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Topic: California Man Has Computer Hacked Then Blames Crypto Exchange (Read 4236 times)

sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
legendary
Activity: 2730
Merit: 1068
Juicin' crypto
Sucks to be him.
sr. member
Activity: 295
Merit: 250
Altcoinpress.com says this story was posted by an author called MicroGuy who created the popular digital currency community GLDTalk.org. I assume that's the same person as the MicroGuy here on bitcointalk with "Founder at GLDTalk.org" written below his avatar?
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.9320292
Quote from: Zer0Sum
...
People have to understand that Cryptsy Public Business Plan = full regulation and partnership with US Govt...
They have about 40 employees at least 50% of whom likely do Government Reporting of some kind...
Remember the late CampBX... they had the same "plan"... and the US Govt administration load killed them.

*** Not only will HYP owners lose their anonymity via Cryptsy ***...
With an annual budget in Florida of > $1,0000,000... this is a recipe for the next Gox.

They are doing a pathetic 10 BTC/day in USD trading and have gone all-in on freaking Ripple...
No one has ever made a dime off XRP except the founders... and that will never change.

next Gox ?
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
One of the ways hackers can get your login info is to install a key logger on your machine to log Key strokes. these keystrokes can be sent to the hacker who can then try to work out what your Log on and Pswd are.
If you have a key logger installed on your machine, that's not the exhange's fault.
It's up to us to ensure our machines are not compromised.


or maybe he just lied.. ever thought of that ?

why do you all fall for the I was hacked story so easily ?
i am revoking your crypto privileges for week by making a crypto-civil-arrest !
i am the crypto-sheriff and if you guys can't stop being gullible then you not allowed to have an opinion for a week !

oh and it's here too.. http://www.coindesk.com/cryptsy-lawsuit-customer-account-breach/
full member
Activity: 474
Merit: 111
One of the ways hackers can get your login info is to install a key logger on your machine to log Key strokes. these keystrokes can be sent to the hacker who can then try to work out what your Log on and Pswd are.
If you have a key logger installed on your machine, that's not the exhange's fault.
It's up to us to ensure our machines are not compromised.
full member
Activity: 152
Merit: 102
Contributory negligence
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
Thanks for the heads up and it's nice to see BigVern make a public statement..
obvious why though of course lol
prob concerned about losing business.

and yeah that guys claim is pathetic anyone half a brain know you can't blame them for dumb-ass'ery
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1030
Twitter @realmicroguy


California businessman and cryptocurrency trader, Skye Bonow, has decided to file suit against the world’s #1 altcoin exchange, Cryptsy, after having his own personal computer compromised.

In court documents filed yesterday in the 15th Judicial Court of Florida, Silver Law Firm alleges that Cryptsy violated the state’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act by failing to provide critical information regarding security risks and customer fund management protocols.

Cryptsy founder, Paul Vernon, in a blog post today called the charges baseless and believes the timing of the news is part of a carefully orchestrated PR campaign aimed at a financial settlement.

He encouraged the site’s 300,000+ users to keep their computers safe at all times and provided several security tips.

"In this case the attack on the user making the claim came from within their own computer. This is currently one of the most common attacks by hackers. While we try to educate our users on how to secure their local environment, we ultimately have no control of a user's computer system."

Bonow, according to the court filing, lost 140 BTC in January after his exchange account was drained through a series of internal transfers and cryptocurrency trades, made by the hacker, on the Cryptsy trading platform. At the time of the loss, the bitcoins were valued at approximately $112,000.00.

Apparently, the plaintiff was previously unaware that passwords stored on personal computers can be used by hackers to access financial records and online trading accounts.

Full Story: http://altcoinpress.com/2014/10/california-man-has-computer-hacked-then-blames-crypto-exchange/
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