Bee Token ICO Derailed by Phishing Scam, Possible Theft of $1 Million in Ethereum

When the Bee Token ICO kicked off on Wednesday, thousands of investors rushed to fund “Beenest,” a commission-free home-sharing platform that aims to disrupt industry heavyweights Airbnb and VRBO.
Unfortunately, hundreds of them unwittingly fell prey to an email- and Telegram-based phishing scam targeted at prospective Bee Token ICO contributors.
Bee Token has spent the bulk of the past two days warning its ICO contributors about the scams, advising them to ignore direct communications that claim to be from the company and verify the token sale’s contract address on the official ICO website.
Please do not fund ETH to addresses that have the following warning: "Warning! There are reports that this address was used in a (BeeToken) Phishing scam."
“The Bee Token has received reports of fake emails, Telegram accounts, etc. claiming to represent the Bee Token ICO Token Generation Event. Please note that we will NEVER EVER communicate an Ethereum address through an email or Direct Message to you via Telegram,” the company said in a post on Medium.
Despite this warning, the scammers have managed to divert nearly $1 million away from the official token sale and into their own pockets. The actual ICO, meanwhile, had raised about $2.8 million by the time of writing.
bee token ICO
Three Ethereum addresses linked to the phishing scam contain a combined total of nearly $1 million, while the official Bee Token ICO has raised $2.8 million.
Social media users allege that there is a reason the phishing scam has been so successful.
Although the scammers may not have sent the emails from official Bee Token addresses, victims claim that the scammers had access to the company’s email list.
They base this accusation on a lesser-known Gmail trick that lets users insert a tag into their email addresses when they subscribe to mailing lists. When they start receiving emails for which they did not subscribe, they can use this tag to identify from whom a sender acquired the receiver’s contact information.
Bee Token did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the alleged breach.

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Embattled Tezos Community Launches T2 Foundation

Utah native Ryan Jasperson and fellow members of the Tezos community have officially launched the T2 Foundation. The mandate of the new foundation is to support the launch of the Tezos network “…if the Tezos Foundation is not able to do so in an adequate and timely manner”.

Ending The Infighting

Tezos Foundation head Johann Gevers has been accused of slowing down the development of the project. Fortunately, Gevers published a blog post via Medium saying he intends to step away from Tezos.
Gevers has since taken down the post. However, a subsequent statement confirmed that he’ll stick to the plan. It seems even whenever Gevers strives to provide the community with clarity, he fails.
Gevers has struggled to make friends in the Tezos community since October. A report from Reuters outlines several disagreements between Gevers and Arthur and Kathleen Breitman. The husband and wife tandem are the leaders of Tezos’ Development team and the corporation behind the project, Dynamic Ledger Solutions.
Despite the fallout, Arthur Breitman maintains that the beta version of the Tezos blockchain could launch within the next five weeks if impending legal issues can be resolved sooner rather than later. He also confirms development of the project is progressing considerably. This despite the fact developers are waiting to receive adequate compensation from the Gevers-led foundation.

T2 Foundation Comes In Peace

The T2 foundation will feature seven board members, including Jasperson, who spent an estimated $50,000 of his own money to launch the T2 Foundation and the Swiss association, The Association for the Tezos Protocol and Ecosystem.
Also joining the board is Olaf Carlson-Wee, head of cryptocurrency hedge fund Polychain Capital. Wee is a significant stakeholder in the project dating back to September 2016. He first penned a letter back in December stating his interest in joining the original Tezos Foundation.
Less than two months later, it appears Carlson-Wee, Jasperson and the rest of the Tezos community are ready to take control of Tezos.

Furthering Development

As the tenuous situation involving Tezos’ two different foundations appears to be slowly resolving itself, development of the protocol continues to forge ahead. The inner workings of its development are on public display, and its obvious significant progress is being made.
That’s great news for the project as it aims to revolutionize blockchain technology through its on-chain governance model.

It’s just too bad computer code can’t get rid of can’t get rid of off-chain governance issues.

No, India Isn’t Banning Bitcoin as Mainstream Media Gets it Wrong [Again]

Contrary to the – now global – news coverage of Indian authorities enforcing an imminent ‘ban’ on bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, India is, quite simply, not banning cryptocurrencies nor their trading on exchanges.
As CCN reported yesterday, India’s finance minister Arun Jaitley was delivering the country’s budget for 2018-19 when he touched on the subject of cryptocurrencies and their usage in the country.
To quote, Jaitley stated:
“The Government does not consider cryptocurrencies as legal tender or coin and will take all measures to eliminate the use of these cryptoassets in financing illegitimate activities or as part of the payments system.”
The takeaways from the statement are:
  • Indian authorities do not recognize bitcoin as legal tender.
  • Indian authorities will crackdown on cryptocurrency usage in illegitimate activities and;
  • Indian authorities will dissuade the public from using cryptocurrencies as payment instruments.
Jaitley did not make any pointed remark on a ban of cryptocurrencies, nor signal a clampdown on cryptocurrency exchanges. A side note – India’s tax authorities are, in fact, using the help of cryptocurrency exchanges to chase tax evaders.
However, the immediate aftermath of Jaitley’s remark sparked a torrent of erroneous reporting from India’s national press and mainstream media outlets about the Indian government outlawing and banning cryptocurrencies.
“Arun Jaitley has just killed India’s cryptocurrency party,” screamed a headline from Quartz India, one of the earliest mainstream publications to report on the finance minister’s statement. ‘It appears to be the end of the road for cryptocurrencies in India’, read the introduction to the article with the rest following in a similar tone.
A prominent news anchor for a major TV news channel watched by tens of millions of viewers wrote: “Bitcoin to be banned. Crypto currency illegal in India says Arun Jaitley” on her Twitter account of over a million followers.
“India vows to eliminate use of cryptocurrencies,” read a dramatic headline from Reuters India, pointing to a “no-holds-barred attack on virtual currencies such as bitcoin” by Indian authorities.
Global mainstream reports ran with the same narrative. “Bitcoin Price Slides Again As India Announces Ban Plan” read a headline from Fortune. That has since been amended to “India Just Caused the Price of Bitcoin to Slide Again.”

No Ban. Repeat: No Ban!

As CCN stressed yesterday, none of the above rings true. To be precise, Jaitley spoke of a crackdown on the abuse of cryptocurrencies in illegal activities as well as their use as a method of payment.
Indeed, in an interview with Indian state-owned broadcaster Doordarshan following his national budget delivery, Jaitley was explicitly asked if the government was moving to ban cryptocurrencies.
A direct translation of the exchange reads:
TV Host: We’ve seen a lot of excitement over bitcoins. Why aren’t you banning it instead of stating it isn’t legal tender?
Jaitley: We are discouraging people from using it now. There is a government committee that’s looking into it right now and they will announce their decisions and next steps after they are done.
Still, no ban. The reference to the government committee is the long-established “Virtual Currency Committee’, an inter-disciplinary committee comprising of representatives from a number of ministries as well as those from the central bank and India’s biggest bank (also state-owned) tasked toward proposing a regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies in India. The committee was established by India’s Ministry of Finance in April 2017. To date, no findings have been made public yet.

What’s the Fuss About?

For India’s bitcoin industry, it’s business as usual.  Sathvik Vishwanath, chief executive Unocoin, one of India’s largest -and best-funded – bitcoin exchanges told CCN:
“We did not see any change in the stance of the government. We are pleased the authorities are taking action against illicit usage of cryptocurrencies but, otherwise, there is no reason for any panic. It’s business as usual at Unocoin.”
Zebpay, another leading Indian cryptocurrency exchange, added:

Wrong interpretation: Bitcoin is illegal.
Correct interpretation: Bitcoin cannot be used as legal tender. Bitcoin cannot be used for illegitimate activities.
To the contrary, India’s bitcoin industry is buoyed by the finance minister’s remarks on cryptocurrencies during a national address in delivering the nations’ budget.
“When a platform as significant as the Union Budget speech mentions cryptocurrencies, it is clear that the sector is coming of age,” read a statement from the Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Committee of India.  “We welcome this positive development, and see it as an important milestone in the journey to policy-clarity and consumer-education.”
Meanwhile, India’s mainstream media has previously jumped the gun with false reporting on cryptocurrencies and their legality in the country. In March 2017, a number of major Indian media sources incorrectly reported bitcoin has been classified “illegal” by the Indian government.
In summary, do not be misled.  India isn’t banning cryptocurrencies, nor their trading in the country.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

Bitcoin Fever Catches the Attention of Nigeria’s Lawmakers

Nigeria has been a hotbed for bitcoin trading, at least among African nations. Now the West African country’s policymakers want to examine the digital coin to determine whether or not it has a place in the Nigerian economy, as per a report in Bloomberg. The concerns surfaced during a Senate session earlier this week in Abuja in which bitcoin took center stage.
African millennials are especially keen on bitcoin, as per the BBC, including in Lagos, where bitcoin is looked to not only as a form of investment but also as a means to remit payments cross-border. But it may soon be tougher for them to do so.
According to Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, the Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and Other Financial Institutions will launch an investigation into “the viability of bitcoin as a form of investment, come up with recommendations on how to control its uses and trade.”
It’s to the dismay of some policymakers that bitcoin’s traded in Nigeria amid what Senator Benjamin Uwajumogu described in a motion as investors being “persuaded” of quick returns.
The Nigerian Senate is joining the chorus of the country’s central bank, the head of which told said in recent days to Bloomberg that trading bitcoin was akin to gambling, saying that the Central Bank of Nigeria couldn’t support such risky behavior.
Caution has been the tone of Nigerian policymakers since a year ago, when the central bank approached lenders amid the bitcoin price volatility and propensity for money laundering. They appear to be digital-coin agnostic, having cautioned that bitcoin, Monero, Litecoin and other altcoins are not recognized as legal tender in the country and therefore any transactions are done so at the risk of the bank.
The CBN even approached lenders, requesting they steer clear of digital coins before “substantive regulation and/or decision” by policymakers. The time appears to have come, as the Senate plans to give its recommendations within a couple of weeks.

An Affinity for Bitcoin

Without formal regulation till now, traders have taken to forming their own clusters to implement standards for bitcoin trading. They had to do something, given their affinity for trading the digital coin coupled with the widespread fraud that had gripped the nation and took Nigerians for millions of dollars. This hit hard in a nation whose per-capita yearly income falls below $3,000.
So the traders reportedly took to messaging app Telegram and created their own Know-Your-Customer (KYC) protocols, so to speak, in which interested parties are vetted, sometimes face-to-face, before joining the group, which has since ballooned to some 800 members.
Meanwhile, the fate of bitcoin trading in Nigeria is out of their hands.

Lagos image from Shutterstock.

FedEx Turns to Blockchain to ‘Transform the Logistics Industry’

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Shipping and logistics behemoth FedEx is firmly turning to decentralized technology by implementing blockchain solutions into its core processes.
Global delivery giant FedEx is working with the Blockchain in Transport Alliance (BiTA) – a working group of leading freight, shipping and logistics companies coming together to develop and implement blockchain technology among everyday operations. First reported by industry publication FreightWaves, FedEx is specifically delving into creating uniform logistics standards for blockchain applications across the industry.
BiTA, which sees members such as UPS and SAP, is the blockchain consortium of choice for the trillion-dollar shipping and logistics industry.
Among BiTA’s founding members, FedEx is already undertaking several blockchain pilots with a focus on dispute resolution, according to FedEx Freight vice president for strategic planning Dale Chrystie. Blockchain tech could prove a key resource to enhance customer experience by providing secure and transparent data, he added.
Speaking to the publication, the executive went on to state:
“We have millions of records a day in our system, and we think of blockchain as a secure chain of custody that could transform the logistics industry. We believe it holds a lot of promise in that space and would streamline all that data exchange in a very secure way.”
The logistics and freight industry is particularly ripe for transformational disruption by blockchain technology. An immutable, real-time, transparent decentralized ledger could significantly bring down operational cost by increasing efficiency and quicker turnaround times for a faster supply chain process.
FedEx Services’ senior vice president of IT Kevin Humphries underlined the importance of delivering complete transparency to customers using the company’s freight and logistics services.
He added:
“And blockchain is opening the door to that by giving customers even more visibility to their package before it gets in our hands and after it leaves our hands.”
Humphries went on to confirm FedEx’s development of blockchain pilots to have a proactive ‘edge’ in understanding the technology before an eventual rollout across different platforms in the industry.

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35% Leap: DigixDAO Price Makes Lonely Advance as Market Retraces

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The DigixDAO price rose 42 percent on Friday, making it the lone cryptocurrency in the top 100 to resist the deepening market correction and achieve an advance against the value of the dollar.

DigixDAO Price Makes Lonely Advance as Market Retraces

First launched in 2016, DigixDAO was one of the first decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), and it provides the backbone for the gold-backed Digix (DGX) ecosystem.
Simply put, while each DGX token is backed by one gram of gold stored in reserve, DGD tokens float according to market demand, which is based primarily on the fact that DGD holders accrue dividends derived from DGX transaction fees.
The DigixDAO price began the year near $180, and it gradually ticked up through the month of January. On Jan. 31, though, DGD began to hasten its climb, and on Feb. 2 it briefly spiked to an all-time high of $491 before sinking back down to a present value of $361. Despite this moderate pullback, the DigixDAO price is still up 42 percent for the day, which is all the more remarkable considering that every other top 100-cryptocurrency is in decline. DGD now has a $723 million market cap.
Digixdao price
Source: CoinMarketCap
The vast majority of DGD volume is centralized on Binance, where the token’s BTC and ETH pairs account for approximately 88 percent of its global trading volume. Huobi’s BTC and ETH pairs add another nine percent, and OKEx is the only other exchange that has processed more than $1 million worth of DGD volume in the past day.
digixdao price
Source: CoinMarketCap

Digix Partners with MakerDAO to Produce ‘Stablecoin’

The DigixDAO price rally appears linked to the Jan. 31 announcement that Digix had formed a partnership with MakerDAO to help produce the latter’s so-called “stablecoin” — a cryptocurrency whose price is stabilized to the value of the US dollar. According to Digix, MakerDAO will use DGX tokens as collateral in its portfolio and, in its words, “be a driver of billions of dollars of DGX demand.”
Since DGD holders reap dividends from DGX transaction fees, speculators immediately began purchasing DGD to profit from this development.

Featured image from Shutterstock.