A major bitcoin exchange has gone bust after secretly
racking up catastrophic losses, other virtual currency companies said
Tuesday _ a potentially fatal blow for the exotic new form of money.
The
website of Tokyo-based Mt. Gox was returning a blank page Tuesday. The
disappearance of the site follows the resignation Sunday of Mt. Gox CEO
Mark Karpeles from the board of the Bitcoin Foundation, a group seeking
legitimacy for the currency, and a withdrawal ban imposed at the
exchange earlier this month.
Prominent members
of the Bitcoin community _ including San Francisco-based wallet service
Coinbase and Chinese exchange BTC China _ sought to shore up confidence
in the currency by saying Mt. Gox's collapse was an isolated case of
mismanagement. They said it had abused users' trust, but did not offer
details on how.
``As with any new industry,
there are certain bad actors that need to be weeded out, and that is
what we are seeing today,'' the statement said.
Documents
purportedly leaked from the company lay out the scale of the problem.
An 11-page ``Crisis Strategy Draft'' published on the blog of
entrepreneur and Bitcoin enthusiast Ryan Selkis says that 740,000
bitcoins are missing from Mt. Gox, which roughly translates to hundreds
of millions of dollars' worth of losses, although figures are fuzzy
given Bitcoin's extreme volatility.
``At the risk of appearing hyperbolic, this could be the end of Bitcoin, at least for most of the public,'' the draft said.
In
a post to his blog, Selkis said that the document was handed to him by a
``reliable source'' and that several people close to the company had
confirmed the figures. Reached by phone, he declined further comment.
The scandal may cost Bitcoin enthusiasts dear.
At
the Tokyo office tower housing Mt. Gox, bitcoin trader Kolin Burgess
said he had picketed the building since Feb. 14 after flying in from
London, hoping to get back $320,000 he has tied up in bitcoins with Mt.
Gox.
``I may have lost all of my money,'' said
Burgess, next to placards asking if Mt. Gox is bankrupt. ``It hasn't
shaken my trust in Bitcoin, but it has shaken my trust in bitcoin
exchanges.''
Mt. Gox CEO Karpeles did not
immediately return several messages seeking comment. A security officer
at the office tower said no one from Mt. Gox was in the building.
Tibbane, an Internet company that Karpeles is CEO of, still has its name
listed on the building's directory.
``I have no idea'' where they are, said Burgess, the trader. ``I'm both annoyed and worried.''
On
bitcoin exchanges, the currency's value has fallen to about $470 from
$550 in the past few hours, a figure already down more than 50 percent
on the price of $1,200 per bitcoin reached on Mt. Gox three months ago.
The
disappearance of Mt. Gox could be fatal for Bitcoin, which was started
in 2009 as a currency free from government controls. Bitcoin's boosters
say the currency's design make it impossible to counterfeit and
difficult to manipulate, and the virtual money has won an eclectic mix
of die-hard fans, including libertarians, tech enthusiasts and
adventurous investors.
But the currency has
struggled to shake off its associations with criminality, particularly
its role in powering the now-defunct online drug marketplace Silk Road.
Only last month another member of the Bitcoin Foundation, Vice Chairman
Charlie Shrem, was arrested at New York's Kennedy Airport on charges of
money laundering.
Authorities have been taking
an increasingly hard look at Bitcoin and related virtual currencies
including Litecoin, Namecoin, Ripple, and countless others. Some
countries, including Russia, have effectively banned the currency. In
other jurisdictions, authorities are weighing whether to try to tame the
marketplace through licenses or other mechanisms.
Even
if Mt. Gox doesn't drag Bitcoin down with it, there's fear that the
exchange's demise will push officials to take an even more skeptical
stance.
``I think this is disastrous from a
(regulatory) standpoint,'' Selkis, the enthusiast, said in a message
posted to Twitter. ``The hammer will now come down hard.''
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