Howdy honglu69, I just wanted to say that I've used shorelinecrypto a couple of times for Curecoin, and I'm happy you listed it for DaveF. Looks like the volume right now leaves a lot to be desired, but hopefully that will change. Dave is trying to get the word out, as am I, so we'll see.
Question: what are the criteria for delisting a coin? Is it solely a volume issue or are there any other factors that go into your decision to delist something? I'm curious as to why New England Coin was dropped, for instance (though I can't say I'm surprised, as I'd never even heard of it before visiting your site).
I'd also like to vouch for the fact that I've done several small trades and subsequent withdrawals and have had no issues thus far. I know people are very reluctant to give small exchanges a try--and for very good reason--but my experience so far has been positive.
Hi The Pharmacist,
I am glad that you like our exchange.
The delisting criteria is mainly on trading volumes as you see our new listing criteria agreement clearly stated that when a coin applicant/dev applied for listing. Specifically on monthly basis, no trading in a month is subject to delisting depending on our server usage and resources case by case.
Another factor is legality and government regulation issue because our exchange is in USA, specifically New England region in Connecticut and we have to follow federal and local laws on crypto. I am puzzled by recent DASH delisting news across board and I am thinking whether we should follow that or not. So far I have not seen any clear laws or regulation news clearly saying that DASH is illegal for trading in USA. But if that is true that DASH becomes illegal in USA, you can expect that we will follow and delist DASH.
For NewEnglandcoin delisting, it is not truly a delisting, it is more of technical swap. NewEnglandcoin now hard forked and changed name to Nengcoin. We list Nengcoin so that NewEnglandcoin holders should just swap to Nengcoin with no effect of this change.