(Reuters) - One of Japan's largest digital currency companies has said it will return a majority of $ 534 million in virtual assets stolen in cybercrime attacks.
Coincheck pledged more than 46 billion yen ($ 423 million) of its own money to customers who lost their property in the virtual NEM currency on Friday.
The Tokyo-based company halted trading after monitoring a breakthrough in its digital trading operations.
Reports indicate that about 260,000 customers were affected by the penetration.
Quinn-Cheek said the amount she promised to repay covered about 90 percent of Neem's customer losses, estimated at 58 billion yen.
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Following the discovery of the breach on Friday, the company suspended all electronic currency withdrawals and deposits except for the Betquin.
The company said it had the electronic address to which the stolen money had been sent.
Reports indicate that some 10,000 companies in Japan accept payments in virtual currencies.
In 2014, Japan's MTGox collapsed for trading in digital assets after it acknowledged the loss of $ 400 million in cybercrime.
The breach occurred at 2:57 am on Friday (17:75 GMT), but the breach was not detected until 11.25 am Tokyo time, after about 8 and a half hours, according to a statement from Queen-Chek.
The company informed the police and the Financial Services Agency of Japan of the incident.Loss size
Neem, the 10th largest currency by market value, fell about 11 percent in 24 hours to 87 cents, according to the Bloomberg News Network.
Other digital currencies suffered losses on Friday, with Petcin down 3.4 percent and Ripple at 9.9 percent.
Friday's losses outweighed the loss of MTJOX in 2014, when the company said it had lost 850,000 homeowners. However, the company subsequently announced the discovery of 200,000 units of virtual currency in an old electronic wallet.
After the collapse of the company shocked the world of virtual currencies, Japan approved a licensing system that required more control over digital currency companies such as Coin-Check.
In fact, it is difficult to answer this question: Japan is one of the most countries to support the virtual currencies among the G-20 countries, so they do not want to answer that question, "said Mark Ostwald, a global market strategist at Bloomberg. The trading institutions of this type of asset are subject to further pressure and it will be important to follow up the official reaction by regulators to what happened. "
About Quinn-Chek?
Quinchik was founded in 2012 in the Japanese capital of Tokyo, and employs about 71 employees, according to figures in August.
The company is headquartered in Chibuwa, an area known for establishing a large number of new companies. Metgocs is also located there.The Japanese company for currency trading quoted Quenchik as saying that the Japanese national television featured the famous Japanese comedian Tetsurodigawa.
Konihiko Sato, a customer of the company, said he had deposited in his account virtual assets worth up to 500,000 yen before the cyber attack. He added that if he ever imagined that the company would be exposed to this penetration.
How is Forex trading?
While conventional governments and banks issue printed money, virtual currencies are issued through a complex electronic process called "mining". Transactions in this type of asset are monitored across computer networks around the world that operate on a technology called "cluster chain".
There are thousands of virtual currencies, most of which are online, unlike the paper and metal currencies we use.
It may be better to consider virtual currencies as tradable assets than as funds. Most Pitcairn owners, for example, seem to be investors. But the nature of dealing with virtual assets, which allows the trader to remain anonymous, has attracted many who engage in criminal activities.
The default currency is determined by the number of traders willing to buy and sell.