Trading has been suspended on the Bitcoin
exchange Mt Gox and its website has closed, amid rumors that the
exchange has lost 744,000 Bitcoins in an online theft – worth around
$350 million at Monday’s trading prices, according to Wired. If true, it would be the largest Bitcoin theft in a series of heists which have hit the troubled currency this year.
The company’s website is offline, its founder has vanished, and staff are not answering calls, according to Reuters.
Wired
reports that the company may have fallen victim to a prolonged hacker
attack, quoting a document by Bitcoin entrepreneur Ryan Selkis, which
claims that the exchange is insolvent after a months-long hack, and
says, ““The reality is that Mt. Gox can go bankrupt at any moment, and
certainly deserves to as a company.” Wired was unable to confirm the
report, and says that no spokesman for the company was available to
comment.
The document, entitled MtGox Situation: Crisis Strategy Draft,
has circulated widely on the internet, and appears to be an internal
document, outlining strategies available to the company. “The current
situation will negatively impact everyone who owns or operates in
Bitcoin,” it says, blaming, “massive robbery and poor Bitcoin
accounting.”
The company’s website was taken offline at noon Tokyo time,
shortly after a statement was published online by digital wallet
company Coinbase, denouncing Mt Gox, and endorsed by other leading
Bitcoin exchanges, according to the FT’s report.
Coinbase
said, “ As with any new industry, there are certain bad actors that
need to be weeded out, and that is what we are seeing today. Mtgox has
confirmed its issues in private discussions with other members of the
bitcoin community.”News agency Reuters described the exchange – once the world’s largest – as having an empty office, bar protesters angry that they had lost money after investing.
Rumors had circulated that the company faced insolvency after it halted withdrawals earlier this year, according to Bloomberg Businessweek. The company had halted withdrawals after what it described as ‘unusual activity’.
Veteran security researcher and writer Graham Cluley says,
“What a colossal mess. According to some reports, 6% of Bitcoins in
circulation have been stolen. These latest developments will send
shockwaves through the Bitcoin world, and it remains to be seen if long
term confidence in crypto currencies will be damaged.”
If the rumor of a ‘heist’ is true, it’s one of a series to
hit Bitcoin sites, including high-profile ‘dark markets’. As reported by
We Live Security,
a large scale cyber-theft this month drained the relaunched ‘online
drug bazaar’ Silk Road 2.0 of nearly all of its Bitcoin reserves –
estimated to be worth several million dollars. Site administrators
blamed an insider, who used a recently discovered flaw to withdraw money
repeatedly, before vanishing.
Forbes Magazine said
that it was the latest in a series of hacks targeting ‘black market’
sites – and that of the half-dozen sites which sprung up in the wake of
the closure of the original Silk Road, three shut down after insiders
ran off with funds, and two after being hacked. Silk Road 2.0’s latest
mishap was also due to an insider, the site admin believes.
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