The New Zealand Herald

Cryptopia co-founder stands by new venture

- Chris Keall

Cryptopia co-founder Adam Clark has come under fire from the bitcoin community, with various industry news sites saying he has a lot of gall to set up a new cryptocurr­ency venture, Assetylene.

The criticism comes after Clark’s previous venture’s failure and the unresolved police and liquidator’s investigat­ions around it.

“One would assume, then, that the founder of a hacked, shuttered exchange, wouldn’t try again so quickly. One would be wrong,” fumed industry commentato­r John Biggs on CoinDesk.

The Cryptopia owners called police into the Christchur­ch-based company in mid-January after a cyber attack saw an unknown amount — never confirmed but said to be in the tens of millions — siphoned off by hackers.

Cryptopia was placed in liquidatio­n last week. Liquidator Grant Thornton expects it to take “months, not weeks” to untangle the situation.

Police have not commented publicly since mid February. Yesterday they told the Herald there was no update to report but that inquiries were ongoing.

Yesterday Clark was happy to field the Herald’s questions. How does he see the stories by Biggs et al?

“Well I left Cryptopia a year and a half ago, so the media is just fake newsing it,” Clark said.

He stresses Assetylene pre-dates Cryptopia’s hack by several months, and is rebuilt from the ground up to address its predecesso­r’s flaws and limitation­s.

Clark left his role as chief technology officer at Cryptopia in February 2018.

“New management wanted to take the company in a different path I fundamenta­lly disagreed with, so we parted ways,” he said. “I’m a simple

guy, I just like to develop/write code. By the end of 2017, Cryptopia had grown from me and my best mate to almost 100 people.

“It was like Game of Thrones, everyone jostling for positions, every decision became about the bottom line, not helping crypto adoption. Basically everything I wanted it not to be.”

Despite his exit as CTO, Clark was listed as a director at the time of its liquidatio­n on May 15 this year.

He pitched that as a white-knight scenario. “I stepped in as director after the hack,” he said. “Both founders did, to see if we could get the company back on track. Unfortunat­ely, due to the outstandin­g debts, this was not possible, despite massive lay-offs and slashing infrastruc­ture.”

He said he and his wife are creating a “white label” cryptocurr­ency trading platform that will be used by their own venture, Assetylene, but also available for other operators to adopt and rebadge.

“The platform will most likely be used by other clients before [Assetylene] is live,” he said.

He says Assetylene is not like Cryptopia.

“New Zealand’s most advanced crypto-currency exchange,” as it’s billed, adds features “like stop-limit and market orders, something Cryptopia has been struggling to integrate since I left”.

It remains a work in progress. No trading has taken place yet.

And while the Herald has read its server is in Malta, Clark laughs that off, saying, “The server is right next to me [in Christchur­ch]. It’s a developmen­t site, with no coins.”

Where did the name Assetylene come from?

“It’s a play on the word for the highly volatile gas Acetylene due to the high volatility of crypto,” Clark said.

Asked how much was taken in the Cryptopia hack, Clark said he wasn’t sure, given some of the funds were still being secured (there are conflictin­g accounts among crypto experts of the AWOL funds shuffling between accounts). And he wouldn’t comment further on the hack itself.

 ?? Main Photo / 123RF ?? Cryptopia co-founder Adam Clark (left) has come under fire over his latest project, Assetylene.
Main Photo / 123RF Cryptopia co-founder Adam Clark (left) has come under fire over his latest project, Assetylene.
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