The Phnom Penh Post

Hacked Japan crypto exchange refunds customers

-

JAPAN-BASED virtual currency exchange Coincheck said on Tuesday that it had refunded more than $440 million to customers following the hacking of its systems, which was one of the largest thefts of its kind.

The company said it used its own funds to reimburse about 46.6 billion yen ($440 million) to all 260,000 customers who lost their holdings of NEM, a leading cryptocurr­ency.

“Procedures have been completed with the accounts of all 260,000 customers,” company spokesman Yosuke Imai said.

Thieves syphoned away 523 million units of the cryptocurr­ency from Coincheck – then valued at $547 million – during the January 26 hack, which exceeded the $480 million in bitcoin stolen in 2014 from another Japanese exchange, MtGox.

The 2014 hack prompted Japan to issue new regulation­s, requiring exchanges to obtain a government licence, but Coincheck was allowed to con- tinue operating while the Financial Services Agency was reviewing its applicatio­n.

Authoritie­s raided Coincheck’s office last month and have slapped the company with sanctions.

Coincheck chief operating officer Yusuke Otsuka said last week that the company’s system was breached after several staff members opened emails containing malware.

The firm had failed to upgrade its systems to keep up with the rapid expansion of the crypto- currency market, he said.

In February, seven plaintiffs – two companies and five individual­s – filed a lawsuit against Coincheck seeking the reimbursem­ent of 19.53 million yen in lost virtual currency and further compensati­on for interest lost due to the hack.

As many as 10,000 businesses in Japan are thought to accept bitcoin, and bitFlyer – the c o u n t r y ’s mai n b i t c o i n exchange – saw its user base grow beyond 1 million in November.

 ?? JHAAN ELKER/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Amazon wants its new brick-and-mortar store in Georgetown to be an extension of its website.
JHAAN ELKER/THE WASHINGTON POST Amazon wants its new brick-and-mortar store in Georgetown to be an extension of its website.
 ?? YAMANAKA/AFP TORU ?? Koichiro Wada, president of Japan’s virtual currency exchange Coincheck, speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on March 8.
YAMANAKA/AFP TORU Koichiro Wada, president of Japan’s virtual currency exchange Coincheck, speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on March 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia