AND THE BITCOINS ARE GONE!!!!

The week bitcoin hit $1,200 I said that things that go parabolic always crash. I’m not sure how accurate the pricing is today, but some websites say it is trading for $550 today. That is a 55% crash in 3 months. It seems these virtual bitcoins can just disappear. Sounds like a great investment. You know what can’t disappear? A gold coin or a silver coin. I believe bitcoins started as a noble attempt to subvert Central banks and their control of currencies. I believe scam artists have joined the party and have taken advantage of dupes. I also believe the governmental and banking authorities have made a concerted effort to undermine and discredit bitcoin as an alternative currency. They are succeeding. And it’s gone!!!

Mt Gox Files For Bankruptcy After $473 Million In Bitcoins “Disappeared”

Tyler Durden's picture

For a case study of a blistering rise and an absolutely epic fall of an exchange that i) was named after Magic: the Gathering and ii) transacted in a digital currency which many have speculated was conceived by the NSA nearly two decades ago and was used as a honeypot to trap the gullible, look no further than Mt.Gox which after halting withdrawals for the second (and final time) has finally done the honorable thing, and filed for bankruptcy. As the WSJ reports, “Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox said Friday it was filing for bankruptcy protection after losing almost 750,000 of its customers’ bitcoins, marking the collapse of a marketplace that once dominated trading in the virtual currency. The company said it also lost around 100,000 of its own bitcoins. Together, the lost bitcoins would be worth approximately $473 million at market prices charted by the CoinDesk bitcoin index, although the price of Mt. Gox bitcoin had fallen well below that index after it stopped bitcoin withdrawals in early February.”

The punchline: speaking to reporters at Tokyo District Court Friday after the bankruptcy filing, Mt. Gox owner Mark Karpelès said technical issues had opened the way for fraudulent withdrawals, and he apologized to customers.

“There was some weakness in the system, and the bitcoins have disappeared. I apologize for causing trouble”

So $473 million Bitcoins disappear just like that? But you heard the man – he is sorry. So all is well – and why not: it works for the TBTF banks every day.

What is amazing is that at the time of filing Mt. Gox had outstanding debt of about ¥6.5 billion ($63.6 million), and just as amazing is that it actually had assets worth ¥3.84 billion.

Elsewhere, prices on the CoinDesk index, which tracks the Bitstamp and BTC-e bitcoin exchanges, fell slightly after the announcement but appeared to stave off a larger drop.

Mr. Karpelès, wearing a gray suit and a blue tie, appeared calm while his lawyer did most of the talking, but he appeared to have difficulty finding words when reporters asked him to send a message to his investors, just repeating his apology.

Computer geeks who were hoping to ride the momentum train to riches, and apparently had never heard of gold, were unhappy:

“It is disappointing they hid so much for so long,” said Jonathan Waller, a 30-year-old game developer who said he had had 211 bitcoin in Mt. Gox. “I hope they manage to become a fully-functioning exchange again, but their reputation is so damaged it may not be possible,” he said.

 

Over the past month, customers from as far away as the U.K. and Australia had come to air their complaints outside the company’s Tokyo offices. One of them, Londoner Kolin Burges, figured in news photos around the world holding a sign saying, “MT GOX—WHERE IS OUR MONEY.”

 

William Banks, a website developer in Australia, said he lost about 100 bitcoins in Mt. Gox. He had been using the platform since the end of 2012, when he bought some bitcoins at $40 each. Recently, he bought more at about $800 a pop as he became more confident in the virtual currency. He said he has contacted a Japan-based lawyer to look into legal action.

 

About Mt. Gox’s loss of bitcoins, he said, “That seems impossible to me. It’s just such an astronomical amount of coins to lose.”

Only when redenominated in USD. Remember: BTC is its own currency so why fret? As for the collapse of this latest Ponzi scheme: if things appear too good to be true (wink wink S&P 500), they usually are.

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12 Comments
Bullock
Bullock
February 28, 2014 9:15 am

Gold, silver, guns, ammo, the only investments I make these days.

harry p.
harry p.
February 28, 2014 9:49 am

those along with reading and learning are the things that hold up

Welshman
Welshman
February 28, 2014 10:24 am

I didn’t understand Bitcoin until I read a long article about the concept, it still wasn’t something I could get by arms around. Now 473m GONE and we are sorry WTF!

Billy
Billy
February 28, 2014 1:42 pm

Bullock

+1, but don’t forget food, water, meds, first aid supplies (Quik-Clot, an IFAK, Israeli pressure bandages, etc)… stuff like that.

One thing I did was learn how to suture – buy a dead piglet and teach yourself how to suture (it’s not difficult). It doesn’t have to be pretty, just effective.

A few tubes of superglue (the genuine article) will be useful too, since superglue was designed to be used in the medical field as a substitute for sutures…

bb
bb
February 28, 2014 2:06 pm

Billy , even if you do manage to make it a year what kind of life do you think you will have ?I believe ,like you ,this collapse will be biblical .It is going to cause pain ,hardship and suffering like no other event in history.It will set the stage for the real ANTICHRIST.I plan,I prep ,I pray but the more I think about it the more dreadful it becomes.Wouldn’t it be better just to die?

Econman
Econman
February 28, 2014 3:44 pm

Investors were “BitCornholed”.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 28, 2014 4:19 pm

Admin steals my story. I am gonna go all clammy on his ass and cry about it fifteen times or so.

Hey, AWD, how are your bitcoins?

bb
bb
February 28, 2014 4:32 pm

LIpoh , the real bitcoins are doing just fine.The bitcoins in.Japan were fake.Didn’t you know this?
.

Econman
Econman
February 28, 2014 9:02 pm

Since it’s “digital money”, the question is was it ever really there in the 1st place?

Around the western world, people rarely use paper money or coins to buy stuff, so our central bank created fiat notes are becoming digital money too. Fake hocus pocus masquerading as $$$.

Thinker
Thinker
March 5, 2014 5:38 pm

American Bitcoin exchange CEO found dead in her Singapore home after suspected suicide at age 28

The American CEO of an exchange for the troubled bitcoin digital currency has been found dead after a suspected suicide at her home in Singapore.

Wisconsin native, Autumn Radtke, 28, was discovered inside her apartment on February 28 and officials in the South East Asian city state are now waiting for toxicology test results to determine the exact cause of death.

Douglas Adams, the non-executive chairman of First Meta confirmed that his colleague had passed away in a statement which said the company was ‘shocked and saddened by the tragic loss of our friend and CEO Autumn Radtke.’

The death of Radtke is the latest piece of bad news to hit the crisis-ridden bitcoin currency following the collapse of the Japanese-based Mt Gox exchange last week after $400m went missing and the closure of the Flexcoin bank yesterday in Canada after computer hackers robbed $600,000.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2573863/Bitcoin-exchange-CEO-dead-home-suspected-suicide-age-28.html#ixzz2v8ADCzcS

Thinker
Thinker
March 8, 2014 10:20 am

Another one goes “poof!”

Bitcoin bank closes after high-tech heist

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A bank specializing in bitcoins says it has closed after computer hackers robbed its digital currency.

The closure of the Flexcoin bank comes just a week after the collapse of Mt. Gox, a major bitcoin exchange.

Mt. Gox also linked its demise to an electronic heist.

The twin failures of Mt. Gox and Flexcoin will likely raise more doubts about bitcoin’s ability to establish itself as an alternative currency.

Hackers stole 896 bitcoins from Flexcoin’s online vault, or “hot wallet,” according to a notice on Flexcoin’s website Tuesday. That translates into a loss of about $600,000, based on bitcoin’s current trading value.

Unlike banks dealing in government-backed currencies, Flexcoin’s losses aren’t covered by deposit insurance. The Alberta, Canada, bank says it can’t recover from the setback.

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20140305/DACB7NH00.html