Japan's Financial Services Agency (FSA)
said it ordered Coincheck to submit a report on the hack and measures for preventing a recurrence by February 13.
The FSA
said it ordered Coincheck to submit an incident report and measures for preventing a recurrence by Feb. 13.
Not exact matches
According to Reuters: «Japan's financial regulator
said on Friday it had
ordered all cryptocurrency exchanges to submit a report on their system risk management, following the hacking of over half a billion dollars of digital money from
Coincheck.»
Japanese authorities
said on Monday they would investigate all cryptocurrency exchanges in the country for security gaps and
ordered Coincheck to raise its standards after hackers stole $ 530 million of digital money from the Tokyo - based exchange.
Withdrawal requests will be initiated on a first come — first serve basis, and
Coincheck says the company may contact certain customers separately in
order to confirm withdrawal details.
Yet, according to another report by Reuters, the FSA
said on Friday that it has already
ordered Coincheck to fix its security loophole, which was also one reason FSA has yet to approve
Coincheck as an exchange.
Vice President of NEM Foundation Jeff McDonald, has
said that they would be cooperating with
Coincheck in the further investigative process but denied the possibility of any «hard fork» where administrators change the transaction history in
order to restore the previous status before any sort of unauthorized access.