Arab Times

Angry Bitcoin investors demand answers at Tokyo creditors’ meet

-

TOKYO, July 23, (AFP): Bitcoin investors voiced anger Wednesday after the first creditors’ meeting for failed Tokyo trading exchange MtGox, whose spectacula­r collapse hammered the digital currency’s reputation and left a trail of unanswered questions.

More than 100 investors, mostly expatriate­s, attended the meeting at a courthouse in the Japanese capital, demanding to know how some $500 million worth of Bitcoins disappeare­d from the disgraced company’s digital vaults earlier this year.

“They are very careful about giving out any informatio­n at this stage, it seems,” Kim Nilsson, 32, a Tokyo-based informatio­n technology engineer, told AFP after the meeting.

“We were hoping for more, obviously,” he added.

Kolin Burges, a 40-year-old investor from London, lashed out what he called a lack of transparen­cy over the missing money.

“I felt that they didn’t give out the answers they should have done,” he said.

People who attended the meeting said former MtGox chief Mark Karpeles and a court-appointed lawyer managing the firm’s bankruptcy proceeding­s gave no clear answer about what happened to their money.

Bitcoins are generated by complex chains of interactio­ns among a huge network of computers around the planet and are not backed by any government or central bank.

The online exchange, which once boasted handling around 80 percent of global Bitcoin transactio­ns, froze withdrawal­s in February. It claimed there was a bug in the software that underpins the virtual currency, making it vulnerable to thieves.

It soon filed for bankruptcy protection, saying it had lost 850,000 units of the crypto-currency valued at some $500 million at the time.

The company later said it had found about 200,000 of them in a “cold wallet” — a storage device such as a memory stick that is not connected to other computers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait