Crypto market daily report – September 4, 2018
Bitcoin Cash was relatively stable trading between the $620 and $640 mark on Tuesday morning at press time—it practically remained in the same price levels all day with only minor movements up or down.
Bitcoin Cash was relatively stable trading between the $620 and $640 mark on Tuesday morning at press time—it practically remained in the same price levels all day with only minor movements up or down.
Aarni Otavi Saarimaa, a Finnish businessman who lost 5,564 BTC in a scam in Thailand, is poised to receive compensation after he began the settlement talks with some of the suspects.
Seven people were arrested in the Mumbai suburb of Mira Road, in connection with a call center scam that had been soliciting payments in BTC.
The cryptocurrency market continued to maintain the gains achieved on Tuesday with the vast majority of the top coins holding on or even increasing their prices. Bitcoin Cash was up by around 2% to trade at the $560 level, spurred by the positive momentum that prevailed across the markets.
David Schwartz, chief technology officer at Ripple Labs, has published a paper claiming XRP cryptocurrency is actually more decentralized than Ethereum and BTC, in the latest attempt to persuade the skeptics.
Dubbed Ryuk, there are suggestions the ransomware attacks could be linked to a North Korean hacker group known to rely on BTC ransom payments.
Philandering husbands are reportedly the new target of a BTC blackmail scam that is currently going around.
The cryptocurrency market experienced another downturn on Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning, with most major currencies seeing the gains made on Tuesday vanish within a matter of a few hours.
A Thai stock investor who has been linked to the $24 million cryptocurrency fraud case has claimed to be victim of the scam himself.
The cryptocurrency market appeared to be in a state of flux with most coins experiencing sharp downturns.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has made cryptocurrencies illegal by diktat, following a change in the law designed to protect residents from engaging in crypto transactions.
Contrary to earlier reports, marijuana advocacy publication High Times Holding Corp. will refuse offers in BTC during its initial public offering (IPO), according to documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.