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Maplechange, a small Canadian cryptocurrency exchange, has ceased operations following the purported theft of all the funds it was holding. Despite promises of an investigation into the matter, many have accused the exchange of attempting to stage an exit scam.
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Canadian Exchange Drained of Holdings
Maplechange took to Twitter to announce the hack, which took place one day after it had conducted âmaintenanceâ to revamp its website. It claimed that âdue to a bug, some people have managed to withdraw all the fundsâ it had been holding. The exchange said it had launched a âthorough investigationâ and insisted that it couldnât offer refunds to customers until it had concluded its probe. âWe are extremely sorry that it has to come to end like this,â it added.
Some sites claimed that Maplechange had deleted the initial tweet within an hour, along with its Telegram and Discord accounts. Those reports cited another tweet from the exchange stating that it would cease business and shut down its social media presence, because it had been completely drained of funds and was left unable to pay its customers back.
Partial Refunds
However, Maplechange returned to Twitter five hours after it reported the hack, amid widespread accusations that it was staging an exit scam. âWe have not disappeared,â it said. âWe simply turned off our accounts temporarily to think this solution through.â
The company opened a Discord server for refunds an hour later, stating that it would be unable to refund any BTC or LTC that had been lost. However, it vowed to try âto refund everything else.â
Significant Trading Spike Prior to Hack
Maplechange saw a significant spike in trade volume in the week preceding the hack. After posting daily trade volume of between $2,000 and $3,000 for the majority of the second and third weeks of October, it bounced between approximately $10,000 and $65,000 in the days leading up to the hack, before falling to roughly $5,000 during the website maintenance period on Oct. 27. At the time of the purported hack, CCX/BTC and LMO/LTC were the two most traded pairings on Maplechange.
The company has since pledged to transfer all of the coins it still possesses back to the coin developers. At the time of this writing, it had said that it had already returned funds to Lumeneo (LMO) and Carbon Credit Coin (CCX).
Maplechange first launched an LTC/CCX pairing on Oct. 11. âAmazing volume today thanks to LMO,â it posted on the following day. âMake sure to grab a boatload for yourself.â It also introduced an XMR/CCX pairing on Oct. 2, and thanked its LTC/LMO pairing for producing ârock solidâ daily volume on Oct. 3.
Do you think the purported hack of Maplechange sounds suspicious? Share your thoughts in the comments section below!
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