Colleagues, while
cryptocurrency fraud is nothing new, the vast proliferation of exchanges, ICOs
and investment funds should send a strong signal to traders and investors
alike: Exercise extreme caution and perform 360 degree due diligence before you
invest. Yes, many exchanges, ICOs and funds are legitimate. Nonetheless, the
recent arrest of Jon Montroll by U.S. authorities in
connection with crypto exchange site WeExchange
and securities investment platform BitFunder
and crypto exchange site WeExchange raise even more red flags. Some of the most
common fraudulent tactics taken by crypto criminals include ICOs with no real
coins (e.g. HoweyCoins),
pump and dump strategies, pyramid and Ponzi schemes and crypto exchanges with
questionable track records … at best. The Cryptocurrency Academy offers two
baseline recommendations. First, for traders do not deposit personal funds that
you are not prepared to loose. Stay with the established top-tier exchanges
like CEX.io, Kraken,
Coinbase, CoinMama, GDAX (CoinBase Pro) and Paxful. For institutional investors, use trusted
investment firms and banks who will perform the due diligence for you – at a
cost – however, also provide a much higher level of security and confidence.
The growing list of players here include JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs as well as
professionally managed crypto funds from the likes of Fidelity, Vanguard and
Charles Schwab. Share your
assessment while visiting us today! Lawrence – Cyber
Security Defender (https://cybersecuritydefender.blogspot.com/)
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