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Topic: SCAM **COINS-e.com***SCAM list of unhappy customers (Read 21875 times)

legendary
Activity: 1672
Merit: 1010
From Crypto to Christie’s - How an Indian metaverse king made his fortune
ANGUS BERWICK and ELIZABETH HOWCROFT - Nov. 17, 2021
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/finance-crypto-sundaresan/
https://archive.ph/5oKao
member
Activity: 178
Merit: 22
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0


He saw opportunity... to steal millions in cryptocurrency from coins-e customers Cheesy (spot the lendroid sticker)
https://i.imgur.com/ZsGTmBB.png



I wanted this to be a feel good story, but he's clearly full of dung.
"Behind every great fortune lies a great crime.

Honore de Balzac"




 
legendary
Activity: 1672
Merit: 1010
The thief now has interview on youtube "NAS Daily"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdtEHFv54iA


He saw opportunity... to steal millions in cryptocurrency from coins-e customers Cheesy (spot the lendroid sticker)


keeps all "his" wealth in crypto and has billions in crypto!!!


People in the comments have no idea about this lowlife, full of praise for this con artist.  Sad  they do not even know that him and Beeple are partners who likely plotted to sell NFT art through Christies so they could wash years of stolen crypto. Maybe Justin Sun lost auction on purpose and was only bidding to push the price up and they would always make the final winning bid towards the end. 
Sun may also be a part of this if we can find some history between him and Sundaresan then it would be clear he too is also involved in the $69 million NFT money laundering and has been rewarded for their role somehow.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
This scammer has another article about him and his $69million Beeple NFT purchase. 
https://cryptoslate.com/metakovan-explains-why-he-paid-69-million-for-beeples-nft-artwork/

and this one
https://www.businessinsider.in/tech/news/the-man-who-bought-beeples-69-million-nft-reveals-his-identity-to-show-the-equalising-power-of-crypto-but-is-caught-in-a-controversy-himself/articleshow/81583375.cms

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When Sundaresan created the B20 project, he gave himself 59% of the outstanding tokens and 2% of it went to Beeple.


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According to an independent blogger Amy Castor, this represents a conflict of interest. The two may have been in cahoots to ensure that the ‘Everydays: The First 5000 Days’ artwork, by Beeple, gets added to the Metapurse collection.

They are still scamming and Christies doesn't even realize are now a part of the scam having helped launder $69 million of cryptocurrencies and pump the price of B20 token. Beeple and Sundaresan would seem to be partners.


This is such a big story and it's as if no one wants to touch it. So many people have a lot riding on NFTs and this sale falling apart would ruin NFT market possibly.
But it won't go away since there were clearly many unhappy peopple on this thread. And I imagine more people will ultimately lose more coin overall in NFTs keep going based solely on the Beeple sale.
legendary
Activity: 1672
Merit: 1010
This scammer has another article about him and his $69million Beeple NFT purchase. 
https://cryptoslate.com/metakovan-explains-why-he-paid-69-million-for-beeples-nft-artwork/

and this one
https://www.businessinsider.in/tech/news/the-man-who-bought-beeples-69-million-nft-reveals-his-identity-to-show-the-equalising-power-of-crypto-but-is-caught-in-a-controversy-himself/articleshow/81583375.cms

Quote
When Sundaresan created the B20 project, he gave himself 59% of the outstanding tokens and 2% of it went to Beeple.


Quote
According to an independent blogger Amy Castor, this represents a conflict of interest. The two may have been in cahoots to ensure that the ‘Everydays: The First 5000 Days’ artwork, by Beeple, gets added to the Metapurse collection.

They are still scamming and Christies doesn't even realize are now a part of the scam having helped launder $69 million of cryptocurrencies and pump the price of B20 token. Beeple and Sundaresan would seem to be partners.
legendary
Activity: 1672
Merit: 1010
Check her twitter too, she seems to be only one writing about these scammers.  This entire Beeple NFT could be one big money laundering operation by the coins-e and lendroid scammers and they were helped by Christies!

https://twitter.com/ahcastor
legendary
Activity: 1672
Merit: 1010
Amy Castor an independent journalist has written about them:

Metakovan, the mystery Beeple art buyer, and his NFT/DeFi scheme - https://amycastor.com/2021/03/14/metakovan-the-mystery-beeple-art-buyer-and-his-nft-defi-scheme/[/quote]
Previous version of article here: https://archive.ph/vgte9

Metakovan, the mystery Beeple art buyer, and his NFT/DeFi scheme

Last week, a crypto whale going by the moniker “Metakovan” bought a Beeple artwork via Christie’s auction for $69 million—$60 million in ETH and $9 million in fees, also in ETH*—outbidding a surprised Justin Sun, founder of the Tron blockchain, in the last minute.

    7/12 I tried to update my bid to $70 MIL at the last 30 secs yet my offer was somehow not accepted by Christie’s system even though there was still 20 secs left.
    — Justin Sun🌞 (@justinsuntron) March 12, 2021

After the barest amount of digging, I am going to hazard a guess that the mystery Beeple buyer is Vignesh Sundaresan, a crypto entrepreneur who has been in the crypto landscape for about seven years.  

It’s pretty obvious, really. Metakovan has given a few audio interviews. And if you compare those to previous Sundaresan interviews, like this one, it’s the same voice—and the same crypto origin story.

In a recent interview with the Good Time Show, for instance, Metakovan says he got into crypto in 2013, lived in Canada for several years, and then left for Singapore in 2017 because crypto regulations in North America were too “unclear.” That’s basically Sundaresan’s background as well.

Putting aside the matter of why Sundaresan would want to keep his real identity cloaked in the first place, the next question is the grift—how is he spinning a profit off of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs?

I’ll get to that in a moment, but first…
Who is Sundaresan?

According to the bio on his website, Vignesh Sundaresan is behind several crypto startups.

He co-founded BitAccess, an early bitcoin ATM company in Canada. BitAccess was accepted into the Y Combinator startup accelerator in June 2014, according to Coindesk.  

And then, in January 2017, he founded the Singapore-based Lendroid Foundation. The firm raised $47.5 million (50,000 ETH) in a two-day initial coin offering in February 2018, according to CryptoRank.

He also founded consulting firm Portkey Technologies and claims to have backed several popular crypto projects, including Ethereum, Polkadot, Dfinity, Omisego and Decentraland.

Going back further, Sundaresan launched crypto exchange Coins-e in Ontario in 2013. (Coincidentally, the same year that Gerald Cotten and Michael Patryn launched their failed Canadian crypto exchange QuadrigaCX.)
Coins-e, a defunct Canadian exchange

Several Coins-e users have taken to social media to complain about losing money on Coins-e, calling it a scam and warning others to watch out. (See Reddit—here and here—and BitcoinTalk.)  

The posts on r/dogecoin are the most alarming. Coins-e clients report having their dogecoin disappear. Wireguysny described watching 1.3 million DOGE evaporate and the frustration of being unable to reach tech support to get to the bottom of the matter.

Xclusive2 wrote: “I’ve had just about enough of of Coins-e millions of coins missing, no reply from support ever! the reason is because it’s a one man operation. the problem is this joker is stealing and trading everyone’s coins when and how he feels to make himself rich he knows that Doge is worth a lot of BTC in large volumes.”

Sundaresan denies being the guy who allegedly ripped people off. According to him, Coins-e was sold to a company called Casa Crypto in Waterloo. The transfer was overseen by law firm LaBarge Weinstein, he claims.

“Since it was sold, I have not been associated with Coins-E. Allegations of a scam are FUD,” he told me.

I am so far unable to confirm that sale. I can’t find any announcement or press release on the sale. The Coins-e website no longer exists, and an archive of the site’s “About” page from 2016 doesn’t reveal who is behind the operation. I can’t find a company called “Casa Crypto” in Waterloo either.

Sundaresan offered to show me proof of the sale via a video call. I told him I was open to that, but he hasn’t gotten back to me to set up a time. He did not comment on whether he was Metakovan.

Meanwhile, I’ve looked up the domain registration for Coins-e.com. The site was registered in May 2013 and the only update was in May 2020—after customers complained about their coins vanishing.

The site was originally registered to Ramesh Vinayagam—the name of a famous Indian composer, per Reddit user xclusive2. Another alias perhaps? And, according to a Paste from January 2014, the site was registered to the man himself shortly before the registration was made private and Sundaresan entered the Y Combinator program.
The NFT connection

NFTs are the big thing now. They took over as the latest grift when decentralized finance, or DeFi, ran out of steam last year. Fellow nocoiner David Gerard wrote a blog post explaining how NFTs work and why digital ownership of art is utter nonsense.

“NFTs are entirely for the benefit of the crypto grifters,” he said. “The only purpose the artists serve is as aspiring suckers to pump the concept of crypto — and, of course, to buy cryptocurrency to pay for ‘minting’ NFTs.”

Stepping back, we first see the connection between Sundaresan’s startup Lendroid and NFTs in a blog post titled “Why DeFi Needs NFTs.” The post, written by his business partner Anand Venkateswaran, describes how NFTs solve the problems of DeFi, such as flash crashes, volatility, and governance. (Venkateswaran, a comms person, also has a pseudonym—he goes by Twobadour Pannar.)

Lendroid powers WhaleStreet, an Ethereum-based platform for swapping ERC20 tokens—that’s the standard for fungible Ethereum tokens. WhaleStreet has its own native “yield-farming token” called Shrimp.

Metakovan is also behind Singapore-based Metapurse, a crypto-based investment firm. Metapurse’s mission, according to its website, is to “democratize access and ownership to artwork.” The firm has been acquiring NFTs. It purchased Beeple’s “Everdays: 20 Collection” artworks for $2.2 million in December.

Metapurse has taken Beeple’s multiple artworks, or NFTs, along with three virtual museums, and combined everything into a “massive bundle.” Would you like to invest in this wonderful package? You can. All you have to do is stock up on Metapurse’s new B20 token.

This blog post on the Metapurse substack lays out the grand plan:

    “We believe we truly achieved this with B.20 — the name of a massive NFT bundle we are fractionalizing so that everyone can have ownership over the first large scale public art project within the metaverse. It is important to note that we’re fractionalizing ownership, not the assets themselves. These fractions will be available as 10 million B.20 tokens, and can be referred to as the “keys” to this digital vault.”

Number go up

The name of this game is “number go up.” This is about pumping B20, so holders and Metapurse can benefit when they go to sell the token—i.e., get more ETH, buy more NFTs, rinse, repeat.

The token distribution is something to pay attention to. Metakovan has 59% of all the B20 tokens. Why does he own the majority of tokens? As he explains it, that is to prevent any single person from owning more than half of B20 tokens—and snatching up all this wonderful artwork for themselves. The idea is to decentralize and democratize art, only Metakovan controls the token supply.

What’s interesting is that Beeple, the creator of the artwork, is actually a business partner of Metakovan’s. He owns 2% of all the B20 tokens. I’m sure there is no conflict of interest here.

WhaleStreet hosted the B20 sale on Jan. 23. Apparently, 1.6 million B20 tokens were sold to the public for $0.36 per token. After the Christie’s auction, B20 shot up to $23. It’s now down to around $16, according to Coinmarketcap. That’s a nice profit for anyone who got in early—and worth over $3 million for Beeple, if he dumps his coins quickly and there’s enough liquidity to actually sell them.

    It was a privilege to engineer the largest bundle ever, and to also host the #B20 sale portal. We've made it bright and shiny. Come check in at 6:30 pm CST at https://t.co/UO5YO6l628 https://t.co/wvA6vQraam
    — WhaleStreet (@WhaleStreetoffl) January 23, 2021

At the end of the day, this is a straight-up initial coin offering-style index fund to speculate on NFTs, with a twist: Metakovan owns most of the tokens—and he has an existing business relationship with the artist.

I wonder if Metakovan anticipated having to pay this much ETH to Beeple for his “Everydays: The First 5000 Days”? Metakovan knew he needed the artwork for his index fund. But did he expect Sun to keep bidding the price up to the very last second?

Also, in an earlier version of this post, I questioned why we can’t see the blockchain transaction—which was supposed to be 42,329.453 ETH. If we can’t see the transaction, how do we know that Beeple actually got paid for the sale and is not in cahoots with Metakovan to make number go up?

I now have a theory.

As Christie’s spells out in its conditions of sale, the transaction needs to come directly from a digital wallet maintained with Coinbase Custody Trust, Coinbase, Fidelity Digital Assets Services, Gemini Trust Company or Paxos Trust Company. And it sounds like the funds may even have gone into Christie’s escrow wallet.

Anyhow, if both parties had Coinbase accounts, the exchange could just change the database records off-chain to flip account balances. In this way, Coinbase acts like a second layer, and you wouldn’t see the ETH transaction.

When all was said and done, the Christie’s auction turned out to be a sweet deal for Beeple who now has a reason to shill crypto to his 2 million Instagram followers. And Metakovan gets publicity for his ICO project, so his own personal B20 holdings rise in value.

    holy fuck.
    — beeple (@beeple) March 11, 2021

Since I published this article, Sundaresan has written to me and asked me to take it down. I refused, but agreed to make edits if he could point to anything specific that was wrong—so far, he hasn’t.

I’m posting Sundaresan’s full comment on the matter below:

“Hello Amy, I am replying to address your concern about coins-e as relating to me. Definitely there are several factual inaccuracies in your blog post and your tweets. I would appreciate if you would temporarily pull down the posts until you have the facts right, as such a post causes unnecessary FUD and obviously it is your choice to not take it down. But if you do it will show that your intentions are in the right place and that you are looking to have a conversation. Regarding coins-e, it dates back to days when the crypto industry was very unorganized and the service itself was quite small and did not warrant a press release when the sale was done. The service was not even big enough to attract the crypto media attention, the service started growing bigger as the Casa crypto was taking over. The transfer happened through a well documented process with assistance from lawyers on both sides. Post the sale I had moved on to build Bitaccess, backed by YCombinator and I have had no link to Casa Crypto after the sale and I have repeatedly addressed this issue via newsletters and Q&As. For the other parts of your question, I believe it shall be better answered by contacting @metapurse and @twobadour directly.“

————-

(March 14, 2021—This article has been updated to add comments from Sundaresan and more detail about Coins-e. Additional updates made later in the day to theorize on why the transaction did not show up on the blockchain, add some Gerard quotes and spruce of the ending a bit.)

(*March 15, 2021—Christie’s accepted its fees in ether—the native crypto of the Ethereum network. When Christie’s originally announced the sale, the auction house said it would accept crypto as payment, but the buyer’s premium had to be in real money. Later it changed its policy to accept ETH, according to Bloomberg.)
member
Activity: 178
Merit: 22
To Everyone who lost money on coins-e.com:

Vignesh (coins-e founder) is trying a new scam ICO. Are you interested to help preventing him from scamming more people?

He is doing a reddit AMA on Feb 8th! Confront him and demand your money back!

(this is his ICO: https://lendroid.com/token_launch)


We have a website to track and organize legal action: lendroidscam.com

Looks like the guy you were looking for is MetaKovan, the man behind ~70M USD NFT purchase. He has revealed details about himself in a post written few hours ago.

https://metapurser.substack.com/p/nfts-the-first-5000-beeples (https://archive.is/xcNRY)
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
How is your exploration working. Any information that can be used against this scammer. I've found some information and I believe we can setup an organization} together to talk about catching him. I can make a mailing list for all the victims
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
Guys, I have been following this matter very closely, and I have hired an investigator myself. It seems like the owner of coins-e is Saif Altimimi, from Waterloo Ontario, he is currently the founder of a startup based in Toronto called ChefHero. Let us create a petition to track him down on change.org and get as many signatures, and how much each one of us have lost.

We should all do something and track this MF down. We can start by rating his company ChefHero to get him to send us our coins back!!!
newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
I've also been scammed by coins-e.com back then.
newbie
Activity: 3
Merit: 0
To Everyone who lost money on coins-e.com:

Vignesh (coins-e founder) is trying a new scam ICO. Are you interested to help preventing him from scamming more people?

He is doing a reddit AMA on Feb 8th! Confront him and demand your money back!

(this is his ICO: https://lendroid.com/token_launch)


We have a website to track and organize legal action: lendroidscam.com
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
Please help fund the campaign.  The minimum deposit to get the investigation started is $2500, then I figure an attorney will have to be hired.  I already put in $100.  If we get enough, it does not have to be a huge expense for any one person.  Obviously we don't know how if our funds can be recovered even when we find the thieves, but I figure its worth at least $100 to try.
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
Hopefully scammers get caught  Angry ... more than 15 BTC gone! We tried to cooperate with the police (1.5year ago?) but they were not interested Cry
legendary
Activity: 1484
Merit: 1026
In Cryptocoins I Trust
Did you get to manage to get a refund or something? Or a reply from the guys?

You talking to me?? I apparently was one of the lucky few that got paid back.

I got a refund within a few days of the incident. I'm sorry to those that did not.

My experience with them was kind of shady though tbh, and this is not that surprising.
newbie
Activity: 6
Merit: 0
We are going after the scammers. I have found a private investigator who can track attempt to track down the people that ran coins-e.com. Here is the cog fund me page-https://www.gofundme.com/investigation-of-coinsecom
newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
Thanks for jogging my memory a little bit.

Vignesh is the guy I first got ahold of. He told me he sold the exchange to Saif and gave me Saif's phone number. Soon after I called Saif, my withdraw was processed (I kind of ambushed him on social media too.)

I still have Vignesh as a Facebook friend from when I was doing my investigation... that is how I originally got in touch with him. He seemed generally helpful, and not until I got in contact with Saif did the problem resolve itself. IMO, from my experience with the two (at least at the time I contacted him)... I think that Saif was the owner of Coins-e.

Interesting enough, they are FB friends as I see I have 1 mutual friend with Saif... and it is Vignesh. I guess Saif has more strict privacy settings on his FB account now, and that is why you guys can't see his profile. It still exists though. I guess it is possible that they are both in on it. I think it has to be at least one of the two of them if not both, seeing as though they are both pointing a finger at each other. I am leaning towards Saif though, because I think it was more likely that he was the one that processed my withdraw manually.

I have 250k in my coins-e wallet. did not looked at them for 3 years. Now finally it has some value but than I discover that this site is closed and my coins are gone?


sent this guy Vignesh a message on FB  and twitter, but have little hope as he seems to be offline for the last month ( what a suprise)


Will report any news.




Did you get to manage to get a refund or something? Or a reply from the guys?
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
Hello, do you know anything new about these scammers?

I put 0.60 BTC in coin-e.com to buy the maxcoin cryptocurrency.

I think the maxcoin is inaugurated in coin-e.com.

I saw the demonstration they made in Keiser Report.

Could we do something? I found this on youtube ...
https://youtu.be/TB67DYw-K44

We have to do something.

Sorry I'm using google translate, I'm Spanish and I do not speak English

Regards
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