Not sure what you're whining about, this is how bitcoin exchanges work. Caveat emptor, where the emptor is anyone dumb enough to send their pseudoanonymous cryptocurrency in an irreversible transaction to some random guy on the internet, lol!
pretty sure Saul of Tarsus wrote something about this
or maybe that was some homophobic screed
i forget
anyway, bitcoin! do not send it to internet stranger!
In my opinion, vleroybrown is right to be concerned and angered by this 'IPO flag' on Cryptostocks.
As far as I know, Cryptostocks is the only exchange that allows asset issuers to raise and lower an IPO flag whenever and as long as they want (I believe this is a new 'feature' of Cryptostocks). Other exchanges, such as Havelock, have IPOs from time to time when they list a new security, but the IPO is only for a specified period of time, and once it's over, it's over. In other words, on Havelock, an IPO is really an IPO. On Cryptostocks, this "IPO flag" has become a way unscrupulous asset issuers can stop people from being able to sell their shares whenever they want. These issuers are abusing this feature whenever they want in order to lock people into their investments and prevent them from being able to get out of their positions.
As far as I know, Cryptostocks is also the only exchange that allows anyone who pays their listing fee to list an 'asset' there, without requiring them to go through any type of verification. The verification and vetting process that other exchanges perform does not guarantee by any means that an asset will turn out to be a profitable investment, or even that it won't turn out to have been a scam too, but it does weed out a lot of the anonymous asset issuers and the flagrant scams (like the 'FIDOR' asset that was listed on Cryptostocks a while back claiming to be Fidor Bank, but that the real Fidor Bank had never heard of, but which wasn't caught until they'd already scammed people, since Cryptostocks didn't perform any verification when they listed them).