The Sun (Malaysia)

Glitch allowed trade of digital currency in zero yen

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TOKYO: A Japanese cryptocurr­ency exchange undergoing checks by regulators has said a system failure let investors briefly trade a digital currency for zero yen, highlighti­ng security concerns about such assets after last month’s cyber heist at Coincheck Inc.

Zaif, an exchange run by Osaka-based Tech Bureau Corp, said on Tuesday a problem in its price calculatio­n system allowed seven customers to trade a cryptocurr­ency with no yen value for around 20 minutes on Feb 16.

It was unclear if the customers realised they were trading the digital asset for zero yen, or were somehow blindsided for a brief moment.

The exchange said it had corrected the customers’ balances to account for any trades of the cryptocurr­ency made at zero yen. It added that it had resolved the issue with six of the customers and was still doing so with the remaining one.

Zaif did not give further details, or identify the cryptocurr­ency affected by the system error. Tech Bureau officials were not immediatel­y available for further comment.

The incident comes after hackers stole US$530 million (RM2.07 billion) in digital money from Coincheck last month, sparking checks by regulators of Japan’s other exchange operators, including Tech Bureau.

The Financial Services Agency launched on-site checks at Tech Bureau because it saw the exchange as potentiall­y vulnerable to cyber-attacks, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Feb 9.

Japan last year rolled out the world’s first system to oversee cryptocurr­ency exchanges, in a bid to protect customers, stamp out illegal uses of cryptocurr­encies as it sought to nurture a young and promising sector. Zaif is one of 16 cryptocurr­ency exchanges registered with the government. – Reuters

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