet by installing a new browser.

Users seeking to access DApps on mobile devices face greater limitations. Native iOS and Android apps do not support third-party browser/extension embedding, and popular mobile web browsers such as Chrome and Safari do not support add-ons.

The Lambda Protocol

The Lambda Protocol is an open-source internet protocol. “Our goal is to allow users to access the decentralized applications of the future in the browsers of today,” said Zhang.

To facilitate this access to DApps, the Lambda Protocol plans to develop a decentralized messaging layer. This messaging layer has the capability to connect browsers such as Chrome and Safari to cryptocurrency wallets such as Ledger Nano S, Trezor, imToken and Jaxx. By utilizing the Lambda Protocol, DApp developers can open their applications to the millions of devices and applications that users currently use.

Conversely, users can connect to DApps via the Lambda decentralized protocol. For example, users can trade bitcoin on decentralized exchanges using hardware wallets without downloading additional software. And they can use decentralized applications on mobile devices without downloading additional applications.

Previously, it was impossible to access any DApps without downloading software that acts as a centralized point of access. But with the Lambda Protocol, users are offered a frictionless, decentralized entry point to the “Web 3.0.”

How the Lambda Protocol Works

DAP (Decentralized Application Particle) tokens fuel the Lambda Protocol. Zhang described the protocol’s basic structure from three standpoints: developers, users and relayers:

“Developers utilizing the Lambda Protocol pay DAP tokens to request a user’s wallet to sign a transaction. Users sign transactions, which are then broadcast to the network. Relayers (users who facilitate the execution of a transaction) earn DAP tokens by broadcasting and generating a proof.”

The amount of DAP required for an individual transaction varies and is calculated dynamically. A staking and rate-limiting mechanism is employed to ensure developers are only charged for on-chain transactions.

The Lambda Protocol plans to launch its testnet in Q1 of 2018.

The post Lambda Protocol: Decentralizing Access to Decentralized Applications appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

What do you think? Is it too late?

What do you think? Is it too late? 1.0m Subscribers 5.2k Online A community dedicated to bitcoin [BTC], the currency of the Internet. bitcoin [BTC] is a distributed, worldwide, decentralized digital money. bitcoin [BTC]s are […]