Not exact matches
Bitstamp managed to deal with the problem relatively quickly and is
now back up and running; a sure sign of improvement following the drama that unfolded at
MtGox.
http://t.co/4QPPUvALYi
now reads «put announce for
mtgox acq here» Zero - evidence speculation: leak was by insider wanting cheap #bitcoin
UPDATE (25th February, 09:28 GMT): The source code on Mt. Gox's website
now reads «put announce for
mtgox acq here» leading some to speculate on the motives behind the document leak:
For
now, BitStamp remains an exchange with one of the more spotless, even if not the most prominent, reputations in the Bitcoin community, with very few complaints about the sorts of deposit and withdrawal delays and anti-fraud and anti-money-laundering compliance hassles that are occasionally reported by users of
MtGox and even Coinbase.
I don't understand why it is so unfair for depositors to
mtgox, we were scammed initially and
now it seems that we are getting scammed again... possibly by the same guy Kaperles or however you spell this b $ & @ % # # $ name.
Currently trading at $ 145 on BitStamp and $ 160 on
MtGox, bitcoin prices are
now more than 10 % above their pre-Silk Road seizure levels.
Since then,
MtGox's market share has been eclipsed by those of Bitstamp and BTCChina, BitPay has been joined by Coinbase, to a lesser extent BIPS and
now Circle, and at the beginning of October the last point of vulnerability, Silk Road, was shut down - and Bitcoin's prices soon went up rather than down.