In June 2011, when customers of now-bankrupt bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox agitated for proof that the Tokyo-based firm was still solvent after a hacking attack, CEO Mark Karpeles turned to the comedy science fiction novel “The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy”.
During an online chat, Karpeles moved the equivalent of $170 million in bitcoin at today’s market rates – the virtual equivalent of a bank manager flashing a wad of cash in a wallet to establish credit. The gesture – with a sly wink to the “geek” culture Karpeles believed he shared with many of his 50,000 customers at the time, including an interest in coding, Japanese manga comics and science fiction – succeeded.
By moving 424,242 bitcoins, Karpeles, then 26, evoked the random number, 42, described as the “meaning of life” in Douglas Adams’ sci-fi novel. “Don’t come after me claiming we have no coins,” Karpeles said, according to a transcript of that online discussion. “42 is the answer.”
As the price of bitcoin soared from a few dollars to above $1,000, Mt. Gox grew to become the world’s largest exchange for the digital currency, handling flows worth $3 billion in 2013, by the company’s own reckoning.
But even as Mt. Gox boomed, French-born Karpeles seemed both keen to maintain total control of key operations and indifferent to commercial success, according to former staff and associates who spoke to Reuters, but asked not to be named because of ongoing investigations into the exchange’s collapse.
Creditors who want to know how Mt. Gox at one point lost some $500 million worth of bitcoin and another $27 million in cash from its bank accounts, are seeking answers from Karpeles, who has spent recent days huddled in meetings with lawyers in Tokyo.
Mt. Gox and its lawyers declined repeated requests for comment for this article.
Lawyers for Karpeles told a U.S. judge last week that he was “not willing” to travel to the United States – as ordered by the judge to answer questions in a bankruptcy court – until his attorneys can “get up to speed” on a new subpoena from the U.S. Treasury Department. Karpeles doesn’t want to go to the U.S. as he fears he could be arrested by authorities there, a person familiar with his thinking said.
“Regardless of whether it was a massive fraud or whether he was just grossly negligent, at the end of the day he’s at fault,” said Steven Woodrow, a lawyer representing a U.S. class action against Karpeles brought by Mt. Gox creditors.
Mt. Gox’s bid to resuscitate its business was dismissed by a Tokyo court on Wednesday, and the court-appointed administrator said that meant the firm was likely to be liquidated. He added that Karpeles was likely to be investigated for liability in the exchange’s collapse.
THE MAGICAL TUX
In its bankruptcy filing, Mt. Gox said 750,000 customer bitcoins and another 100,000 belonging to the exchange were stolen due to a software security flaw. Karpeles has told others he has been hurt by accusations he masterminded the theft, and wants to return the bitcoins and cash to some 127,000 creditors.
Karpeles, who has said he is reluctant to appear in public because of safety concerns, relieves stress by driving around Tokyo at night in a Honda Civic he bought as a company car at Mt. Gox, people close to him said. He lives alone with his cat, Tibane, whose exploits he used to chronicle on now-deleted Flickr and YouTube accounts.
The cat’s name, chosen by Karpeles’ late grandmother, inspired the name of his first company, Tibanne, which he set up in October 2009 in Japan. His employer at the time, software platform distributor Nexway, had transferred him to the country earlier that year.
Born in Chenove, in the Burgundy region of France, Karpeles wrote his first computer program aged 10. He wrote on his blog that he “never really felt at home in France,” and has not been back since moving to Japan five years ago.
The full article
http://altcoinhunters.com/2014/04/insight-at-mt-gox-bitcoin-hub-geek-ceo-sought-both-control-and-escape/